1. Even in the field of Slavic studies, which is the location of much of the scholarship on Russian culture and intellectual life, rarely do we find work on philosophical thought. Vladimir Krasikov discusses the lackluster representation of Russian philosophy on the English-language Internet. Krasikov, Russkaia filosofiia today (M: Volodei, 2008), 234–260.
2. Costica Bradatan, “Geography and Fragility,” Angelaki 13.3 (Dec. 2010), 1.
3. Evert van der Zweerde, “What Is Russian about Russian Philosophy?,” in Re-ethnicizing the Minds? Cultural Revival in Contemporary Thought (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2006), 166.
4. Van der Zweerde, “The Place of Russian Philosophy in World Philosophical History. A Perspective,” Diogenes 56, 170 (2009), 174.
5. The textbook in question is Mikhail Maslin’s Istoriia russkoi filosofii, 2nd ed. (M: Gruppa ACT, 2008).