dbo:abstract
- Mihailo Đurić (Serbian Cyrillic: Михаило Ђурић; 22 August 1925 – 25 November 2011) was one of Serbia's most prominent philosophers. He was a professor at the University of Belgrade's Law School and member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. Within the frame of ancient Greek culture, he studied philosophy, law, politics and history, but also modern political theory and ethics. A majority of his works are within the field of philosophy and method of sociology, history of political theories and political science. In the past two decades, his work was mainly devoted to the study of Nietzsche and Heidegger. Đurić studied law, philosophy and classic philology in Belgrade, where he obtained his PhD with the thesis on Ideas of the Natural Law in Greek Sophists (1954). He was professor at Law School from 1954 until 1973, when, for political reasons, he was removed from the University. In 1954 he was appointed as Research Fellow at the University of Belgrade's Law School, where he was later promoted to Assistant Professor in 1957, Associate Professor in 1964, and full Professor in 1969. He taught History of Political Theory, General Sociology and Methodology of Social Science. (en)
- Mihailo Đurić (en serbe cyrillique : Михаило Ђурић), né le 22 août 1925 à Šabac et mort le 25 novembre 2011 à Belgrade, est un philosophe et sociologue serbe, professeur à la Faculté de droit de l'université de Belgrade et membre de l'Académie serbe des sciences et des arts. À partir des années 1980, les écrits de Đurić à la fois en serbe et en allemand ont contribué à la compréhension des œuvres de Friedrich Nietzsche et Martin Heidegger et à la compréhension du lien entre ces deux philosophes. Ses œuvres Nietzsche et la métaphysique (1984) et Le défi du nihilisme (1986) se concentrent principalement sur Nietzsche, sur la nécessité de la philosophie aujourd'hui ; La philosophie entre l'Est et l'Ouest porte principalement sur Heidegger et ses lectures de Nietzsche[réf. nécessaire]. (fr)