Jump to content
Plato in Poland 1800–1950 / III. Plato interwoven within the fabric of Polish philosophy
Plato in Poland 1800–1950 / III. Plato interwoven within the fabric of Polish philosophy
Contents
Chapter
Expand
|
Collapse
Page
1–10
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
1–10
Details
11–22
Introduction
11–22
Details
0.1 The scope of the research
Details
0.2 The problem of reception in studies on the history of philosophy
Details
23–61
I. Passive acceptance of Plato’s image
23–61
Details
1.1 A.I. Zabellewicz, J.K. Szaniawski, and Polish Kantianism in relation to Plato
Details
1.2 F. A. Kozłowski and Hegelianism
Details
1.3 W. Tatarkiewicz and the Marburg neo-Kantianism
Details
62–130
II. Recognition of Plato as a problem. Plato assessment and interpretations
62–130
Details
2.1 Plato as material to be improved according to P. Semenenko
Details
2.2 Plato as an opponent of democracy and a precursor of socialism from the perspective of B. Limanowski
Details
2.3 Plato as a revolutionary from the perspective of a conservative thinker, W. Dzieduszycki
Details
2.4 Plato as a precursor of modern democracy as viewed by E. Jarra, a philosopher of law
Details
131–428
III. Plato interwoven within the fabric of Polish philosophy
131–428
Details
3.1 Christianisation of Plato by S. Pawlicki
Details
J. Adamski as an advocate of using Plato for the purposes of neo-scholasticism
Details
The early works of S. Pawlicki and the development of his method in the history of philosophy
Details
The unfinished Plato in the History of Greek Philosophy
Details
Plato’s late works in Pawlicki’s manuscripts
Details
Reception and assessment of Pawlicki’s interpretation of Plato
Details
W. Potempa and his critical assessment of Pawlicki’s Christianised Plato
Details
3.2 Plato as the founder of the tenets of Messianism according to W. Lutosławski
Details
Early preparatory studies
Details
Opus vitae in English and Plato’s philosophical development
Details
Reaction to Plato’s Logic in Poland
Details
Reaction of English and German-speaking researchers to Plato’s Logic
Details
The neo-Kantians and Lutosławski’s Plato
Details
Polemic with Paul Shorey
Details
The ideological link between Plato and Messianism
Details
Epilogue: Plato as a remedy for the post-war situation
Details
3.3 S. Lisiecki’s ‘Platonising’
Details
Published works
Details
Manuscripts
Details
3.4 W. Witwicki’s alliance with Plato
Details
The literary origins of his work
Details
The Symposium as the inauguration of his work as a translator
Details
The Lvov series of translations
Details
The Warsaw series of translations
Details
Philosophical symmachy
Details
Digression: Witwicki’s Plato and the Lvov-Warsaw school
Details
Epilogue: Plato as jointly responsible for World War II and the post-war situation
Details
3.5 Plato as a mathematician and a logician
Details
Z. Jordan and the methods of the Lvov school applied to Plato
Details
Plato as a starting point for B. Bornstein’s speculative philosophy
Details
429–440
Conclusions
429–440
Details
441–474
Bibliography
441–474
Details
475–480
Appendix: Chronological list of Polish translations of Plato’s dialogues
475–480
Details
Durchsuchen Sie das Werk
Geben Sie ein Keyword in die Suchleiste ein
CC-BY-NC-ND
Access
Plato in Poland 1800–1950 , page 131 - 428
III. Plato interwoven within the fabric of Polish philosophy
Autoren
Tomasz Mróz
DOI
doi.org/10.5771/9783896659477-131
ISBN print: 978-3-89665-946-0
ISBN online: 978-3-89665-947-7
Chapter Preview
Chapter Preview
Share
Current chapter
Complete document
Download citation
RIS
BibTeX
Copy DOI link
doi.org/10.5771/9783896659477-131
Share by email
Video schließen
Share by email Nomos eLibrary
Recipient*
Sender*
Message*
Your name
Send message
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy
and
Terms of Service
apply.