Is the history of philosophy possible on the principles of transcendentalism? In memory of Röd: Round-table sitting of Kantian society

Authors

Abstract

Kantian society in Ukraine has held the philosophical seminar in memory of Wolfgang Röd (1926–2014) on September 22, 2014. W. Röd was a member of Kantian society in Ukraine from 1999 and took part more than once in the Society discussions. Wolfgang Röd was an outstanding Austrian philosopher and philosophy historian. First scientific works by W. Röd were written in the framework of German traditions of the history of philosophy. He has formulated his methodological position as critical history of philosophy. Röd was one of contemporary philosophers who studied in detail the problem of the theory and metatheory of experience which he understood in terms of transcendental philosophy. The last of the fourteen-volume History of Philosophy by Röd (published in 2014 in co-authorship with P. Basile) was dedicated to pragmatism and tradition of analytical philosophy.

Author Biographies

Mykhailo Minakov, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy

doctor of sciences in philosophy, associate professor, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies

Vitali Terletsky, Research Institute of Ukraine Studies

PhD in philosophy, senior researcher

Oleg Khoma, Vinnytsia National Technical University

Doctor of sciences in philosophy, Professor, Head of the Department of Philosophy

Vakhtang Kebuladze, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv

Doctor of Philosophy, Associated professor of philosophy department, co-chairman of Ukrainian Phenomenological Society

Downloads

Abstract views: 642

Published

2017-05-01

How to Cite

Minakov, M., Terletsky, V., Khoma, O., & Kebuladze, V. (2017). Is the history of philosophy possible on the principles of transcendentalism? In memory of Röd: Round-table sitting of Kantian society. Filosofska Dumka, (2), 5–14. Retrieved from https://dumka.philosophy.ua/index.php/fd/article/view/76

Issue

Section

TOPIC OF THE ISSUE

Metrics

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 1 2 3 4 5 6 > >>