This HTML5 document contains 340 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation.

The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata.

Namespace Prefixes

PrefixIRI
dbpedia-dehttp://de.dbpedia.org/resource/
dctermshttp://purl.org/dc/terms/
dbohttp://dbpedia.org/ontology/
n18http://dbpedia.org/resource/File:
foafhttp://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/
dbpedia-kohttp://ko.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-cahttp://ca.dbpedia.org/resource/
n32http://wwics.si.edu/topics/pubs/
n22https://global.dbpedia.org/id/
n27http://theanarchistlibrary.org/HTML/
dbpedia-ruhttp://ru.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbthttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Template:
dbpedia-ukhttp://uk.dbpedia.org/resource/
rdfshttp://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#
dbpedia-nnhttp://nn.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-ethttp://et.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-srhttp://sr.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-pthttp://pt.dbpedia.org/resource/
n12http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/
dbpedia-nohttp://no.dbpedia.org/resource/
rdfhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
dbpedia-arhttp://ar.dbpedia.org/resource/
owlhttp://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#
dbpedia-mkhttp://mk.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbpedia-frhttp://fr.dbpedia.org/resource/
wikipedia-enhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
dbphttp://dbpedia.org/property/
dbchttp://dbpedia.org/resource/Category:
provhttp://www.w3.org/ns/prov#
xsdhhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#
wikidatahttp://www.wikidata.org/entity/
dbpedia-nlhttp://nl.dbpedia.org/resource/
dbrhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/

Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Virgin_Soil
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:David_Apotheker
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Desire_(1921_film)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:List_of_last_words_(19th_century)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Cultural_radicalism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Varfolomey_Zaytsev
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbp:movement
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nikolai_Ishutin
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbp:movement
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anarchism_in_Georgia
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anarchism_in_Russia
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anarchism_in_Switzerland
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Maxim_Antonovich
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbp:movement
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nihilism_(disambiguation)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Church_of_the_Savior_on_Blood
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Circle_of_Tchaikovsky
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Mykhailo_Drahomanov
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anti-nihilistic_novel
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Leonid_Feodorov
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Liu_Shifu
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:What_Is_to_Be_Done%3F_(novel)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nikolai_Shelgunov
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Alexei_Nikolaevich,_Tsarevich_of_Russia
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anarchism_in_China
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anarchism_in_Ukraine
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anarchist_St._Imier_International
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nihilism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nikolai_Utin
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Bazarovism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:History_of_Russia
rdfs:seeAlso
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Assassination_of_Alexander_II_of_Russia
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Dmitry_Karakozov
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbp:movement
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Mihailo_Jovanović_(metropolitan)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Narodnaya_Volya
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Catechism_of_a_Revolutionary
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Sergey_Nechayev
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbp:movement
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Fabergé_egg
