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Leszek Kołakowski

Leszek Kołakowski (/ˌkɒləˈkɒfski/; Polish: [ˈlɛʂɛk kɔwaˈkɔfskʲi]; 23 October 1927 – 17 July 2009) was a Polish philosopher and historian of ideas. He is best known for his critical analyses of Marxist thought, such as in his three-volume history of Marxist philosophy Main Currents of Marxism (1976). In his later work, Kołakowski increasingly focused on religious questions. In his 1986 Jefferson Lecture, he asserted that "we learn history not in order to know how to behave or how to succeed, but to know who we are".[1]

Leszek Kołakowski
Kołakowski in 1971
Born(1927-10-23)23 October 1927
Died17 July 2009(2009-07-17) (aged 81)
EducationŁódź University
University of Warsaw (PhD, 1953)
Notable workMain Currents of Marxism (1976)
AwardsPeace Prize of the German Book Trade (1977)
MacArthur Fellowship (1983)
Erasmus Prize (1983)
Kluge Prize (2003)
Jerusalem Prize (2007)
Era20th-/21st-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
InstitutionsUniversity of Warsaw
Doctoral students
Main interests
Notable ideas
Humanist interpretation of Marx
Criticism of Marxism

Due to his criticism of Marxism and of the Communist state system, Kołakowski was effectively exiled from Poland in 1968. He spent most of the remainder of his career at All Souls College, Oxford. Despite being in exile, Kołakowski was a major inspiration for the Solidarity movement that flourished in Poland in the 1980s[2] and helped bring about the collapse of the Soviet Union, leading to his being described by Bronisław Geremek as the "awakener of human hopes".[3][full citation needed][4] He was awarded both the MacArthur Fellowship and Erasmus Prize in 1983, the 2003 Kluge Prize, and the 2007 Jerusalem Prize.

Life and career Edit

Kołakowski was born in Radom, Poland. He could not obtain formal schooling during the German occupation of Poland (1939–1945) in World War II, but he read books and took occasional private lessons, passing his school-leaving examinations as an external student in the underground school system. After the war, he studied philosophy at both University of Lodz and University of Warsaw, the latter of which he completed a doctorate at in 1953, focusing on Spinoza from a Marxist viewpoint.[5] He served as a professor and chair of Warsaw University's department of History of Philosophy from 1959 to 1968.[6]

In his youth, Kołakowski became a communist. He signed a denunciation against Władysław Tatarkiewicz.[7] In 1945, he joined the Association of Fighting Youth.[8] From 1947 to 1966, he was a member of the Polish United Workers' Party. His intellectual promise earned him a trip to Moscow in 1950.[9] He broke with Stalinism, becoming a revisionist Marxist advocating a humanist interpretation of Karl Marx. One year after the 1956 Polish October, Kołakowski published a four-part critique of Soviet Marxist dogmas, including historical determinism, in the Polish periodical Nowa Kultura. [pl][10] His public lecture at Warsaw University on the tenth anniversary of Polish October led to his expulsion from the Polish United Workers' Party. In the course of the 1968 Polish political crisis, he lost his job at Warsaw University and was prevented from obtaining any other academic post.[11]

He came to the conclusion that the totalitarian cruelty of Stalinism was not an aberration but a logical end-product of Marxism, whose genealogy he examined in his monumental Main Currents of Marxism, his major work, published in 1976 to 1978.[12]

 
Kołakowski, ANeFo

Kołakowski became increasingly fascinated by the contribution that theological assumptions make to Western culture and, in particular, modern thought. For example, he began his Main Currents of Marxism with an analysis of the contribution that various forms of ancient and medieval Platonism made, centuries later, to the Hegelian view of history. In the work, he criticized the laws of dialectical materialism for being fundamentally flawed and found some of them being "truisms with no specific Marxist content", others "philosophical dogmas that cannot be proved by scientific means" but others being just "nonsense".[13]

Kołakowski defended the role which freedom of will plays in the human quest for the transcendent. His Law of the Infinite Cornucopia asserted a doctrine of status quaestionis: for any given doctrine that one wants to believe, there is never a shortage of arguments by which one can support it.[14] Nevertheless, although human fallibility implies that we ought to treat claims to infallibility with scepticism, our pursuit of the higher (such as truth and goodness) is ennobling.

