
ON THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SCIENCE AND ART—FROM “WHAT TO DO?” - ON THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SCIENCE AND ART. - CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
A contemplative essay opens by questioning the dominant belief that modern humanity’s justification rests solely on experimental, positive science. It traces the shift from the lofty Hegelian doctrines that once saturated every lecture hall and newspaper to a newer creed that crowns induction and measurement as the sole path to truth. The author sets the stage by juxtaposing the labor‑dividing structures of societies with the organismic laws that supposedly govern them.
Drawing from personal memory, the narrator recounts the era when Hegelian thought seemed invincible, only to watch it evaporate without a single overthrow. He examines how both old and new philosophies promised certainty while offering little more than obscure jargon to the public. This reflective account reveals a lingering tension between lofty metaphysics and the promise of scientific exactitude.
The work invites listeners to reconsider the uneasy partnership of science and art, suggesting that neither can fully explain human experience alone. By weaving historical critique with lived observation, it encourages a balanced view that honors both rigorous inquiry and creative insight.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (135K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1828–1910
Best known for War and Peace and Anna Karenina, this giant of Russian literature wrote with unusual depth about family life, moral struggle, and the search for meaning. In his later years, he also became a powerful moral voice whose ideas on nonviolence reached readers far beyond Russia.
View all books
by graf Leo Tolstoy

by graf Leo Tolstoy

by graf Leo Tolstoy

by graf Leo Tolstoy

by graf Leo Tolstoy

by graf Leo Tolstoy

by graf Leo Tolstoy

by graf Leo Tolstoy