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
rdfs:label
Nihilisme russe Moviment nihilista Movimento niilista russo Russian nihilist movement Nihilisme (politieke stroming) Русский нигилизм 허무주의 운동 الحركة العدمية الروسية Russischer Nihilismus Російський нігілізм
rdfs:comment
The Russian nihilist movement was a philosophical, cultural, and revolutionary movement in the Russian Empire during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, from which the broader philosophy of nihilism originated. In Russian, the word nigilizm (Russian: нигилизм; meaning 'nihilism', from Latin nihil 'nothing') came to represent the movement's unremitting attacks on morality, religion, and traditional society. Even as it was yet unnamed, the movement arose from a generation of young radicals disillusioned with the social reformers of the past, and from a growing divide between the old aristocratic intellectuals and the new radical intelligentsia. Русский нигилизм — это умонастроение поколения шестидесятников, сформировавшееся в России на рубеже 1850-х и 1860-х годов. Tип шестидесятника-нигилистa был изобpaжен Typгeневым в oбpaзe Базapoвa в романе «Отцы и дети» (1862). Собственно идеологом нигилизма был Писарев (отрицавший это понятие, заменявший его понятием «реализм»), а также Чернышевский и Добролюбов. В 1862 году по России прокатилась волна поджогов (Петербург и города Поволжья), в организации которых обвиняли «нигилистов» (студентов русского и польского происхождения). Своего рода рупором нигилизма стал журнал «Русское слово», закрытый в 1866 году после покушения Каракозова на царя. В дальнейшем нигилизм повлиял на народничество (c 1870-х) и большевизм (через Чернышевского). К восьмидесятым годам слово «нигилист» существовало в 니힐리스트 운동(Nihilist movement)는 모든 권위를 부정했던 1860년대 러시아의 운동이었다. nihil은 무(無)뜻하는 라틴어에서 비롯 되었다. 1881년 알렉산더 2세의 암살 이후 니힐리스트들은 정치적 변화를 만들어내기 위해 폭력을 사용하는 이들로 전유럽에 알려지게 되었다. Le nihilisme russe désigne un mouvement intellectuel, philosophique, politique, littéraire et journalistique de gauche particulièrement vivace dans l’Empire russe de la fin des années 1850 jusqu’au début des années 1880. El moviment nihilista va ser un moviment rus en la dècada del 1860 que va rebutjar totes les autoritats. Es deriva del llatí nihil, que significa «res». Després de l'assassinat del tsar Alexandre II el 1881, els nihilistes foren coneguts a tot Europa com a defensors de l'ús de la violència per tal d'aconseguir un canvi polític. De nihilistische beweging (Russisch: нигилизм) was een Russische politieke beweging rond 1860 gekenmerkt door het in twijfel trekken van de geldigheid van alle vormen van vooropgezette ideeën en sociale normen. Het is afgeleid van het Latijnse woord "nihil", dat "niets" betekent. De nihilisten verdedigden de onafhankelijkheid van het individu en choqueerden het Russische establishment. O fenômeno cultural russo conhecido como niilismo desenvolveu-se durante o reinado de Alexandre II (1881-1885), czar de carácter liberal e reformista. A década de 1860 é considerada a década do niilismo. A perda da Guerra da Crimeia (1854-1856), a abertura do regime ao exterior (abertura não só económica, mas também cultural e ideológica) e as relativas liberdades concedidas pelo czar - por exemplo, na imprensa - propiciaram um ambiente adequado para o desenvolvimento dessa nova subcultura. De carácter fundamentalmente intelectual, o niilismo representou uma reação contra as antigas concepções religiosas, metafísicas e idealistas. Neste sentido, os niilistas são considerados uma consequência direta do ocidentalismo russo (sobre o tema ver também ). Os jovens, retratados como rudes e cínico الحركة العدمية الروسية، كانت حركةً ثقافيةً وفلسفيةً ثوريةً في الإمبراطورية الروسية خلال أواخر القرن التاسع عشر وأوائل القرن العشرين، واعتُبرت تمهيدًا للأشكال الفلسفية العدمية الأوسع. استُخدم المُقابل الروسي لكلمة «العدمية» لتوصيف رفض الحركة للمُثل القائمة. انبثقت الحركة -التي لم تكن مسماة بعد- من جيل الشباب الراديكاليين الذين خيّب الإصلاحيون الاجتماعيون آمالهم سابقًا، وانطلقت نتيجةً للانقسام المتزايد بين نخبة المثقفين النبلاء من جهة ونخبة المثقفين غير النبلاء من جهة أخرى. Der russische Nihilismus (lat. nihil ‚nichts‘ und -ismus) umfasst sowohl eine philosophische Strömung als auch eine sozio-kulturelle Bewegung. Hauptmerkmal des russischen Nihilismus ist die Ablehnung von Autoritäten – Staat, Kirche und Familie – und das Streben nach einer freiheitlichen und atheistischen Gesellschaft. Das Studium der (Natur-)Wissenschaften liefert die Erkenntnisse für eine ideale neue Gesellschaftsordnung, Bildung ist der Weg zur Selbstemanzipation. Der russische Nihilismus zeichnet sich durch Niedrigschätzung der Geisteswissenschaften und der Künste aus, die bis zur Anti-Ästhetik gehen kann.