In 1965, Kołakowski, Maria Ossowska and Tadeusz Kotarbiński drew up a report on the meaning of the concept of message, which was used by the defence in the trial of Jacek Kuroń and Karol Modzelewski who were charged by the communist authorities with "propagating false information" in their Open Letter to the Party.[15]

In 1968, Kołakowski became a visiting professor in the Department of Philosophy at McGill University in Montreal and in 1969 he moved to the University of California, Berkeley.[16] In 1970, he became a senior research fellow at All Souls College, Oxford. He remained mostly at Oxford, but he spent part of 1974 at Yale University, and from 1981 to 1994, he was a part-time professor at the Committee on Social Thought and in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Chicago.[17]

Although the Polish Communist authorities officially banned his works in Poland, underground copies of them influenced the opinions of the Polish intellectual opposition.[18] His 1971 essay Theses on Hope and Hopelessness (full title: In Stalin's Countries: Theses on Hope and Despair),[19][20] which suggested that self-organized social groups could gradually expand the spheres of civil society in a totalitarian state, helped to inspire the dissident movements of the 1970s that led to Solidarity and eventually to the collapse of Communist rule in Eastern Europe in 1989.[21] In 1975, he was one of the signatories of the Letter of 59, an open letter signed by Polish intellectuals who protested against the changes of the Constitution of the People's Republic of Poland that were made by the communist party of Poland in 1975.[22] In the 1980s, Kołakowski supported Solidarity by giving interviews, writing and fundraising.[3]

Kołakowski maintained throughout his life and career a view of Marxism that was distinct from that of existing political regimes, and he relentlessly disputed these differences and defended his own interpretation of Marxism. In a famous article cleverly entitled "What is Left of Socialism", he wrote

The Bolshevik Revolution in Russia had nothing to do with Marxian prophesies. Its driving force was not a conflict between the industrial working class and capital, but rather was carried out under slogans that had no socialist, let alone Marxist, content: Peace and land for peasants. There is no need to mention that these slogans were to be subsequently turned into their opposite. What in the twentieth century perhaps comes closest to the working class revolution were the events in Poland of 1980-81: the revolutionary movement of industrial workers (very strongly supported by the intelligentsia) against the exploiters, that is to say, the state. And this solitary example of a working class revolution (if even this may be counted) was directed against a socialist state, and carried out under the sign of the cross, with the blessing of the Pope.[23]

 
Kolakowski's grave

In Poland, Kołakowski is regarded as a philosopher and historian of ideas but also as an icon for anti-communism and opponents of communism. Adam Michnik has called Kołakowski "one of the most prominent creators of contemporary Polish culture".[24][25] He authored more than 30 books in a career spanning more than five decades.[26] He is also regarded as a great populariser of philosophy. His writings, lectures and TV appearances encouraged people to ask questions, even the most banal ones, and praised the figure of a jester in philosophy – somebody who is "not afraid to challenge even our strongest assumptions and maintains a healthy distance towards everything."[27]

Kołakowski died on 17 July 2009, aged 81, in Oxford, England.[28] In an obituary, philosopher Roger Scruton wrote that Kołakowski was a "thinker for our time" and that, regarding Kołakowski's debates with intellectual opponents, "even if ... nothing remained of the subversive orthodoxies, nobody felt damaged in their ego or defeated in their life's project, by arguments which from any other source would have inspired the greatest indignation".[29]

Awards Edit

 
Kołakowski in 2007

In 1986, the National Endowment for the Humanities selected Kołakowski for the Jefferson Lecture. Kołakowski's lecture "The Idolatry of Politics",[30] was reprinted in his collection of essays Modernity on Endless Trial.[31]

In 2003, the Library of Congress named Kołakowski the first winner of the $1 million John W. Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Humanities.[32][33][26] When announcing the inaugural laureate of the prize, James H. Billington, the Librarian of Congress, emphasized not only Mr. Kolakowski’s scholarship but also his "demonstrable importance to major political events in his own time," adding that “his voice was fundamental for the fate of Poland, and influential in Europe as a whole."[26]

His other awards include the following:

