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Vladimir Sergeevich Solovev
Владимир Соловьев
Life Time
21 September 1909 - 10 July 1968
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Vladimir Sergeyevich Solovyov / B> was born in Moscow on January 16 (28), 1853, the son of the historian S. M. Solovyov. He graduated with a gold medal from the First Moscow Gymnasium, entered the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of Moscow University, in the Department of Natural Sciences; from the 3rd year he moved to the faculty of history and philology; in 1873 he passed the candidate exam, after which he stayed one academic year as a freelist at the Moscow Theological Academy. In 1874,
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Vladimir Sergeyevich Solovyov / B> was born in Moscow on January 16 (28), 1853, the son of the historian S. M. Solovyov. He graduated with a gold medal from the First Moscow Gymnasium, entered the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of Moscow University, in the Department of Natural Sciences; from the 3rd year he moved to the faculty of history and philology; in 1873 he passed the candidate exam, after which he stayed one academic year as a freelist at the Moscow Theological Academy.
In 1874, he defended his thesis at St. Petersburg University for a master’s degree in philosophy and was elected a full-time assistant professor of philosophy at Moscow University; he also lectured at the highest women’s courses in Gerrier. In 1875-76 he traveled to England, France, Italy and Egypt.
In 1877 he left Moscow University and was appointed a member of the Academic Committee of the Ministry of Public Education. In 1880 he received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, in the same year he began to lecture at St. Petersburg University as a privatdocent. From September 1891 he was the editor of the philosophical department in the dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron.
Solovyov’s first published philosophical work is the book “The Crisis of Western Philosophy: Against the Positivists” (1874); it was followed by “Criticism of Abstract Principles” (1880), “Reading about God-Manhood” (1881), “Religious Foundations of Life” (1884), “Magomet, His Life and Religious Teaching” (1896), “Justification of Good” (1897).