foaf:depiction
n12:Turgenev_by_Repin.jpg n12:N_G_Chernyshevsky.jpg n12:Нечаев_Сергей_Геннадиевич.jpg n12:Bakunin_Nadar.jpg n12:What_is_to_be_Done.jpg n12:Russian_Nihilists_are_being_tied_to_chairs_on_horse-drawn_pl_Wellcome_V0041837.jpg n12:Repin_Nichilista.jpg n12:Dimitri_Pisarev.jpg
dcterms:subject
dbc:Revolutionary_movements dbc:Freemasonry-related_controversies dbc:Philosophical_movements dbc:Political_movements_in_Russia dbc:Russian_philosophy dbc:19th_century_in_the_Russian_Empire dbc:Nihilism dbc:Politics_of_the_Russian_Empire
dbo:wikiPageID
1610469
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1122076192
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Siberia dbr:Rational_egoism dbr:Sophistry dbr:Materialism dbc:Revolutionary_movements dbr:August_Cieszkowski dbr:Crimean_War dbr:Sergey_Stepnyak-Kravchinsky dbr:Forced_labour dbr:Bakuninist dbr:Pierre-Joseph_Proudhon dbr:Aleksey_Pisemsky dbr:Johann_Fichte dbc:Freemasonry-related_controversies dbr:Dmitry_Karakozov dbr:Selfishness dbr:Schism dbr:Cynicism_(contemporary) dbr:James_Buel dbr:Jarosław_Dąbrowski dbr:Steering_committee dbr:Dmitry_Pisarev dbr:Epistemological_skepticism dbr:Tsar_Nicholas_I dbr:Age_of_Enlightenment dbr:Ludwig_Feuerbach dbr:Aleksandr_Pushkin dbr:Vissarion_Belinsky dbr:Routledge_Encyclopedia_of_Philosophy dbr:Nihilist_Faction dbr:Temperament dbr:Ishutin_Circle n18:Dimitri_Pisarev.jpg dbr:Fyodor_Dostoevsky dbr:Libertarian_socialism dbc:Philosophical_movements dbr:Kazan dbr:German_idealism dbr:Sergei_Nechayev dbr:Michael_Allen_Gillespie dbr:Emancipation_reform_of_1861 dbc:Political_movements_in_Russia dbr:Far-left_politics dbr:Nikolay_Dobrolyubov dbr:Cultural_movement dbr:Ludwig_Büchner dbr:Sentimentality dbr:Tsarist_autocracy dbr:Universalism dbr:Russkoye_Slovo dbr:Maxim_Antonovich dbr:Fathers_and_Sons_(novel) dbr:Perm,_Russia dbr:Moral_scepticism dbr:Positivism n18:Turgenev_by_Repin.jpg dbr:Ivan_Turgenev dbr:Nikolai_Obruchev dbr:Empiricist n18:N_G_Chernyshevsky.jpg dbr:Old_Believers dbr:Zemlya_i_volya dbr:Ivan_Pavlov dbr:The_Precipice_(Goncharov_novel) dbr:Political_terrorism dbr:Left_Hegelian dbr:Freemasonry dbr:Egoism dbr:Georg_Hegel dbr:Atheism dbr:Nikolay_Chernyshevsky dbr:Alexander_Dmitrievich_Mikhailov dbr:Revolutionary_movement dbc:Russian_philosophy dbr:Vasily_Kurochkin dbr:Metaphysics dbr:St._Petersburg dbr:German_idealists dbr:Penal_servitude dbr:Anti-nihilistic_novel dbr:Helen_Hundley dbr:Friedrich_Schelling dbr:Nikolay_Ogarev dbr:Nikolai_Nadezhdin dbr:Mock_execution dbr:Poland n18:Нечаев_Сергей_Геннадиевич.jpg dbr:Moscow dbr:Peter_Kropotkin dbr:Carl_Vogt dbr:Ronald_Hingley dbr:Edward_Wasiolek dbr:Mikhail_Bakunin dbr:Revolutionary_socialism dbr:Crime_and_Punishment dbr:Mikhail_Katkov dbr:Viktor_Klyushnikov dbr:Idealism dbr:Moral_skepticism dbr:Notes_from_Underground dbr:Countercultural dbr:Nikolay_Mikhaylovsky dbr:French_Enlightenment dbr:Jacob_Moleschott dbr:Ivan_Sechenov dbr:Subjectivism dbr:Aleksandr_Serno-Solovyevich dbr:Ukraine dbr:Russian_Empire dbr:Aleksandr_Sleptsov dbr:Philosophical_movement dbr:Aleksandr_Vasilevich_Golovnin dbr:Nikolai_Leskov dbr:Nikolai_Shelgunov dbr:Mark_Natanson dbr:Moral_authority dbr:Natural_science dbr:Rational_egoist dbr:Vasilij_Bervi dbr:Vasilij_Bervi-Flerovskij dbr:Petrashevsky_Circle dbr:John_Stuart_Mill dbr:Skepticism dbr:Alexander_II_of_Russia dbr:Literary_criticism dbr:Peter_and_Paul_Fortress dbr:Charles_Darwin dbr:No_Way_Out_(novel) dbr:Sovremennik dbr:Hard_determinism dbr:Nikolai_Serno-Solovyevich dbr:Raznochintsy dbr:Thomas_J._J._Altizer dbr:Alexander_Herzen dbr:Utopian_socialism dbr:Relativist dbr:Political_prisoner dbc:19th_century_in_the_Russian_Empire dbr:Nikolai_Ishutin dbr:Literary_realism dbr:Jean-Baptiste_Lamarck dbr:Russian_Orthodox dbr:Intelligentsia dbr:Antinihilistic_literature dbr:Pyotr_Lavrov dbr:What_Is_to_Be_Done%3F_(novel) dbr:Abstract_thought dbr:Aestheticism