Bibliography Edit

  • Klucz niebieski, albo opowieści budujące z historii świętej zebrane ku pouczeniu i przestrodze (The Key to Heaven), 1957
  • Jednostka i nieskończoność. Wolność i antynomie wolności w filozofii Spinozy (The Individual and the Infinite: Freedom and Antinomies of Freedom in Spinoza's Philosophy), 1958
  • 13 bajek z królestwa Lailonii dla dużych i małych (Tales from the Kingdom of Lailonia and the Key to Heaven), 1963. English edition: Hardcover: University of Chicago Press (October 1989). ISBN 978-0-226-45039-1.
  • Rozmowy z diabłem (US title: Conversations with the Devil / UK title: Talk of the Devil; reissued with The Key to Heaven under the title The Devil and Scripture, 1973), 1965
  • Świadomość religijna i więź kościelna, 1965
  • Od Hume'a do Koła Wiedeńskiego (the 1st edition:The Alienation of Reason, translated by Norbert Guterman, 1966/ later as Positivist Philosophy from Hume to the Vienna Circle),
  • Kultura i fetysze (Toward a Marxist Humanism, translated by Jane Zielonko Peel, and Marxism and Beyond), 1967
  • A Leszek Kołakowski Reader, 1971
  • Positivist Philosophy, 1971
  • TriQuartely 22, 1971
  • Obecność mitu (The Presence of Myth), 1972. English edition: Paperback: University of Chicago Press (January 1989). ISBN 978-0-226-45041-4.
  • ed. The Socialist Idea: A Reappraisal, 1974 (with Stuart Hampshire)
  • Husserl and the Search for Certitude, 1975
  • Główne nurty marksizmu. First published in Polish (3 volumes) as "Główne nurty marksizmu" (Paris: Instytut Literacki, 1976) and in English (3 volumes) as "Main Currents of Marxism" (London: Oxford University Press, 1978). Current editions: Paperback (1 volume): W. W. Norton & Company (17 January 2008). ISBN 978-0393329438. Hardcover (1 volume): W. W. Norton & Company; First edition (7 November 2005). ISBN 978-0393060546.
  • Czy diabeł może być zbawiony i 27 innych kazań, 1982
  • Religion: If There Is No God, 1982
  • Bergson, 1985
  • Le Village introuvable, 1986
  • Metaphysical Horror, 1988. Revised edition: Paperback: University of Chicago Press (July 2001). ISBN 978-0-226-45055-1.
  • Pochwała niekonsekwencji, 1989 (ed. by Zbigniew Menzel)
  • Cywilizacja na ławie oskarżonych, 1990 (ed. by Paweł Kłoczowski)
  • Modernity on Endless Trial, 1990. Paperback: University of Chicago Press (June 1997). ISBN 978-0-226-45046-9. Hardcover: University of Chicago Press (March 1991). ISBN 978-0-226-45045-2.
  • God Owes Us Nothing: A Brief Remark on Pascal's Religion and on the Spirit of Jansenism, 1995. Paperback: University of Chicago Press (May 1998). ISBN 978-0-226-45053-7. Hardcover: University of Chicago Press (November 1995). ISBN 978-0-226-45051-3.
  • Freedom, Fame, Lying, and Betrayal: Essays on Everyday Life, 1999
  • The Two Eyes of Spinoza and Other Essays on Philosophers, 2004
  • My Correct Views on Everything, 2005
  • Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?, 2007
  • Is God Happy?: Selected Essays, 2012
  • Jezus ośmieszony. Esej apologetyczny i sceptyczny, 2014

