ORIGEN IN RUSSIAN PHILOSOPHY: FROM GREGORY SKOVORODA TO NIKOLAI BERDYAEV Cover Image

ORIGEN IN RUSSIAN PHILOSOPHY: FROM GREGORY SKOVORODA TO NIKOLAI BERDYAEV
ORIGEN IN RUSSIAN PHILOSOPHY: FROM GREGORY SKOVORODA TO NIKOLAI BERDYAEV

Author(s): Alexey Kamenskikh
Subject(s): Metaphysics, Philosophy of Middle Ages, 19th Century Philosophy, Contemporary Philosophy, Philosophy of Religion, Biblical studies
Published by: Новосибирский государственный университет
Keywords: Origen of Alexandria; apocatastasis; Biblical allegorism; Russian religious philosophy; Grigory Skovoroda; Vladimir Solovyov; Sergei Bulgakov; Nicolay Berdyaev; George Florovsky;

Summary/Abstract: Observing the history of reception of Origen’s intellectual heritage by Russian theologians and philosophers of the past few centuries, some key moments and figures are discernible. Those figures are Grigory Skovoroda (1722–1794), Vladimir Solovyov (1853– 1900), Sergei Bulgakov (1871–1944), Nicolay Berdyaev (1874–1948) and George Florovsky (1893–1979). Surely, the history of Origen’s reception in Russia cannot be reduced to them alone: translations were made of Origen’s works and special investigations were conducted into some aspects of his theology. But those authors’ significance for our outline is determined by (1) their key role in the evolution of Russian theological and philosophical thought and – at the same time – (2) by the fact that those authors’ own intellectual evolution and/or (3) their ideas’ reception by their contemporaries proceeded in close connection with the problem of Origen. So the process of reception of Origen’s intellectual heritage in Russia was substantially conditioned by the controversies raging around the key representatives of the so-called “Russian religious philosophy.”

  • Issue Year: IX/2015
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 446-459
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: English
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