dbr:Forced_labour_camp dbr:Progressivism dbc:Nihilism dbr:Bolshevist dbr:Subcultural dbr:Bezdna_unrest dbr:Individualistic dbr:Social_reformer dbr:Kandievka n18:Russian_Nihilists_are_being_tied_to_chairs_on_horse-drawn_pl_Wellcome_V0041837.jpg dbr:Westernizer n18:Repin_Nichilista.JPG n18:Bakunin_Nadar.jpg dbr:Narodism dbr:Political_nihilism dbr:Encyclopædia_Britannica dbr:Nizhny_Novgorod dbr:Russian_Revolution dbr:Family n18:What_is_to_be_Done.jpg dbr:Nicholas_I_of_Russia dbr:Ivan_Goncharov dbr:Cooperative dbr:Schellingian dbr:Narodnaya_Volya dbr:Summer_Garden dbr:Deterministic dbc:Politics_of_the_Russian_Empire dbr:Assassination_of_Alexander_II_of_Russia dbr:Narodniks
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink
n27:Aragorn___Nihilism__Anarchy__and_the_21st_century.html n32:ACF2B0.pdf
owl:sameAs
dbpedia-ru:Русский_нигилизм dbpedia-ar:الحركة_العدمية_الروسية wikidata:Q1494934 dbpedia-nl:Nihilisme_(politieke_stroming) dbpedia-ca:Moviment_nihilista dbpedia-nn:Den_russiske_nihilistrørsla dbpedia-de:Russischer_Nihilismus n22:VNpg dbpedia-mk:Нихилистичко_движење dbpedia-et:Vene_nihilistide_liikumine dbpedia-ko:허무주의_운동 dbpedia-pt:Movimento_niilista_russo dbpedia-fr:Nihilisme_russe dbpedia-no:Den_russiske_nihilistbeveglsen dbpedia-sr:Нихилистички_покрет dbpedia-uk:Російський_нігілізм
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Transliteration dbt:Reflist dbt:Refend dbt:Refbegin dbt:Wiktionary dbt:Wikt-lang dbt:Redirect dbt:Main dbt:Blockquote dbt:ISBN dbt:Short_description dbt:See_also_if_exists dbt:Etymology dbt:Use_mdy_dates dbt:Nsl dbt:Nihilism dbt:Linktext dbt:Use_Oxford_spelling dbt:Quote_box dbt:About dbt:Further dbt:Em
dbo:thumbnail
n12:Repin_Nichilista.jpg?width=300
dbp:align
left
dbp:author
dbr:Ivan_Turgenev
dbp:source
Fathers and Sons, Chapter 5
dbp:width
360
dbo:abstract
الحركة العدمية الروسية، كانت حركةً ثقافيةً وفلسفيةً ثوريةً في الإمبراطورية الروسية خلال أواخر القرن التاسع عشر وأوائل القرن العشرين، واعتُبرت تمهيدًا للأشكال الفلسفية العدمية الأوسع. استُخدم المُقابل الروسي لكلمة «العدمية» لتوصيف رفض الحركة للمُثل القائمة. انبثقت الحركة -التي لم تكن مسماة بعد- من جيل الشباب الراديكاليين الذين خيّب الإصلاحيون الاجتماعيون آمالهم سابقًا، وانطلقت نتيجةً للانقسام المتزايد بين نخبة المثقفين النبلاء من جهة ونخبة المثقفين غير النبلاء من جهة أخرى. عرّف اللاسلطوي الروسي بيوتر كروبوتكتين العدمية -بحسب ما جاء في موسوعة بريتانيكا- على أنها «رمز النضال ضد جميع أشكال الاستبداد والنفاق والاصطناعية، ورمز النضال من أجل الحرية الفردية». اعتُبرت العدمية الروسية -من وجهة نظر فلسفية- عدميةً وشكوكيةً، لكنها لم تنطو على إنكار أحادي للأخلاقيات والمعارف كما افُترض خطًا، إذ لم تتبنَ العدمية الروسية الفكر العبثي بالضرورة. اشتملت العدمية الروسية في المقابل على النظريات الحتمية المجردة، والإلحادية، والمادية، والوضعية، والأنانية العقلانية. وبالتالي، سعت العدمية الروسية إلى استيعاب العناصر الأساسية للفكر التنويري الأوروبي وإعادة تأطيرها بما يتناسب مع الوضع الروسي، جنبًا إلى جنب مع رفضها لمتغربي الجيل السابق. دخل العدميون في صراع حتمي مع السلطات الدينية التابعة للكنيسة الأرثوذكسية، والهياكل الأسرية الصارمة السائدة حينها، والأوتوقراطية القيصرية أيضًا. اقترنت العدمية الروسية بالدرجة الأولى بالنشاطية الثورية على الرغم من عدم انخراط معظم العدميين في السياسة، إذ نظروا إلى السياسة بوصفها وسيلةً اجتماعيةً متقادمةً. اعتقد العدميون الروسيون باستحالة نظم دور إيجابي للسياسة على نحو سليم قبل رفض الظروف الحالية. وفي المقابل، بدأ بعض العدميين في اعتناق مبادئ اجتماعية معينة، لكن بقيت صياغاتهم غامضةً في هذا الصدد. شُوّهت طبيعة العدمية الروسية في جميع أنحاء أوروبا بعد اغتيال القيصر ألكسندر الثاني في عام 1881، إذ وُصفت بأنها إرهاب سياسي وإجرام عنيف. Le nihilisme russe désigne un mouvement intellectuel, philosophique, politique, littéraire et journalistique de gauche particulièrement vivace dans l’Empire russe de la fin des années 1850 jusqu’au début des années 1880. L'apparition du mouvement nihiliste provoque un profond clivage au sein même de l'intelligentsia russe de l'époque, qui se scinde entre « nihilistes » et « antinihilistes ». Pour certains historiens de ce mouvement (par exemple, Sergueï Stepniak-Kravtchinski ou Pierre Kropotkine), celui-ci s'acheva à la fin des années 1860, d'autres le voient se prolonger très au-delà, mais distinguent une première phase plus littéraire, suivie par une phase plus politique. 