Dostoevsky 's Underground Memorial Freedom In Dostoevsky' s Underground Memo, underground people proposed a concept of freedom of behavior completely different from Kant. Kant thinks that the agent can not act freely, but unless the action is taken for some reason, the underground staff seems to be in the opposite position. The only way to be truly autonomous is to reject the concept of freedom and to confirm the right to act. I do not have a reason. I assert that the concept of underground freedom is based on Kant because it requires self-awareness in decision making.
In Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre, Walter Kaufman wrote as follows. "I do not think there is a reason to call Dostoevsky as an existentialist, but the underground memo tells us," I will not mention Dostoevsky's "underground note" in this article, but on the movement of the ensemble and the way it is released I will explore. Existential tone note - the subject of existence in Dostoyevsky's "Karamazov brothers". Mainly through Ivan Karamazov. I am primarily based on the French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, but pay attention first to the basic idea and spirit of the existentialist thinker Soren Kelkegaard. I made readers understand the origin of existentialism and did this to compare Sartre's atheistic existentialism with the theological existentialism of Kierkegaard.
Notes from the ground (Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky) 129 "Journal Epoch, memo from the basement", by Donstoevsky Konstantin Mochulsky: Flying over his life and work (1967) (Ken Kesey) "Raymond's" Grail Knight " Arrival beyond the wasteland M. Alderman (1972) Strange case of Jekyll and Haid (Robert Louis Stevenson) "Mask in the mirror: 18th century and 90s", "Separated Self: Perspective" Victorian literature (1969) 141
In this course, I met "underground notes" of Fyodor Dostoevsky for the first time. After two visits to Western Europe, he wrote in 1864 (two years before huge crime and punishment) while Dostoyevski was shocked and fascinated by the state of Western civilization. Although the narrator ("underground man") from the underground memo is not a modernist (especially Dostoevsky), despite accepting his contemporary wisdom (philosophy, aesthetics) his position remains unchanged. (Morality and science) leads this wisdom to a logical conclusion and a glimpse of absurd reasons and absurd reasons for modern life and thinking. This principle can be summarized by the reasonable philosopher Gottfried Leibniz with the word "nothing known by unfounded law".