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dc.contributor.authorKołodziejczyk, Artur
dc.date.accessioned2020-11-23T14:56:36Z
dc.date.available2020-11-23T14:56:36Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11089/32583
dc.description.abstractThe dissertation's thesis is twofold. First of all the twentieth-century experience of evil, in the form of a historical event of Shoah, is an impulse that prompts a new question about God and human being in relation to the current philosophical tradition, as well as seeking new answers in the perspective of the philosophical reflection of Hannah Arendt and Hans Jonas. The second thesis is the conviction that mentioned questions (specific to the area of philosophy of God and philosophy of human being) are not distanced from each other but – especially by the axiological component present in them – they open a common sphere of discourse and they are complementary. The research goal is a critical analysis of the thoughts of H. Arendt and H. Jonas in the context of their own suggestions for answers to the questions about God and human being in the context of the experience of the Holocaust, and to show the constructiveness of their thoughts in the perspective of philosophy of God and philosophy of human being. The method used for this work is twofold. First of all is used for the phenomenological method, which is particularly important during the analysis of source texts. This method is based on looking at the problem as it appears, with the suspension of any previous knowledge on the topic. Thanks to this, the subject of reflection, for example a given source text, can speak for itself. The second method is the critical method which is a critical analysis of source texts in the field of philosophical work topics. Completed archival and library queries allowed to diagnose the scope of research status in the subject of the dissertation and also allowed to find deficiencies. Because of these queries, the dissertation also shows new problems and issues. The footnotes contain information about such bibliographic items – from Polish and foreign archives and libraries – which allowed some of the original theses appearing in this dissertation to be presented. These foreign queries were conducted during research internships at the Tel Aviv University, as well as at The New School in New York. Many of the foreign bibliographic items used in this work are not available in the collections of Polish libraries. Considering the conducted queries of Polish and foreign bibliographic and archival sources, it should be noted that the starting point in the philosophical reflection of H. Arendt and H. Jonas are specific historical experiences. Secondly, the idea of God after the experience of the Holocaust is expressed in the works of H. Jonas – but in an implicit way – on the new philosophical vision of human being. There is also a thesis that the imperative of responsibility, promoted by H. Jonas, is a ethical key imperative in the philosopher's point of view and is also associated with the idea of God after the act of tsimtsum, which means: self-destruction of God during the moment of the creation of the world. Criticism also goes to the form of the idea of God, proclaimed by H. Jonas, after the mentioned act of tsimtsum – as extremely different from the traditional understanding of this issue. It must be remembered that H. Jonas emphasizes many times that his considerations oscillate within the Jewish tradition. There is also shown that some elements of this tradition are arbitrarily modified by the philosopher. In this paper is presented too the criticism of the opinion that the main philosophical issue in the studies of H. Arendt is the Holocaust. There is also a thesis that does not appear directly in the philosopher’s texts: it is a statement that the historical event of totalitarianism has contributed to the revision of previous questions about authority, human freedom and condition, the possibility of human action, as well as to the revision of questions about evil. Moreover, there is also the thesis that in H. Arendt's philosophical writings there are such elements that allow to recognize, that totalitarianism made a review of functioning questions about eschatological reality. There is also a conviction according to which the tragic event of the Shoah showed almost the divine omnipotence of human possibilities in the form of creating a system of total power – it is totalitarianism. The modern era still has the hallmark of extreme evil in the form of Auschwitz and Kolyma. Both of these terms are for some a symbol of God's silence, and for others – an experience of extreme evil and betrayal committed by human being. It is also hard to deny that the twentieth century was largely marked by great political friction, which evolved into great global armed conflicts, abounding in unprecedented cruelty, of which Auschwitz and Kolyma became the most significant symbols. Reflection on the Shoah event and totalitarianism, which transforms the philosophical discourse about God and human being, is the main topic of the dissertation.pl_PL
dc.description.sponsorshipThe research on this dissertation has been supported financially by the Government of the State of Israel and by the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange ("Prom" programme).pl_PL
dc.language.isoplpl_PL
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Międzynarodowe*
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/*
dc.subjectHolokaustpl_PL
dc.subjectSzoahpl_PL
dc.subjectfilozofiapl_PL
dc.subjectantropologia filozoficznapl_PL
dc.subjectzłopl_PL
dc.subjectBógpl_PL
dc.subjectczłowiekpl_PL
dc.subjectHannah Arendtpl_PL
dc.subjectHans Jonaspl_PL
dc.subjecttotalitaryzmpl_PL
dc.titleSzoah jako impuls do rewizji filozoficznych pytań o Boga i człowieka - w ujęciu Hannah Arendt i Hansa Jonasapl_PL
dc.typePhD/Doctoral Dissertationpl_PL
dc.rights.holderArtur Kołodziejczykpl_PL
dc.page.number243pl_PL
dc.contributor.authorAffiliationInstitute of Philosophy of the Faculty of Philosophy and History of the University of Lodzpl_PL
dc.contributor.authorBiographicalnote(born 1991) philosopher, theologian; PhD candidate at the Department of Contemporary Philosophy of the Institute of Philosophy of the University of Lodz, where preparing a doctoral dissertation on the impact of the Holocaust on the post-war philosophy of God and human being - according to Hannah Arendt and Hans Jonas. Member of Collegium Invisibile since 2013. He worked as a researcher at the Philosophy Department of the Tel Aviv University, where he conducted research related to his dissertation and didactic classes in contemporary Polish philosophy. In 2019, he received a grant "Prom" of the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange for a research internship at The New School for Social Research in New York.pl_PL
dc.contributor.authorEmailUL0201837@edu.uni.lodz.plpl_PL
dc.dissertation.directorGlinkowski, Witold
dc.dissertation.reviewerKłoczowski, Jan
dc.dissertation.reviewerSzulakiewicz, Marek
dc.date.defence2020-12-15
dc.disciplinefilozofiapl_PL


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