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Leszek Kołakowski, "The Idolatry of Politics," reprinted in Modernity on Endless Trial (University of Chicago Press, 1990, paperback edition 1997), ISBN 0-226-45045-7, ISBN 0-226-45046-5, ISBN 978-0-226-45046-9, p. 158.
  2. ^ Roger Kimball, . The New Criterion, June 2005
  3. ^ a b Jason Steinhauer (2015). "'The Awakener of Human Hopes': Leszek Kolakowski", John W. Kluge Center at Library of Congress, September 18, 2015; accessed 01 December 2017
  4. ^ "Philosopher Awarded Library's New Kluge Prize". Washington Post. 11 May 2003.
  5. ^ "Leszek Kolakowski: Polish-born philosopher and writer who produced". Independent.co.uk. 29 July 2009. Archived from the original on 14 June 2022. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  6. ^ George Gömöri (29 July 2009). . independent.co.uk. Archived from the original on 14 April 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  7. ^ "Pięć lat temu zmarł Leszek Kołakowski". 21 July 2009.
  8. ^ Andrzej Friszke and Tadeusz Koczanowicz (23 April 2018). "Leszek Kołakowski's political path". eurozine.com. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  9. ^ "Leszek Kolakowski". Telegraph.co.uk. 20 July 2009. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  10. ^ , TIME Magazine, 14 October 1957
  11. ^ Clive James (2007) Cultural Amnesia, p. 353
  12. ^ Gareth Jones (17 July 2009) "Polish philosopher and author Kołakowski dead at 81". Reuters
  13. ^ Kołakowski, Leszek (2005). Main Currents of Marxism. New York: W. W. Norton and Company. p. 909. ISBN 9780393329438.
  14. ^ Kołakowski, Leszek (1982). Religion. New York: Oxford University Press. ASIN B01JXSH3HM., p.16
  15. ^ Roman Graczyk (19 April 2018). ""List otwarty do Partii" Kuronia i Modzelewskiego". interia.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  16. ^ "Leszek Kołakowski (1927-2009)" (in Polish). 15 February 2021. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  17. ^ "Leszek Kołakowski". press.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  18. ^ Leszek Kolakowski: Scholar and Activist The Long Career of the Kluge Prize Winner, Library of Congress Information Bulletin, December 2003.
  19. ^ Leszek Kołakowski (1971): Hope and Hopelessness. In: Survey, vol. 17, no. 3 (80)
  20. ^ Kołakowski : In Stalin's Countries: Theses on Hope and Despair (1971). osaarchivum.org
  21. ^ "Leszek Kolakowski, renowned philosopher, 1927-2009". news.uchicago.edu. 21 July 2009. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  22. ^ Lipiński, Edward (2006). "The Letter of 59 Intellectuals to the Speaker of the Diet of the Polish People's Republic". The Polish Review. The Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America. 51 (1): 95–97. JSTOR 25779595. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  23. ^ "What Is Left of Socialism by Leszek Kolakowski | Articles | First Things". October 2002.
  24. ^ Adam Michnik (18 July 1985) "Letter from the Gdansk Prison," New York Review of Books.
  25. ^ Norman Davies (5 October 1986) "True to Himself and His Homeland," New York Times.
  26. ^ a b c Nicholas Kulish (20 July 2009). "Leszek Kolakowski, Polish Philosopher, Dies at 81". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 May 2023.
  27. ^ Michał Wieczorek (1 February 2019). "10 Polish Philosophers Who Changed the Way We Think". culture.pl. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  28. ^ Leszek Kolakowski. Encyclopædia Britannica
  29. ^ Scruton, Roger. "Leszek Kolakowski: thinker for our time". opendemocracy.net. Open Democracy. Retrieved 27 February 2015.
  30. ^ Jefferson Lecturers. neh.gov
  31. ^ Leszek Kołakowski (1990) "The Idolatry of Politics," p. 158 in Modernity on Endless Trial. University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-45045-7.
  32. ^ "Library of Congress Announces Winner of First John W. Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Humanities and Social Sciences". Loc.gov. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  33. ^ Leszek Kołakowski, "What the Past is For" (speech given on 5 November 2003, on the occasion of the awarding of the Kluge Prize to Kołakowski).
  34. ^ "Leszek Kołakowski". sppwarszawa.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  35. ^ "Leszek Kołakowski". sppwarszawa.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  36. ^ "Doktorzy Honorowi Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego". Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  37. ^ "M.P. 1998 nr 6 poz. 109". isap.sejm.gov.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  38. ^ "Leszek Kołakowski. Portret z nosorożcem". teatrkubus.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  39. ^ "John W. Kluge Prize for Achievement in the Study of Humanity (The John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress)". Loc.gov. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  40. ^ . polinst.hu. Archived from the original on 12 February 2018. Retrieved 22 May 2023.
  41. ^ Simon Williams (23 January 2007). "Polish writer on individual freedom to be awarded Jerusalem Prize". jpost.com. Retrieved 22 May 2023.

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • "Leszek Kołakowski". Information Processing Centre database (in Polish).
  • Leszek Kołakowski – Daily Telegraph obituary
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 10 January 2008)
  • Kołakowski, Leszek (1974). "My correct views on everything: A rejoinder to Edward Thompson's 'Open letter to Leszek Kołakowski'". Socialist Register. 11.
  • The Alienation of Reason (Extract)
  • The Death of Utopia Reconsidered
  • The Complete and Brief Metaphysics
  • Judt, Tony. "Goodbye to All That?" in The New York Review of Books, Vol. 53, No. 14, 21 September 2006 (review-essay on Main Currents of Marxism: The Founders, the Golden Age, the Breakdown by Leszek Kołakowski, translated from the Polish by P.S. Falla. Norton, 2005, ISBN 0-393-06054-3; My Correct Views on Everything by Leszek Kołakowski, edited by Zbigniew Janowski. St. Augustine's, 2004, ISBN 1-58731-525-4; Karl Marx ou l'esprit du monde by Jacques Attali. Paris: Fayard, 2005, ISBN 2-213-62491-7)
  • 1 April 1999, BBC Radio program In Our Time
  • Appearances on C-SPAN

