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dc.contributor.authorPoole, Randall A.-
dc.date.accessioned2019-06-27T16:01:17Z-
dc.date.available2019-06-27T16:01:17Z-
dc.date.issued2019-03-
dc.identifier.citationPoole Randall A. Integral humanisms: Jacques Maritain, Vladimir Soloviev, and the history of human rights. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Philosophy and Conflict Studies, 2019, vol. 35, issue 1, pp. 92–106.en_GB
dc.identifier.otherhttps://doi.org/10.21638/spbu17.2019.108-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11701/15814-
dc.description.abstractToday both the history and philosophical grounding of human rights are matters of great controversy. One prominent figure in the debate is Samuel Moyn, professor of law and history at Harvard University. He argues that universal human rights are a relatively recent concept, dating from the 1940s and that they are, more specifically, a product of the Catholic philosophy of that era. The Catholic thinker who reinvented human rights was Jacques Maritain. He was among the founders of the French philosophical movement known as personalism, which he fashioned into his own Christian (or “integral”) humanism. By 1940, he was turning integral humanism into an explicit and robust defense of human rights. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights followed in 1948, and Maritain was one of its intellectual architects. Decades before Maritain, however, another tradition of Christian personalism had already developed into a theory of human rights. This tradition was Russian neo-idealism. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it combined Orthodox Christian personalism with a Kantian conception of human dignity to produce a theoretically sophisticated defense of human rights. The leading figure in this development was Russia’s greatest religious philosopher, Vladimir Soloviev. After the Russian Revolution, the intellectual legacy of Soloviev and Russian neo- idealism was transmitted by Nikolai Berdiaev and the Russian philosophical emigration to interwar France, where it helped form the milieu in which Maritain’s thought took shape. Indeed, Maritain’s “integral humanism” is strikingly similar to Soloviev’s Christian humanism.en_GB
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherSt Petersburg State Universityen_GB
dc.relation.ispartofseriesVestnik of St Petersburg University. Philosophy and Conflict Studies;Volume 35; Issue 1-
dc.subjecthuman dignityen_GB
dc.subjecthuman rightsen_GB
dc.subjectliberalismen_GB
dc.subjectpersonalismen_GB
dc.subjectChristian humanismen_GB
dc.subjectRussian neo-idealismen_GB
dc.subjectdeificationen_GB
dc.subjectbogochelovechestvoen_GB
dc.subjectKanten_GB
dc.subjectJacques Maritainen_GB
dc.subjectVladimir Solovieven_GB
dc.subjectNikolai Berdiaeven_GB
dc.titleIntegral humanisms: Jacques Maritain, Vladimir Soloviev, and the history of human rightsen_GB
dc.typeArticleen_GB
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