Age, Biography and Wiki

Vladimir Bibikhin was born on 29 August, 1938 in Bezhetsk, RSFSR, USSR, is a Russian religious thinker (1938–2004). Discover Vladimir Bibikhin's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 66 years old?

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Occupation N/A
Age 66 years old
Zodiac Sign Virgo
Born 29 August, 1938
Birthday 29 August
Birthplace Bezhetsk, RSFSR, USSR
Date of death 12 December, 2004
Died Place Moscow, Russia
Nationality Russia

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Vladimir Bibikhin Height, Weight & Measurements

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Vladimir Bibikhin Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Vladimir Bibikhin worth at the age of 66 years old? Vladimir Bibikhin’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Russia. We have estimated Vladimir Bibikhin's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1927

The course was mostly devoted, both in lecturers and seminars, to the reading and study of Heidegger's main work "Being and Time" (1927).

Bibikhin's last seminars at the Institute of Philosophy and his last article were also dedicated to Heidegger.

1938

Vladimir Veniaminovich Bibikhin (29 August 1938, Bezhetsk — 12 December 2004, Moscow) was the most prominent Soviet and Russian religious thinker of the New Russia and continued the Russian tradition of early 20th century religious thinking.

He was known as a translator, philologist, and philosopher.

He is best known for translations of Martin Heidegger, which caused mixed reactions among specialists.

He lectured in authors' courses at the philosophy faculty of Moscow State University.

Bibikhin undertook a sufficient number of translations to enable him to formulate his own theory of Europe.

This theory consisted in part of a return to the past, and enlivening the most valuable achievements of the past culture.

1967

Bibikhin graduated from Moscow State Linguistic University in 1967 and taught language and translation theory at both the MSLU and MGIMO University.

At this time, he worked mainly on philosophy and literature and studied ancient languages under Andrey Zaliznyak.

Vladimir Bibikhin translated texts from Spanish, Italian, Latin, Greek, French, English, and German from 1967 onward.

He wrote several papers and scientific reviews, as well as commentaries on translations and articles on the theory of translation (the best of them were subsequently included in the book "Word and Event").

Among others, Bibikhin translated the works of Iamblichus, John Amos Comenius, García Lorca, Giuseppe Mazzini, Petrarch, Nicholas of Cusa, St. Gregory Palamas, St. Macarius of Egypt, W. Heisenberg, Jean-Paul Sartre, Gabriel Marcel, Jacques Ellul, Eugène Ionesco, Antonin Artaud, Wilhelm von Humboldt, Sigmund Freud, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Martin Heidegger, Gadamer, Wilhelm Dilthey, Hannah Arendt, and Jacques Derrida.

Theological translations were published under the pseudonym V. Veneaminov.

Bibikhin's views on philosophy of language were controversial, and were criticized by some professional philosophers and linguists.

N. V. Motroshilova claimed Bibikhin had deliberately concealed Heidegger's closeness to the Nazis and ignored empirical evidence of his loyalty to the Nazi regime.

She also noted the ambiguity of his "Being and Time" translation: 'But his translation of "Being and Time" is worthy of special conversation.

1972

Bibikhin was employed at the Institute of Philosophy, Russian Academy of Sciences in 1972 and served there until his death.

He spent his last years working at the Centre of Methodology and Ethics of Science of the Philosophy of Science and Technology Branch of the Institute.

1977

He completed his postgraduate study at the faculty of philosophy, MSU in 1977 by defending his candidate's thesis, entitled: "Semantic Potencies of the Linguistic Sign."

The themes included in his thesis were:

1) interrelations between word and world, 2) word and thought,

3) an approach to word and thought, 4) attempt to think of the ontological foundation of language.

These theories were subsequently developed in a seminar called "Inner form of word" and in the courses "Language of Philosophy" and "L. Wittgenstein."

He worked as a secretary and assistant for Aleksei Losev, also recording several conversations with the philosopher.

These recordings were later collected and published in the book "Aleksei Fedorovich Losev. Sergey Sergeyevich Averintsev."

1980

He lectured in authors courses and held seminars at the Faculty of Philosophy of MSU from 1980 to 2004.

He also lectured at St. Philaret's Christian Institute in Moscow and St. Thomas Institute.

He was buried at Nikolo-Archangelski cemetery in Moscow.

Bibikhin lectured in about twenty courses at MSU and other institutes.

He wrote: 'Philosophy always went against the stream.

With great risk... Philosophy is for the returning from doctrines to things; for recalling the early; for the ending of divination through words.

There is a difference between philosophy and the sciences: they are building themselves, philosophy is called to reconstruct itself like a scaffolding after building the house.'

Bibikhin believed philosophy was not an "intellectual activity," nor a "scientific sphere" or a "cultural sphere," and the philosophers' language is not a "construction," or "information about the things" – rather, it is a 'preparation for the possibility of forming knowledge about things based on the last, utmost foundations'.

To Bibikhin, Philosophy is an 'attempt — guaranteed by nothing – to give my life, human life, back the way it used to be at the very beginning: relation to the world, not to the picture, but to an event'.

It is an attempt to let an event be in disinterested word, let it be the 'place where an event is shining, becoming a phenomenon, where all that exists is let to be as it really is, not controlled or placed on a register'.

Heidegger's thought was essential to Bibikhin.

1989

He was a lecturer of Philosophy and member of the faculty of MSU from 1989 onward.

1990

In his four-term course "Early Heidegger" (1990s) Bibikhin read Heidegger's earliest works not as immature and preliminary, but as a commentary to his later writings.

2004

(2004)