Our beautiful Alexandria. Letters to I. I. Kaplan (1922–1924), E. I. Bronstein-Shur (1927–1941), F. G. Ginzburg (1927–1941)
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In 1922, university physiology students had a summer internship near Peterhof in the former royal residence, “our beautiful Alexandria,” as they called it. At that time, A. A. Ukhtomsky began a short correspondence with I. Kaplan, and later (from 1927 to 1941) he actively corresponded with his students E. Bronstein-Shur and F. Ginzburg. The range of scientific and moral problems in the published letters of those years was quite diverse - from the law of dominance and the concept of “chronotope” to the secrets of the psychology of creativity and Tolstoy’s question: “Why do people write?”
The text of the book was translated from the original language using an artificial intelligence program. For the most part, the translation of the text is of very high quality, but in some cases, due to the imperfection of the technology, there may be incorrect phrase translations in the text, as well as single words and expressions may not be translated.
FL/243278/UA
Data sheet
- Name of the Author
- Алексей Ухтомский Алексеевич
Игорь Кузьмичев Сергеевич - Language
- Ukrainian
- Release date
- 2017