The Divine and the Human
One of 20th Century's Utmost Existentialism Philosophical Thinkers
Nikolai Berdyaev was one of the most prominent representatives of Russian religious philosophy of the twentieth century, but above all - the country's first representative of the school of religious existentialism, consistently opposes freedom of spirit Procrustean bed of objective necessity.
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The Divine and the Human
One of 20th Century's Utmost Existentialism Philosophical Thinkers
Nikolai Berdyaev was one of the most prominent representatives of Russian religious philosophy of the twentieth century, but above all - the country's first representative of the school of religious existentialism, consistently opposes freedom of spirit Procrustean bed of objective necessity.
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The Divine and the Human

The Divine and the Human

The Divine and the Human

The Divine and the Human

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Overview

One of 20th Century's Utmost Existentialism Philosophical Thinkers
Nikolai Berdyaev was one of the most prominent representatives of Russian religious philosophy of the twentieth century, but above all - the country's first representative of the school of religious existentialism, consistently opposes freedom of spirit Procrustean bed of objective necessity.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940158839207
Publisher: LONDON : GEOFFREY BLES
Publication date: 01/19/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 274
File size: 547 KB

About the Author

About the Author
Nikolai Alexandrovich Berdyaev was born at Kiev in 1874 of an aristocratic family. He commenced his education in a military school and subsequently entered the University of Kiev. There he accepted Marxism and took part in political agitation, for which he was expelled. At twenty-five he was exiled from Kiev to the north of Russia and narrowly escaped a second period of exile shortly before the Revolution. Before this, however, he had broken with Marxism in company with Sergius Bulgakov, and in 1909 he contributed to a symposium which reaffirmed the values of Orthodox Christianity. After the October Revolution he was appointed by the Bolshevists to a chair of philosophy in the University of Moscow, but soon fell into disfavour for his independent political opinions. He was twice imprisoned and in 1922 was expelled from the country. He settled first in Berlin, where he opened a Russian Academy of Philosophy and Religion. Thence he moved to Clamart near Paris, where he lectured in a similar institution.
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