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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1975

Pages: 22-27

Series: Sovietica

ISBN (Hardback): 9789401017503

Full citation:

, "Solovyev's idea of "integral knowledge" and Scheler's "system of conformity"", in: Vladimir Solovyev and Max Scheler: attempt at a comparative interpretation, Berlin, Springer, 1975

Solovyev's idea of "integral knowledge" and Scheler's "system of conformity"

pp. 22-27

in: Helmut Dahm, Vladimir Solovyev and Max Scheler: attempt at a comparative interpretation, Berlin, Springer, 1975

Abstract

"Knowledge in its unity is theosophy."1 We would like to explain this sentence now. "Free theosophy or integral knowledge … must represent the highest condition of the whole of philosophy."2 As such, theosophy constitutes the heart of Solovyev's idea of a cultural, epistemological and historical macrocosm obtained meta-anthropologically on the basis of the facticity of man. "The nature of man as such exhibits three fundamental forms of being (Sein): feeling, thought and the active will. Each of these has two aspects — one exclusively personal, the other social."3

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1975

Pages: 22-27

Series: Sovietica

ISBN (Hardback): 9789401017503

Full citation:

, "Solovyev's idea of "integral knowledge" and Scheler's "system of conformity"", in: Vladimir Solovyev and Max Scheler: attempt at a comparative interpretation, Berlin, Springer, 1975