Logo
facts about zaid orudzhev.html

10 Facts About Zaid Orudzhev

facts about zaid orudzhev.html1.

Zaid Orudzhev is a doctor of philosophy and currently a professor at the Moscow State Academy for Business Administration.

2.

Zaid Orudzhev was born in Baku, entered the Faculty of Philosophy at Lomonosov Moscow State University in the early 1950s, graduating in 1955.

3.

In 1969, Orudzhev was appointed a professor at the Faculty of Philosophy at his alma mater, Lomonosov Moscow State University, a post he would occupy for the next 16 years.

4.

Zaid Orudzhev has read courses of lectures on dialectical logic at universities in Germany, the US, Canada and Cuba.

5.

James Scanlan wrote that Zaid Orudzhev's work meant dialectical logic cannot be rejected in the US, as had been the case previously USSR specialists, because the issue had been raised to a level that merited scientific respect.

6.

Zaid Orudzhev paid a great deal of attention to developing a method for the analysis of intermediate links in order to create systems of scientific theory.

7.

Zaid Orudzhev's articles were the first in the USSR to develop the theory of reform as an essential means for the development of any society, including socialist society, as well as the theory of the regional development of society, as opposed to centralised development, as a universal means of economic management.

Related searches
James Scanlan
8.

Zaid Orudzhev defines the past, according to Nietzsche, only humans possess, as a unity of time that has already passed and a human being's accumulated activities.

9.

Zaid Orudzhev believes that Darwin's theory still cannot prove the natural origin of man in the proper sense, because it does not depart from "pure biologism" in its understanding of human nature.

10.

Zaid Orudzhev believes that, for example, all historical epochs are determined by new three-tier modes of thought, which include concepts from general logic ethical concepts and the experiential, practical level, and these modes of thought are based on new concepts acquired through their a priori capacity.