leszek, kołakowski, polish, ˈlɛʂɛk, kɔwaˈkɔfskʲi, october, 1927, july, 2009, polish, philosopher, historian, ideas, best, known, critical, analyses, marxist, thought, such, three, volume, history, marxist, philosophy, main, currents, marxism, 1976, later, work. Leszek Kolakowski ˌ k ɒ l e ˈ k ɒ f s k i Polish ˈlɛʂɛk kɔwaˈkɔfskʲi 23 October 1927 17 July 2009 was a Polish philosopher and historian of ideas He is best known for his critical analyses of Marxist thought such as in his three volume history of Marxist philosophy Main Currents of Marxism 1976 In his later work Kolakowski increasingly focused on religious questions In his 1986 Jefferson Lecture he asserted that we learn history not in order to know how to behave or how to succeed but to know who we are 1 Leszek KolakowskiKolakowski in 1971Born 1927 10 23 23 October 1927Radom PolandDied17 July 2009 2009 07 17 aged 81 Oxford England United KingdomEducationLodz UniversityUniversity of Warsaw PhD 1953 Notable workMain Currents of Marxism 1976 AwardsPeace Prize of the German Book Trade 1977 MacArthur Fellowship 1983 Erasmus Prize 1983 Kluge Prize 2003 Jerusalem Prize 2007 Era20th 21st century philosophyRegionWestern philosophy Polish philosophySchoolContinental philosophy Marxist humanism Warsaw School Perennialism late InstitutionsUniversity of WarsawDoctoral studentsGillian RoseMain interestsIntellectual history Politics ReligionNotable ideasHumanist interpretation of MarxCriticism of MarxismInfluences Erasmus Pascal Spinoza Kant Hegel Marx Engels Brzozowski Lukacs WojtylaInfluenced Merquior Hitchens Solidarity Kimball GescinskaDue to his criticism of Marxism and of the Communist state system Kolakowski was effectively exiled from Poland in 1968 He spent most of the remainder of his career at All Souls College Oxford Despite being in exile Kolakowski was a major inspiration for the Solidarity movement that flourished in Poland in the 1980s 2 and helped bring about the collapse of the Soviet Union leading to his being described by Bronislaw Geremek as the awakener of human hopes 3 full citation needed 4 He was awarded both the MacArthur Fellowship and Erasmus Prize in 1983 the 2003 Kluge Prize and the 2007 Jerusalem Prize Contents 1 Life and career 2 Awards 3 Bibliography 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife and career EditKolakowski was born in Radom Poland He could not obtain formal schooling during the German occupation of Poland 1939 1945 in World War II but he read books and took occasional private lessons passing his school leaving examinations as an external student in the underground school system After the war he studied philosophy at both University of Lodz and University of Warsaw the latter of which he completed a doctorate at in 1953 focusing on Spinoza from a Marxist viewpoint 5 He served as a professor and chair of Warsaw University s department of History of Philosophy from 1959 to 1968 6 In his youth Kolakowski became a communist He signed a denunciation against Wladyslaw Tatarkiewicz 7 In 1945 he joined the Association of Fighting Youth 8 From 1947 to 1966 he was a member of the Polish United Workers Party His intellectual promise earned him a trip to Moscow in 1950 9 He broke with Stalinism becoming a revisionist Marxist advocating a humanist interpretation of Karl Marx One year after the 1956 Polish October Kolakowski published a four part critique of Soviet Marxist dogmas including historical determinism in the Polish periodical Nowa Kultura pl 10 His public lecture at Warsaw University on the tenth anniversary of Polish October led to his expulsion from the Polish United Workers Party In the course of the 1968 Polish political crisis he lost his job at Warsaw University and was prevented from obtaining any other academic post 11 He came to the conclusion that the totalitarian cruelty of Stalinism was not an aberration but a logical end product of Marxism whose genealogy he examined in his monumental Main Currents of Marxism his major work published in 1976 to 1978 12 Kolakowski ANeFoKolakowski became increasingly fascinated by the contribution that theological assumptions make to Western culture and in particular modern thought For example he began his Main Currents of Marxism with an analysis of the contribution that various forms of ancient and medieval Platonism made centuries later to the Hegelian view of history In the work he criticized the laws of dialectical materialism for being fundamentally flawed and found some of them being truisms with no specific Marxist content others philosophical dogmas that cannot be proved by scientific means but others being just nonsense 13 Kolakowski defended the role which freedom of will plays in the human quest for the transcendent His Law of the Infinite Cornucopia asserted