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Dmitry Pisarev (1840-1868)

"Dmitry Ivanovich Pisarev[nb 1] (14 October [O.S. 2 October] 1840 – 16 July [O.S. 4 July] 1868) was a Russian literary critic and philosopher who was a central figure of Russian nihilism. He is noted as a forerunner of Nietzschean philosophy and for the impact his advocacy of liberation movements and natural science had on Russian history.

A critique of his philosophy became the subject of Fyodor Dostoevsky's celebrated novel Crime and Punishment. Indeed, Pisarev's philosophy embraces the nihilist aims of negation and value-destruction; in freeing oneself from all human and moral authority, the nihilist becomes ennobled above the common masses and free to act according to sheer personal preference and usefulness. These new types, as Pisarev termed them, were to be pioneers of what he saw as the most necessary step for human development, namely the reset and destruction of the existing mode of thought. Among his most famous locutions is: "What can be smashed must be smashed. Whatever withstands the blow is fit to survive; what flies into pieces is rubbish. In any case, strike out right and left, no harm can come of it."" - (en.wikipedia.org 18.03.2024)

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Programmzettel zu "Rosa Laub" am Metropol-Theater 1987
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[Relation to person or institution] Dmitry Pisarev (1840-1868)
[Relation to person or institution] Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts
Intellectual creation Wolf-Dieter Pfennig (1956-)
Intellectual creation Karl-Heinz Siebert (1934-)

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