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(1975) Vladimir Solovyev and Max Scheler: attempt at a comparative interpretation, Dordrecht, Springer.
"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
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-1748-0_2
Full citation:
Dahm, H. (1975). Solovyev's idea of "integral knowledge" and Scheler's "system of conformity", in Vladimir Solovyev and Max Scheler: attempt at a comparative interpretation, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 22-27.
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