Życiński, Józef2024-01-302024-01-302002Roczniki Filozoficzne, 2002, T. 50, z. 2, s. 5-22.0035-7685http://theo-logos.pl/xmlui/handle/123456789/12642The philosophy of the death of God, pronounced by Friedrich Nietzsche in 1882, resulted in many negative consequences experienced in contemporary culture. The Nietzschean critique of the classical hierarchy of values inspired radical declaration about the death of metaphysics and the end of human history. In its form developed in deconstructive postmodernism, this philosophy proclaims the dissolution of the human subject. Consistently, it rejects the very concept of human person and tries to reduce human existence to the level of psychoanalitic, social and/or cultural phenomena. In this conceptual framework, either the classical version of humanism must be questioned or its nihilistic reinterpretation, in terms of a humanism of despair, should be adopted.plAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Polandhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/pl/egzystencjalizmhumanizmkulturanihilizmosoba ludzkapostmodernizmsekularyzacjaśmierć Bogaexistentialismhumanismculturenihilismhuman personpostmodernismsecularisationdeath of Godhumanizm tragicznyhumanism of despairczłowiekhumanwspółczesnośćpresentXXI w.kulturowa śmierć Bogacultural death of GodHumanizm tragiczny jako następstwo kulturowej śmierci BogaThe Humanism of Despair as a Result of the Death of God in Contemporary CultureArticle