Z historie polských setkání s Janem Patočkou : o sblížení, přátelství a paměti v těžkých dobách

Title: Z historie polských setkání s Janem Patočkou : o sblížení, přátelství a paměti v těžkých dobách
Variant title:
  • From the history of Polish encounters with Jan Patočka : on closeness, friendship and memory in times of difficulty
Contributor
Madecki, Roman (Translator)
Source document: Studia philosophica. 2010, vol. 57, iss. 1, pp. [47]-58
Extent
[47]-58
  • ISSN
    1803-7445 (print)
    2336-453X (online)
Type: Article
Language
License: Not specified license
 

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Abstract(s)
Intellectual contacts of Polish philosophers with Jan Patočka date back to the 30s of the 20th century. They developed in the times when the phenomenological movement in Poland had already been established, mainly as a result of the activity of Roman Ingarden, which is why the interest in Patočka's ideas and further contacts with him enhanced Polish phenomenological thought. In the newest history of Polish philosophy, the presence of Patočka's ideas, including his original interpretation of phenomenology, has been little studied. – Polish contacts with Patočka were initiated by Tadeusz Kroński and Irena Krońska still before the Second World War. In the post-war years they continued and developed into warm bonds of friendship, mostly owing to Krońska herself and Kroński's friends and colleagues: Bronisław Baczko and Leszek Kołakowski. Close relations between Patočka and the Polish philosophical community owe much to Tadeusz Kotarbiński. The ideas of Slavonic cooperation were close to Kotarbiński's heart. He met Patočka in Prague, hosted him in Warsaw and in the 70s openly appealed to Polish and Czechoslovakian authorities to stop political persecution of the Czech philosopher.
Note
Z polštiny přeložil Mgr. Roman Madecki, Ph.D.