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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

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Bogdanov and Lenin

epistemology and revolution

David G. Rowley

pp. 1-19

This paper explains how A. Bogdanov changed from a left Bolshevik impatient for armed insurrection into a moderate proponent of revolution through cultural transformation by placing him in the context of a debate over epistemology among Russian Social Democrats in the early twentieth century. By relying on neo-Kantian epistemology to justify socialist revolution, N. Berdyaev actually began to turn away from Marxism. Lenin espoused a naive realism that was consistent with scientific socialism, but which did not satisfy Bogdanov. Empiriomonism, Bogdanov's neo-Positivist epistemology, led him away from violent revolution and toward a proletarian cultural revolution.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/BF02342514

Full citation:

Rowley, D. G. (1996). Bogdanov and Lenin: epistemology and revolution. Studies in East European Thought 48 (1), pp. 1-19.

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