Marcin PodbielskiCorresponding author

A Century of Separation
A Note from the Editor

Article
18/2 - Fall 2013, pages 135-138
Date of online publication: 26 juillet 2015
Date of publication: 30 décembre 2013

Abstract

Russian Philosophy has long been studied and admired in countries of what may broadly be termed the West. Translations into English, German, or French, of authors like Semyon Frank, Nikolai Berdayev, and Vladimir Solovyov, and of writers like Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Mikhail Bulgakov, are readily available these days. It is only natural that the works of these figures should have attracted the interest of Christian thinkers, who are able to see in them an excellent example of reflection being not only inspired by faith but also applied to areas rarely at the focal point of theology—such as, for instance, proposals for organizing societies on the basis of personal ties, as advocated by Frank. Moreover, thinkers who have grown up in a Christian environment may find in their texts an important example of how faith can serve as an inspirational source of ideas that carry a significant appeal for non-believers, too. In this issue of Forum Philosophicum, we offer our readers some papers in which ideas of this kind, such as the kenotic theory of freedom of Berdayev, are discussed by scholars, and various influences in Russian philosophy are traced back to their antecedent influences.

Cite this article

Podbielski, Marcin. “A Century of Separation: A Note from the Editor.” Forum Philosophicum 18, no. 2 (2013): 135–8. doi:10.35765/forphil.2013.1802.08.