니힐리스트 운동(Nihilist movement)는 모든 권위를 부정했던 1860년대 러시아의 운동이었다. nihil은 무(無)뜻하는 라틴어에서 비롯 되었다. 1881년 알렉산더 2세의 암살 이후 니힐리스트들은 정치적 변화를 만들어내기 위해 폭력을 사용하는 이들로 전유럽에 알려지게 되었다. Русский нигилизм — это умонастроение поколения шестидесятников, сформировавшееся в России на рубеже 1850-х и 1860-х годов. Tип шестидесятника-нигилистa был изобpaжен Typгeневым в oбpaзe Базapoвa в романе «Отцы и дети» (1862). Собственно идеологом нигилизма был Писарев (отрицавший это понятие, заменявший его понятием «реализм»), а также Чернышевский и Добролюбов. В 1862 году по России прокатилась волна поджогов (Петербург и города Поволжья), в организации которых обвиняли «нигилистов» (студентов русского и польского происхождения). Своего рода рупором нигилизма стал журнал «Русское слово», закрытый в 1866 году после покушения Каракозова на царя. В дальнейшем нигилизм повлиял на народничество (c 1870-х) и большевизм (через Чернышевского). К восьмидесятым годам слово «нигилист» существовало в языке лишь в виде своего рода ругательства, хотя так продолжали называть себя некоторые народники (см. «Нигилистка» Софьи Ковалевской, 1884). O fenômeno cultural russo conhecido como niilismo desenvolveu-se durante o reinado de Alexandre II (1881-1885), czar de carácter liberal e reformista. A década de 1860 é considerada a década do niilismo. A perda da Guerra da Crimeia (1854-1856), a abertura do regime ao exterior (abertura não só económica, mas também cultural e ideológica) e as relativas liberdades concedidas pelo czar - por exemplo, na imprensa - propiciaram um ambiente adequado para o desenvolvimento dessa nova subcultura. De carácter fundamentalmente intelectual, o niilismo representou uma reação contra as antigas concepções religiosas, metafísicas e idealistas. Neste sentido, os niilistas são considerados uma consequência direta do ocidentalismo russo (sobre o tema ver também ). Os jovens, retratados como rudes e cínicos, combateram e ridicularizaram as ideias de seus pais. Essa atitude negativa e de desprezo ficou perfeitamente retratada no personagem do romance "Pais e Filhos", de Turgueniev. No extremo sentimentalismo de seus pais esses jovens só viam uma forma de hipocrisia. Observavam como seus românticos pais exploravam seus servos, maltratavam suas esposas e impunham uma disciplina estrita nos seus lares e, paradoxalmente, logo depois se dedicavam a fazer poemas e a exibir um comportamento ridículo, como ilustrou posteriormente o conhecido anarquista Piotr Kropotkin nas suas "" (1899). Os niilistas rechaçavam e abandonavam em nome do progresso tudo o que não podia ser justificado cientificamente, como superstições, preconceitos e costumes. Criticavam as posições esteticistas na arte por se regozijarem com a beleza do abstracto e por carecer de uma utilidade social real. Adoptaram também uma postura ética utilitarista denominada "egoísmo racional", com base na qual buscaram redefinir as relações sociais em âmbitos como a amizade, o amor e o trabalho. O niilismo foi um movimento cultural que influenciou a juventude aristocrática russa na segunda metade do século XIX. A maioria dos seus adeptos era a favor de reformas democráticas e da abolição da servidão na Rússia, razões pelas quais foram posteriormente perseguidos. Em suas Memórias de um Revolucionário, Piotr Kropotkin o descreve: Em primeiro lugar, o niilista declarou guerra contra o que ele descreveu como "as mentiras convencionais da humanidade civilizada." Sinceridade absoluta era a sua marca registada, e