Lev Shestov’s philosophy of freedom

被引:0
作者
Julia V. Sineokaya
Anton M. Khokhlov
机构
[1] Institute of Philosophy,Department of the History of Western Philosophy
[2] Russian Academy of Sciences,undefined
来源
Studies in East European Thought | 2016年 / 68卷
关键词
Russian philosophy; Religious existentialism; Philosophy of freedom; Absurdity; Lev Shestov;
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学科分类号
摘要
This article is devoted to the problem of freedom in the writings of the Russian philosopher, Lev Shestov. For him, attaining spiritual freedom means overcoming existential anxiety about fate (to borrow Paul Tillich’s term) on the way to comprehending God. Shestov’s work is aimed at liberating man from the power of an extrinsic anonymous, objective order that consigns man to suffering here on earth. By correlating the interpretation of existential experience and the Bible Shestov arrives at his own religious-philosophical concept of freedom. The authors of this article examine three mythologemes that are fundamental to Shestov’s philosophy of freedom: “creation out of nothing” (as the ultimate expression of dispensation), “the Fall” (as the metaphysical ground for irrationalism), and eschatological “annulment of past evil” (as the moral correlate of theistic voluntarism).
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页码:213 / 227
页数:14
相关论文
共 2 条
  • [1] Shestov L(1991)Ugroza sovremennykh varvarov [The menace of modern barbarians] Vestnik Akademii Nauk SSSR [Bulletin of the Academy of Sciences] 5 181-195
  • [2] Shestov L(2001)Chto takoe russkii bolshevizm? [What Is Russian Bolshevism] Istoriia filosofii[History of Philosophy] 8 109-120