Good and evil. Two forces that seem to be in eternal opposition. In Russian religious thought, these are not just abstract categories. It is a living drama that unfolds in the soul of each person and in the destiny of the entire world. Russian philosophers did not try to give a simple definition — they sought the path to overcoming evil. And they found it not in negation, but in transformation. In this article, we will explore the main stages of Russian religious philosophy and see how thinkers answered the question of what evil is and how to deal with it.Vladimir Solovyov: evil as the absence of order The founder of Russian religious philosophy, Vladimir Solovyov, regarded evil not as a separate force, but as a violation of the divine order. For Solovyov, evil is chaos, a breakdown of connections, egoism. He claimed that all existing things strive for unity with God and with each other. Evil arises when a separate part of the world tries to become the center of the universe. This he called "egoization." According to Solovyov, the struggle against evil is not destruction, but the restoration of harmony. Man is called not to be a fighter, but a gatherer. Evil should be included in good and transformed. This optimistic concept became the foundation for all subsequent Russian thought.Fyodor Dostoevsky: evil as temptation of freedom Fyodor Dostoevsky, more of an artist than a philosopher, but his influence on Russian religious thought is enormous. He showed evil in all its monstrous attractiveness. His heroes (Raskolnikov, Stavrogin, Ivan Karamazov) do not just commit evil — they philosophically justify it. Dostoevsky showed that evil often grows out of freedom that man does not know how to manage. But he also showed the path to overcoming — through suffering, repentance, and love. His famous formula: "Beauty will save the world" is not about aesthetics. It is about the fact that good and evil struggle in the heart of man, and victory is possible through transformation, ...
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