a doctrine of status quaestionis for any given doctrine that one wants to believe there is never a shortage of arguments by which one can support it 14 Nevertheless although human fallibility implies that we ought to treat claims to infallibility with scepticism our pursuit of the higher such as truth and goodness is ennobling In 1965 Kolakowski Maria Ossowska and Tadeusz Kotarbinski drew up a report on the meaning of the concept of message which was used by the defence in the trial of Jacek Kuron and Karol Modzelewski who were charged by the communist authorities with propagating false information in their Open Letter to the Party 15 In 1968 Kolakowski became a visiting professor in the Department of Philosophy at McGill University in Montreal and in 1969 he moved to the University of California Berkeley 16 In 1970 he became a senior research fellow at All Souls College Oxford He remained mostly at Oxford but he spent part of 1974 at Yale University and from 1981 to 1994 he was a part time professor at the Committee on Social Thought and in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Chicago 17 Although the Polish Communist authorities officially banned his works in Poland underground copies of them influenced the opinions of the Polish intellectual opposition 18 His 1971 essay Theses on Hope and Hopelessness full title In Stalin s Countries Theses on Hope and Despair 19 20 which suggested that self organized social groups could gradually expand the spheres of civil society in a totalitarian state helped to inspire the dissident movements of the 1970s that led to Solidarity and eventually to the collapse of Communist rule in Eastern Europe in 1989 21 In 1975 he was one of the signatories of the Letter of 59 an open letter signed by Polish intellectuals who protested against the changes of the Constitution of the People s Republic of Poland that were made by the communist party of Poland in 1975 22 In the 1980s Kolakowski supported Solidarity by giving interviews writing and fundraising 3 Kolakowski maintained throughout his life and career a view of Marxism that was distinct from that of existing political regimes and he relentlessly disputed these differences and defended his own interpretation of Marxism In a famous article cleverly entitled What is Left of Socialism he wroteThe Bolshevik Revolution in Russia had nothing to do with Marxian prophesies Its driving force was not a conflict between the industrial working class and capital but rather was carried out under slogans that had no socialist let alone Marxist content Peace and land for peasants There is no need to mention that these slogans were to be subsequently turned into their opposite What in the twentieth century perhaps comes closest to the working class revolution were the events in Poland of 1980 81 the revolutionary movement of industrial workers very strongly supported by the intelligentsia against the exploiters that is to say the state And this solitary example of a working class revolution if even this may be counted was directed against a socialist state and carried out under the sign of the cross with the blessing of the Pope 23 Kolakowski s graveIn Poland Kolakowski is regarded as a philosopher and historian of ideas but also as an icon for anti communism and opponents of communism Adam Michnik has called Kolakowski one of the most prominent creators of contemporary Polish culture 24 25 He authored more than 30 books in a career spanning more than five decades 26 He is also regarded as a great populariser of philosophy His writings lectures and TV appearances encouraged people to ask questions even the most banal ones and praised the figure of a jester in philosophy somebody who is not afraid to challenge even our strongest assumptions and maintains a healthy distance towards everything 27 Kolakowski died on 17 July 2009 aged 81 in Oxford England 28 In an obituary philosopher Roger Scruton wrote that Kolakowski was a thinker for our time and that regarding Kolakowski s debates with intellectual opponents even if nothing remained of the subversive orthodoxies nobody felt damaged in their ego or defeated in their life s project by arguments which from any other source would have inspired the greatest indignation 29 Awards Edit Kolakowski in 2007In 1986 the National Endowment for the Humanities selected Kolakowski for the Jefferson Lecture Kolakowski s lecture The Idolatry of Politics 30 was reprinted in his collection of essays Modernity on Endless Trial 31 In 2003 the Library of Congress named Kolakowski the first winner of the 1 million John W Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Humanities 32 33 26 When announcing the inaugural laureate of the prize James H Billington the Librarian of Congress emphasized not