Вопросы философии и психологии. Год 4, книга 1 (16), январь 1893. / Научный журнал под редакцией профессора Н. Я. Грота при участии Московского психологического общества.
Москва : Издание А. А. Абрикосова (Типо-литография Т-ва И. Н. Кушнерев и Ко), 1893.
129+56+119+15 с. ; Обычный формат. Твердый владельческий переплет эпохи.
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Grot, Nikolai Ya. (Ed.).
Questions of Philosophy and Psychology. Year 4, Book 1 (16), January 1893. / Scientific journal under the editorship of Professor N. Ya. Grot with the participation of the Moscow Psychological Society.
Moscow : Published by A. A. Abrikosov, 1893.
129+56+119+15 pp. ; Regular format. Contemporary private hardcover. In Russian.
This 1893 issue of Questions of Philosophy and Psychology is a primary source documenting the intellectual "Golden Age" of Russian thought at the end of the 19th century. Founded and edited by Professor Nikolai Grot, this journal was the first and most influential periodical in Russia dedicated to synthesizing philosophical inquiry with the emerging science of experimental psychology. Under Grot’s leadership, the journal became a forum where the strict boundaries between metaphysics and empirical observation were challenged and debated by the country's greatest minds. This specific volume, published by the prominent industrialist and philanthropist A. A. Abrikosov, reflects the high intellectual standards of the Moscow Psychological Society during a period of intense searching for a unified world-view. The text provides a deep dive into the internal logic of late Imperial academic discourse, including the arrangement of sections on theoretical philosophy, psychological observations, and critical reviews of contemporary Western thinkers.
The complex pagination (129+56+119+15 pages) is typical for this publication, as it often divided content into specialized supplements, including original research, translated monographs, and bibliographic indices. This structure allowed readers to engage with diverse materials—from the development of Russian religious philosophy to the latest trends in French and German physiological psychology. Bound in a sturdy contemporary private hardcover, this copy has been preserved as a professional tool from an era when Russian philosophers were attempting to reconcile spiritual values with scientific progress. For collectors of pre-revolutionary academic journals and historians of Russian psychology, this January 1893 issue stands as a definitive artifact of a time when Moscow was a global center for psychological and philosophical innovation.