
Contents
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Life and Works Life and Works
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Philosophical Influences and Ideas Philosophical Influences and Ideas
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God and Man God and Man
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Christian Apologetics and the Inner Experience of Truth Christian Apologetics and the Inner Experience of Truth
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Ecumenism and the Church Ecumenism and the Church
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Frank’s Christian Humanism: Ethics, Politics, History Frank’s Christian Humanism: Ethics, Politics, History
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Works Cited Works Cited
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Further Reading Further Reading
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29 Semyon Frank
Get accessPhilip Boobbyer is Reader in History at the University of Kent in Canterbury (UK). His publications include: S. L. Frank: The Life and Work of a Russian Philosopher 1877–1950 (Ohio University Press, 1995), Conscience, Dissent and Reform in Soviet Russia (Routledge, 2005) and The Spiritual Vision of Frank Buchman (Penn State University Press, 2013).
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Published:02 September 2020
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Abstract
Semyon Liudvigovich Frank was a proponent of ‘all-unity’, who sought to overcome the polarities in modern thought through a universal philosophical synthesis. Jewish by background, he was drawn to Marxism in his youth; but after some involvement in politics he grew disenchanted with the revolutionary movement. After 1905, he embarked on a career as a professional philosopher. He converted to Orthodoxy in 1912. Following deportation from Russia in 1922 he lived in Germany, France, and Britain. His main works of religious philosophy were written in emigration, although his underlying philosophical outlook was formed before the revolution. Most of the main themes in Christian theology were addressed in his work, even though theology was not his primary focus. Ontological questions were his main preoccupation. He saw his ideas as belonging to the Platonist tradition. His thinking was antinomian; following Nicholas of Cusa, he sought to demonstrate the ‘coincidence of opposites’. There was an apophatic tendency in his work, as well as an experiential emphasis. He saw evil as a kind of non-existent reality. He rejected charges of pantheism. There were echoes of Vladimir Soloviev’s thought in his writings, but this similarity only became clear to him after his philosophical system was formed. His outlook on the church was ecumenical, although he remained loyal to the Moscow Patriarchate. His social philosophy was personalistic and his political thought gradualist; he advocated a kind of Christian realism or humanism while warning against utopianism.
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