only Mr Kolakowski s scholarship but also his demonstrable importance to major political events in his own time adding that his voice was fundamental for the fate of Poland and influential in Europe as a whole 26 His other awards include the following Jurzykowski Prize 1969 34 Peace Prize of the German Book Trade 1977 Veillon Foundation European Prize for the Essay 1980 Erasmus Prize 1983 MacArthur Fellowship 1983 Jefferson Lecture for the National Endowment for the Humanities 1986 Award of the Polish Pen Club 1988 University of Chicago Press Gordon J Laing Award 1991 Tocqueville Prize 1994 35 Honorary degree of the University of Gdansk 1997 36 Order of the White Eagle 1997 37 38 Honorary degree of the University of Wroclaw 2002 Kluge Prize of the Library of Congress 2003 39 St George Medal 2006 Honorary degree of the Central European University 2006 40 Jerusalem Prize 2007 41 Democracy Service Medal 2009 Bibliography EditKlucz niebieski albo opowiesci budujace z historii swietej zebrane ku pouczeniu i przestrodze The Key to Heaven 1957 Jednostka i nieskonczonosc Wolnosc i antynomie wolnosci w filozofii Spinozy The Individual and the Infinite Freedom and Antinomies of Freedom in Spinoza s Philosophy 1958 13 bajek z krolestwa Lailonii dla duzych i malych Tales from the Kingdom of Lailonia and the Key to Heaven 1963 English edition Hardcover University of Chicago Press October 1989 ISBN 978 0 226 45039 1 Rozmowy z diablem US title Conversations with the Devil UK title Talk of the Devil reissued with The Key to Heaven under the title The Devil and Scripture 1973 1965 Swiadomosc religijna i wiez koscielna 1965 Od Hume a do Kola Wiedenskiego the 1st edition The Alienation of Reason translated by Norbert Guterman 1966 later as Positivist Philosophy from Hume to the Vienna Circle Kultura i fetysze Toward a Marxist Humanism translated by Jane Zielonko Peel and Marxism and Beyond 1967 A Leszek Kolakowski Reader 1971 Positivist Philosophy 1971 TriQuartely 22 1971 Obecnosc mitu The Presence of Myth 1972 English edition Paperback University of Chicago Press January 1989 ISBN 978 0 226 45041 4 ed The Socialist Idea A Reappraisal 1974 with Stuart Hampshire Husserl and the Search for Certitude 1975 Glowne nurty marksizmu First published in Polish 3 volumes as Glowne nurty marksizmu Paris Instytut Literacki 1976 and in English 3 volumes as Main Currents of Marxism London Oxford University Press 1978 Current editions Paperback 1 volume W W Norton amp Company 17 January 2008 ISBN 978 0393329438 Hardcover 1 volume W W Norton amp Company First edition 7 November 2005 ISBN 978 0393060546 Czy diabel moze byc zbawiony i 27 innych kazan 1982 Religion If There Is No God 1982 Bergson 1985 Le Village introuvable 1986 Metaphysical Horror 1988 Revised edition Paperback University of Chicago Press July 2001 ISBN 978 0 226 45055 1 Pochwala niekonsekwencji 1989 ed by Zbigniew Menzel Cywilizacja na lawie oskarzonych 1990 ed by Pawel Kloczowski Modernity on Endless Trial 1990 Paperback University of Chicago Press June 1997 ISBN 978 0 226 45046 9 Hardcover University of Chicago Press March 1991 ISBN 978 0 226 45045 2 God Owes Us Nothing A Brief Remark on Pascal s Religion and on the Spirit of Jansenism 1995 Paperback University of Chicago Press May 1998 ISBN 978 0 226 45053 7 Hardcover University of Chicago Press November 1995 ISBN 978 0 226 45051 3 Freedom Fame Lying and Betrayal Essays on Everyday Life 1999 The Two Eyes of Spinoza and Other Essays on Philosophers 2004 My Correct Views on Everything 2005 Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing 2007 Is God Happy Selected Essays 2012 Jezus osmieszony Esej apologetyczny i sceptyczny 2014See also EditAgnieszka Kolakowska his daughter Zygmunt Bauman Adam Schaff History of philosophy in Poland List of Polish people philosophy Poles in the United KingdomReferences Edit Leszek Kolakowski The Idolatry of Politics reprinted in Modernity on Endless Trial University of Chicago Press 1990 paperback edition 1997 ISBN 0 226 45045 7 ISBN 0 226 45046 5 ISBN 978 0 226 45046 9 p 158 Roger Kimball Leszek Kolakowski and the Anatomy of Totalitarianism The New Criterion June 2005 a b Jason Steinhauer 2015 The Awakener of Human Hopes Leszek Kolakowski John W Kluge Center at Library of Congress September 18 2015 accessed 01 December 2017 Philosopher Awarded Library s New Kluge Prize Washington Post 11 May 2003 Leszek Kolakowski Polish born philosopher and writer who produced Independent co uk 29 July 2009 Archived from the original on 14 June 2022 Retrieved 3 February 2018 George Gomori 29 July 2009 Leszek Kolakowski Polish born philosopher and writer who produced seminal critical analyses on Marxism and religion independent co uk Archived from the original on 14 April 2016 Retrieved 22 May 2023 Piec