Abstract
This is a translation from the Russian of Nikolai Lossky’s review of Henri
Bergson, Les deux sources de la morale et de la religion (1932). The review was
published in the Parisian émigré journal Новый Град (Cité nouvelle) in 1932. In this
review, Lossky criticizes Bergson for leaving some key problems of the philosophy
of religion unresolved, namely that of God’s relation to the world (theism vs.
pantheism), that of immortality, as well as that of evil. He also criticizes Bergson’s
“extreme biologism” in his explanation of morality, which, in his view, subjectivizes
the objects of religion. For Lossky, the symbolic images of the Christian
religion are not subjective “fabulations,” but real symbols through which God
reveals himself to us. Likewise, according to Lossky, true morality cannot be
explained in terms of biological adaptation, but must rely on the foundation of an
objective, i.e., Platonic, axiological sphere. (Frédéric Tremblay)