On the Views of Florian Bochwic (a Chapter from the history of Polish Thought)

  • Jacek Juliusz Jadacki University of Warsaw
Keywords: axiological absolutism, ontological dualism, intuitionism, creationism

Abstract

The paper depicts the philosophical views of F. Bochwic (1799-1856) which are as follows: ontology, anthropology, epistemology, ethics, and education.

The world, according to Bochwic, was created by God (creationism) and is divided into two spheres: spiritual and carnal (ontological dualism). The factor that unites them is man. His purpose, as a free creature, is his tendency to perfection. The sources of human knowledge are the following: unreliable senses and reliable conscience (intuitionism). Conscience is the source of our presentiments with regard to: the existence of God, immortality of the soul, God's justice, and moral orders obligatory for all people (axiological absolutism): the order to make good and avoid evil, the order to love oneself and the neighbour, and the order to obey one's parents and superiors.

The philosophical views of Bochwic lay at the grounds of his educational doctrine. According to it, education should instil civil virtues in adolescents and be versatile, balanced, varied, imitative, kind, and permanent.

Published
2020-10-15
Section
Articles