Freedom, Happiness, and the Communion of Life

Auteurs-es

  • Tsoncho Tsonchev McGill University

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.26443/jcreor.v2i2.55

Résumé

The first part of this paper discusses the question of freedom and happiness through the prism of Dostoyevsky's Story of the Grand Inquisitor and Evgenyi Zamyatin's dystopia We. It argues that the goal of human life is not happiness but freedom, and that materialistic utilitarianism and rationalism do not oppose totalitarianism. The second part of the paper shows, through the philosophy of Nikolai Berdyaev, that freedom is both personalistic and communitarian and that death and separation in our lives cannot destroy life and the meaning of life. According to Berdyaev's eschatological vision, there is no individual salvation; life is eternal and essentially communal. The argument of this paper could be described as theologia crucis.   

Biographie de l'auteur-e

Tsoncho Tsonchev, McGill University

Tsoncho Tsonchev received his Doctor of Philosophy in Summer of 2021 from McGill's School of Religious Studies on Person and Communion: The Political Theology of Nikolai Berdyaev. His research interests include Political Theology; Christian Ethics; Russian Religious and Political Thought; Intellectual History; Political Ideologies and Regimes. He is also one of the Editors and Contributors of The Montreal Review.

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Publié-e

2021-08-01

Comment citer

Tsonchev, Tsoncho. 2021. « Freedom, Happiness, and the Communion of Life ». Journal of the Council for Research on Religion 2 (2). Montreal, QC, Canada:53-70. https://doi.org/10.26443/jcreor.v2i2.55.