The Philosophy of Living Experience

The Philosophy of Living Experience is a book by Alexander Bogdanov, which he wrote in 1911 and published in 1913.[1]:176 [1]:16 Further editions were published in 1920 and 1923 without revision.[1]:16 However the 1923 addition contains an appendix "From Religious to Scientific Monism" delivered at the Institute of Scientific Philosophy in February 1923.[2]:249 This is the book in which Bogdanov most extensively discusses the relationship of his thought to both Karl Marx and Ernst Mach.[1]:18 The book was probably based on a course he developed firstly at the Capri Party School (1909) and subsequently at the Bologna Party School (1911).[3]:263 Indeed Bogdanov cites the unpublished work of Nikifor Vilonov, a worker-philosopher who attended the Capri school.[2] An English translation was published in 2015.[2]

Publishing history

Two manuscripts of the text dating from 1911 is in the Russian Center for the Preservation and Study of Documents of Contemporary History (Rossiiskii tsentr khraneniiai izucheniia dokumentov noveishei istorii): the first consist of chapters I and II (205 pages) and the second covers Chapters III -IV (RTsKhIDNI f 259, op. 1, d17 and d18).[3]

  • The first edition (1913) was published in St Petersburg by Izdanie M. I. Semenova.
  • The second edition (1920) was published in Moscow by Gosizdat.
  • The third edition (1923) was published in both Moscow and St Peterburg by Kniga.
  • An English translation by David Rowley was published by Historical Materialism in conjunction with Brill as Volume 8 of their "Alexander Bogdanov Library".[4]

Content

Introduction

(a) What is philosophy? Who needs it and why? Bogdanov starts this discussion by looking at the unpublished work of two worker-philosophers active at the time: Fedor Kalinin and Nikifor Vilonov.[1]

(b) What came before philosophy?

(c) How did philosophy and science become distinguished from religion?

Chapter I. What is Materialism?

Chapter II. Materialism of the Ancient World

Chapter III. Modern Materialism

Chapter IV. Empiriocriticism

Chapter V. Dialectical Materialism

Chapter VI. Empiriomonism

(a) Labour causality (b) Elements of experience (c) Objectivity (d) Sociomorphism (e) Substitution (f) The picture of the world

Conclusion: The Science of the Future

Appendix: From Religious to Scientific Monism

gollark: Esolangs with linear types WHEN?
gollark: Rust but it's an esolang?
gollark: See, I don't get randomly angry or something. Make me moderator.
gollark: I said they were! I didn't say they weren't! You're interpreting me oddly!
gollark: You are clearly a most 1337 h4xx0r.

References

  1. Jensen, Kenneth (1978). Beyond Marx and Mach. Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing Company.
  2. The Philosophy of Living Experience. www.brill.com. Brill. 2015-10-05. ISBN 9789004306462. Retrieved 28 November 2016.:207
  3. Biggart, John; Gloveli, Georgii; Yassour, Avraham (1998). Bogdanov and his Work. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  4. "Alexander Bogdanov Library". Alexander Bogdanov Library. Bogdanov Library. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.