em nome dessa sinceridade ele renunciava, e pedia aos outros que também renunciassem, às superstições, preconceitos, hábitos e costumes que a sua razão não pudesse justificar. Ele recusava a dobrar-se à autoridade excepto à da razão, e na análise de cada instituição social ou hábito ele revoltava-se contra toda sorte de sofisma mais ou menos mascarado.Essas pessoas não tinham nenhum ideal de reconstrução social em mente, nenhuma intenção revolucionária. Elas apenas queriam ensinar a massa de camponeses a ler, instruí-los, dar auxílio médico, e ajudá-los de qualquer forma a sair da escuridão e miséria, e aprender ao mesmo tempo quais eram os seus ideais populares de uma melhor vida social. George Kennan, um americano que visitou a Rússia czarista, também se surpreendeu com a ideia, então prevalecente nos países ocidentais, de que os niilistas russos eram "arremessadores de bombas". Para ele, aqueles eram apenas cidadãos pacíficos, que sinceramente esperavam que o governo melhorasse a situação de seus súbditos. Der russische Nihilismus (lat. nihil ‚nichts‘ und -ismus) umfasst sowohl eine philosophische Strömung als auch eine sozio-kulturelle Bewegung. Hauptmerkmal des russischen Nihilismus ist die Ablehnung von Autoritäten – Staat, Kirche und Familie – und das Streben nach einer freiheitlichen und atheistischen Gesellschaft. Das Studium der (Natur-)Wissenschaften liefert die Erkenntnisse für eine ideale neue Gesellschaftsordnung, Bildung ist der Weg zur Selbstemanzipation. Der russische Nihilismus zeichnet sich durch Niedrigschätzung der Geisteswissenschaften und der Künste aus, die bis zur Anti-Ästhetik gehen kann. De nihilistische beweging (Russisch: нигилизм) was een Russische politieke beweging rond 1860 gekenmerkt door het in twijfel trekken van de geldigheid van alle vormen van vooropgezette ideeën en sociale normen. Het is afgeleid van het Latijnse woord "nihil", dat "niets" betekent. De nihilisten verdedigden de onafhankelijkheid van het individu en choqueerden het Russische establishment. De nihilistische beweging omvatte verschillende denkbeelden. Er waren nihilistische liberalen die tevreden zouden zijn met de invoering van een grondwet en parlement, terwijl andere nihilisten voorstander waren van een (democratische of dictatoriale) staatsocialistische maatschappij, terwijl weer andere nihilisten juist aanhangers waren van het anarchisme. Ook waren er nihilisten die vonden dat de maatschappelijke omstandigheden zo slecht waren dat het vernietigd moest worden, waarbij een constructief politieke programma niet nodig was. Nihilisten werden als volksmenners bestempeld, en na de mislukte aanslag op Tsaar Alexander II stonden zij voornamelijk bekend als voorstanders van het gebruik van geweld als het voornaamste werktuig voor politieke verandering. El moviment nihilista va ser un moviment rus en la dècada del 1860 que va rebutjar totes les autoritats. Es deriva del llatí nihil, que significa «res». Després de l'assassinat del tsar Alexandre II el 1881, els nihilistes foren coneguts a tot Europa com a defensors de l'ús de la violència per tal d'aconseguir un canvi polític. The Russian nihilist movement was a philosophical, cultural, and revolutionary movement in the Russian Empire during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, from which the broader philosophy of nihilism originated. In Russian, the word nigilizm (Russian: нигилизм; meaning 'nihilism', from Latin nihil 'nothing') came to represent the movement's unremitting attacks on morality, religion, and traditional society. Even as it was yet unnamed, the movement arose from a generation of young radicals disillusioned with the social reformers of the past, and from a growing divide between the old aristocratic intellectuals and the new radical intelligentsia. Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin, as stated in the Encyclopædia Britannica, "defined nihilism as the symbol of struggle against all forms of tyranny, hypocrisy, and artificiality and for individual freedom." As only an early form of nihilist philosophy, Russian nihilism saw all the morality, philosophy, religion, aesthetics, and social institutions which were in place as worthless and meaningless but did not necessarily see meaninglessness in all ethics, knowledge, and human life. It did however, incorporate theories of hard determinism, atheism, materialism, positivism, and egoism in an aim to assimilate and distinctively recontextualize core elements of the Age of Enlightenment into Russia while dropping the Westernizer approach of the previous generation. Russian nihilism developed an atmosphere of extreme moral scepticism, at times praising outright selfishness and championing those who held themselves exempt from all moral authority. In its most complete forms it also denied the possibility of common ideals, instead favouring a relativist and individualistic outlook. Nihilists predictably fell into conflict with the Russian Orthodox religious authorities, as well as with prevailing family structures and the Tsarist autocracy. Although most commonly associated with revolutionary activism, most nihilists were in fact not political and instead discarded politics as an outdated stage of humanity. They held that until a destructive programme had overcome the current conditions no constructive programme could be properly formulated, and although some nihilists did begin to develop communal principles their formulations in this regard remained vague. With the widespread revolutionary arson of 1862, a number of assassinations and attempted assassinations of the 1860s and 70s, and the eventual assassination of Tsar Alexander II in 1881, Russian nihilism was fiercely mischaracterized throughout Europe as a doctrine of political terrorism and violent crime. Kropotkin argues that while violence and terrorism were used, this was due to the specific revolutionary context and was not inherent to nihilist philosophy, though historian M. A. Gillespie adds that nihilism was nevertheless at the core of revolutionary thought in Russia throughout the lead-up to the Russian Revolution. Professor T. J. J. Altizer further states that Russian nihilism in fact had its deepest expression in a Bolshevist nihilism of the 20th century.
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Russian_nihilist_movement?oldid=1122076192&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
98348
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Russian_philosophy
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Existentialist_anarchism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:The_Cathedral_Folk
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:The_Adventure_of_the_Golden_Pince-Nez
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Rational_egoism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Russian_materialism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Spiro_Gulabchev
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Russian_Nihilists
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Russian_nihilism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Russian_nihilist
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Russian_nihilists
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Anarcho-nihilist
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nihilism_movement
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nihilist_anarchism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
dbr:Nihilistic_anarchism
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
dbo:wikiPageRedirects
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement
Subject Item
wikipedia-en:Russian_nihilist_movement
foaf:primaryTopic
dbr:Russian_nihilist_movement