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    Defining nothingness: Kazimir Malevich and religious renaissance
    Studies in East European Thought 1-15. forthcoming.
    In the treatise “Suprematism. The World as Objectlessness or Eternal Peace” (1922), Kazimir Malevich positions himself as a “bookless philosopher” who did not consider theories of other philosophers. In fact, the treatise contains a large number of references to philosophers belonging to different traditions. A careful reading shows the extent to which Malevich’s theory is linked to the Russian religious philosophy of the early twentieth century. In my view, Nikolai Berdyaev, Sergei Bulgakov, Pa…Read more
  •  1
    The paper is devoted to discussion of the concepts of existence in the tradition of analytic philosophy, that criticize Quine's conception, presented in his "On What There Is". The conceptions of possible worlds, universals, non-existent objects and fundamental basis , from within the phenomenology and continental philosophy