Barbara Skarga
Barbara Skarga | |
---|---|
Born | 25 October 1919 |
Died | 18 September 2009 Olsztyn, Poland | (aged 89)
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western Philosophy |
School | Philosophy of dialogue |
Main interests | Epistemology, humanity, ontology, ethics |
Barbara Skarga (25 October 1919 – 18 September 2009) was a Polish philosophy historian and philosopher who worked mainly in ethics and epistemology.
Biography
[edit]Skarga was born in 1919 at Warsaw to a Calvinist family with gentry roots. Her sister was actress Hanna Skarżanka and brother was Edward Skarga.
Skarga studied philosophy at Wilno University. During World War II, she was a member of the resistance movement Armia Krajowa. In 1944 the Soviet NKVD arrested and sentenced her to ten years at the katorga. Afterwards, she was forced to live at a collective farm. After the war she wrote an anonymous memoir about her time in the gulag.[1]
She returned to Poland in 1955[2] and graduated in 1957 with a Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of Warsaw. In 1988 she became a full professor of philosophy.
Skarga was an editor-in-chief of Etyka. In 1995, she was awarded Order of the White Eagle.
Skarga died on 18 September 2009 in Olsztyn, and was buried in Warsaw.[3]
In 2022, the Barbara Skarga Foundation is based in Warsaw and offers a scholarship to unpublished philosophers.[4]
Bibliography
[edit]- Narodziny pozytywizmu polskiego 1831-1864 (1964)
- Kłopoty intelektu. Między Comte'em a Bergsonem (1975)
- Czas i trwanie. Studia nad Bergsonem (1982)
- Po wyzwoleniu 1944-1956 (1985)
- Przeszłość i interpretacje (1987)
- Granice historyczności (1989)
- Tożsamość i różnica. Eseje metafizyczne (1997)
- Ślad i obecność (2002)
- Kwintet metafizyczny (2005)
- Człowiek to nie jest piękne zwierzę (2007)
- Tercet metafizyczny (2009)
References
[edit]- ^ European Salon website
- ^ Archive of the History of Philosophy website
- ^ "Skarga, Barbara". Traces Of War. Retrieved 2024-10-07.
- ^ Barbara Skarga Foundation, scholarship page
External links
[edit]- 1919 births
- 2009 deaths
- People from Warsaw
- Ontologists
- Academic staff of the University of Lviv
- Academic staff of the University of Warsaw
- 20th-century Polish philosophers
- Home Army members
- Polish Calvinist and Reformed Christians
- Polish deportees to Soviet Union
- Polish people detained by the NKVD
- Polish women philosophers
- Polish ethicists
- Epistemologists
- 20th-century Polish women
- Polish historians of philosophy