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Ibn Sina Foundation

The work "Panhuman vs. Universal" by A. Smirnov published

28.06.2019

The work "Panhuman vs. Universal" focuses on the conceptualization logic explaining the interior mechanism of consciousness and the culture unwrapped in the systems. It suggests the understanding of the consciousness’ activity as an epistemic chain, that is a provisional build-up line of cognitive actions’ complexity connected with the initial intuition of the subject-predicate agglutination and equipped withleast three significant levels: sensory perception, conventional speech and theoretical reasoning, including formal argumentation. It contains an explanation of initial intuitions for the substantial conceptualization logic unwrapped in the context of the European culture and the processual logic unwrapped in the context of the Arab Muslim culture. The work also raises the question of the Russian culture and demonstrated that the difference of conceptualization logics per se implies the indispensable plurality of the mind and excludes the justifiability of accepting a culture unwrapping only one of possible logics as a universal one. The book mentions the idea of the Panhuman as an alternative. It also describes the genesis and the development of the Panhuman in the Russian thought and examines the concepts of the classical Eurasianism.

The book was written by Andrey Smirnov, a Soviet and Russian philosopher, PhD in Philosophy, academician and director of the RAS Institute of Philosophy.

The following works of A. Smirnov were published earlier with the support of the Ibn Sina Islamic Culture Research Foundation and the RAS Institute of Philosophy: "Selected works" of Ibn Arabi (volumes I and II) (2013, 2014), "The history of the Arab Muslim philosophy: anthology" (2013), "The history of the Arab Muslim philosophy: study guide" (2013), "The scattered and the organized: cognitive methods of the Arab Muslim culture" (2017), "The scattered and the organized: strategies for organizing semantic space in the Arab Muslim culture" (2015), "The event and objects” (2018).

Last modified on 2019 Jul 02