Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Andrzej Walicki

    May 15, 1930 – August 20, 2020
    Andrzej Walicki
    Filozofia polskiego romantyzmu 2
    Spotkania z Isaiahem Berlinem
    W kręgu konserwatywnej utopii
    Polskie zmagania z wolnością
    Encounters with Isaiah Berlin
    The flow of ideas
    • 2015

      The flow of ideas

      • 876 pages
      • 31 hours of reading

      This history of Russian thought was first published in Polish in 1973 and subsequently appeared 2005 in a revised and expanded publication. The current volume begins with Enlightenment thought and Westernization in Russia in the 17th century and moves to the religious-philosophical renaissance of first decade of the 20th century. This book provides readers with an exhaustive account of relationships between various Russian thinkers with an examination of how those thinkers relate to a number of figures and trends in Western philosophy and in the broader history of ideas.

      The flow of ideas
    • 2011

      Encounters with Isaiah Berlin

      Story of an Intellectual Friendship

      • 228 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      The volume contains Isaiah Berlin’s letters to his Polish friend, Andrzej Walicki, and Walicki’s detailed account of Berlin’s role in his life. Berlin actively promoted Walicki’s books on Russian intellectual history not only because of his own interest in the subject. Above all he wanted to promote Russian intellectual history as a separate, internationally recognized field of study and, therefore, warmly welcomed Walicki’s firm intention to study it in a systematic way, with the aim of providing a comprehensive synthesis of all important currents in pre-Revolutionary Russian thought. Already at their meeting Berlin discovered in Walicki a promising candidate to help him in laying foundations for Russian intellectual history as a legitimate part of the universal history of ideas; as a discipline rewarding in itself and particularly relevant for rediscovering the great traditions of the Russian intelligentsia and setting them against the stifling dogmas of Soviet totalitarianism.

      Encounters with Isaiah Berlin