The academic virtues in public discussion: Adam Schaff and the campaign against the Lvov-Warsaw School in post-war Poland
The academic virtues in public discussion: Adam Schaff and the campaign against the Lvov-Warsaw School in post-war Poland
Author(s): Aleksei LokhmatovSubject(s): Philosophy, Social Sciences, Education, History of Philosophy, 19th Century Philosophy, History of Education, Sociology of Education
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: public discussions; academic virtues; Stalinism; Adam Schaff; the Lvov-Warsaw School; Polish philosophy
Summary/Abstract: Adam Schaff was at the front of the ideological campaign organized in post-war Poland during the wave of Stalinization. By attempting to adapt the Soviet “model” of public discussion to Polish academia, Schaff wanted to teach the representatives of the Lvov-Warsaw School of logic how to lead a scholarly debate. Schaff ’s group consisted of young scholars from the Instytut Kształcenia Kadr Naukowych [Institute for Education of Scientific Staff] and with critical reviews on the works of Polish logicians they tried to force their opponents to change the basic principles of their academic practice under the new circumstances. Nevertheless, Schaff ’s project failed since, unlike Soviet scholars, the participants in the discussion referred to different academic virtues that made the adaptation of the Soviet model of public discussion impossible.
Journal: Studia Historiae Scientiarum
- Issue Year: 2021
- Issue No: 20
- Page Range: 711-753
- Page Count: 43
- Language: English