Ernest Leopoldovich Radlov or Ernst Radlow (Russian: Эрнест Леопольдович Радлов, 1854—1928) was a Russian neo-Kantian philosopher and historian of philosophy of German origin. Co-founder of the St. Petersburg Philosophical Society, director of the Public Library in Petrograd (1918—1924).
He was also a friend and editor of Vladimir Solovyov.
Radlov introduced Thomas Masaryk to Russian philosophy in conversations over the summer of 1882.[1]
Works
- Etika Aristotelia [Aristotle's Ethics], 1884
- “Ob istolkovanii” Aristotelia [On the interpretation of Aristotle], 1891
- (ed.) Pisʹma [Letters] of Vladimir Solovyov, 3 vols, 1908.
- Solov’eva o svobode voli [Solovyov on free will], 1911
- Ocherk istorii russkoǐ filosofii [Essay on the history of Russian philosophy], 1912. [Translated into German by Margarete Woltner as Russische Philosophie (1925) and into Italian by Ettore Lo Gatto as Storia della filosofia russa (1925).]
- Filosofskiy slovar’ [Dictionary of philosophy], 1913
References
- ↑ Josef Novák (1988). On Masaryk: Texts in English and German. Rodopi. p. 224. ISBN 90-6203-979-0.
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