lat temu zmarl Leszek Kolakowski 21 July 2009 Andrzej Friszke and Tadeusz Koczanowicz 23 April 2018 Leszek Kolakowski s political path eurozine com Retrieved 22 May 2023 Leszek Kolakowski Telegraph co uk 20 July 2009 Retrieved 3 February 2018 Foreign News VOICE OF DISSENT TIME Magazine 14 October 1957 Clive James 2007 Cultural Amnesia p 353 Gareth Jones 17 July 2009 Polish philosopher and author Kolakowski dead at 81 Reuters Kolakowski Leszek 2005 Main Currents of Marxism New York W W Norton and Company p 909 ISBN 9780393329438 Kolakowski Leszek 1982 Religion New York Oxford University Press ASIN B01JXSH3HM p 16 Roman Graczyk 19 April 2018 List otwarty do Partii Kuronia i Modzelewskiego interia pl in Polish Retrieved 22 May 2023 Leszek Kolakowski 1927 2009 in Polish 15 February 2021 Retrieved 22 May 2023 Leszek Kolakowski press uchicago edu Retrieved 22 May 2023 Leszek Kolakowski Scholar and Activist The Long Career of the Kluge Prize Winner Library of Congress Information Bulletin December 2003 Leszek Kolakowski 1971 Hope and Hopelessness In Survey vol 17 no 3 80 Kolakowski In Stalin s Countries Theses on Hope and Despair 1971 osaarchivum org Leszek Kolakowski renowned philosopher 1927 2009 news uchicago edu 21 July 2009 Retrieved 22 May 2023 Lipinski Edward 2006 The Letter of 59 Intellectuals to the Speaker of the Diet of the Polish People s Republic The Polish Review The Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America 51 1 95 97 JSTOR 25779595 Retrieved 22 May 2023 What Is Left of Socialism by Leszek Kolakowski Articles First Things October 2002 Adam Michnik 18 July 1985 Letter from the Gdansk Prison New York Review of Books Norman Davies 5 October 1986 True to Himself and His Homeland New York Times a b c Nicholas Kulish 20 July 2009 Leszek Kolakowski Polish Philosopher Dies at 81 The New York Times Retrieved 23 May 2023 Michal Wieczorek 1 February 2019 10 Polish Philosophers Who Changed the Way We Think culture pl Retrieved 22 May 2023 Leszek Kolakowski Encyclopaedia Britannica Scruton Roger Leszek Kolakowski thinker for our time opendemocracy net Open Democracy Retrieved 27 February 2015 Jefferson Lecturers neh gov Leszek Kolakowski 1990 The Idolatry of Politics p 158 in Modernity on Endless Trial University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 45045 7 Library of Congress Announces Winner of First John W Kluge Prize for Lifetime Achievement in the Humanities and Social Sciences Loc gov Retrieved 3 February 2018 Leszek Kolakowski What the Past is For speech given on 5 November 2003 on the occasion of the awarding of the Kluge Prize to Kolakowski Leszek Kolakowski sppwarszawa pl in Polish Retrieved 22 May 2023 Leszek Kolakowski sppwarszawa pl in Polish Retrieved 22 May 2023 Doktorzy Honorowi Uniwersytetu Gdanskiego Retrieved 7 August 2019 M P 1998 nr 6 poz 109 isap sejm gov pl in Polish Retrieved 22 May 2023 Leszek Kolakowski Portret z nosorozcem teatrkubus pl in Polish Retrieved 22 May 2023 John W Kluge Prize for Achievement in the Study of Humanity The John W Kluge Center at the Library of Congress Loc gov Retrieved 15 February 2017 Leszek Kolakowski polinst hu Archived from the original on 12 February 2018 Retrieved 22 May 2023 Simon Williams 23 January 2007 Polish writer on individual freedom to be awarded Jerusalem Prize jpost com Retrieved 22 May 2023 Further reading EditAzurmendi Joxe amp Arregi Joseba Kolakowski Onati EFA 1972 ISBN 8472400530 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Leszek Kolakowski Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leszek Kolakowski Leszek Kolakowski Information Processing Centre database in Polish Leszek Kolakowski Daily Telegraph obituary Polish Philosophy Page Bibliography at the Wayback Machine archived 10 January 2008 Kolakowski Leszek 1974 My correct views on everything A rejoinder to Edward Thompson s Open letter to Leszek Kolakowski Socialist Register 11 The Alienation of Reason Extract The Death of Utopia Reconsidered The Complete and Brief Metaphysics Judt Tony Goodbye to All That in The New York Review of Books Vol 53 No 14 21 September 2006 review essay on Main Currents of Marxism The Founders the Golden Age the Breakdown by Leszek Kolakowski translated from the Polish by P S Falla Norton 2005 ISBN 0 393 06054 3 My Correct Views on Everything by Leszek Kolakowski edited by Zbigniew Janowski St Augustine s 2004 ISBN 1 58731 525 4 Karl Marx ou l esprit du monde by Jacques Attali Paris Fayard 2005 ISBN 2 213 62491 7 Kolakowski In Stalin s Countries Theses on Hope and Despair 1971 1 April 1999 BBC Radio program In Our Time Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leszek Kolakowski amp oldid 1170274872, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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