Victor Vaziulin | |
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Born | 30 August 1932 |
Died | 8 January 2012 | (aged 79)
Era | 20th-century philosophy - 21st-century philosophy |
Region | Soviet Philosophy |
School | Marxism, Founder of International School "Logic of History" |
Main interests | Marxism · Epistemology · Dialectics · Philosophy of History · Ethics · Marx's method |
Notable ideas | Society as an organic whole · Necessary fallacies in the development of scientific knowledge · Logic of History · Differentiation between early and mature socialism |
Victor Alekseyevich Vaziulin (Russian: Виктор Алексеевич Вазюлин; 30 August 1932 – 8 January 2012) was a Soviet and Russian philosopher.[1] He became famous for his deep knowledge of Karl Marx's work as well as for further developing Marxism through the dialectical sublation of its acquis.[clarification needed]
Doctor of Sciences in Philosophical Sciences (1973).[2]
V. A. Vaziulin was born in Zvenigorod, Moscow Oblast on 30 August 1932 and studied philosophy at Lomonosov University (1950–55), defended his PhD thesis at 1964 and his postdoctoral thesis at 1971. At 1964 he became professor at Lomonosov University, where he taught until his retirement. He also taught at the universities of Bratislava and Prague. He died in Moscow on 8 January 2012.
V. A. Vaziulin wrote a novel, distinct direction in social theory, dialectical logic and science methodology. The main scientific achievements of V. A. Vaziulin include:
The first two achievements are internally connected to the approach of scientific thinking as a natural-historical process.