Abstract

The article provides an overview of the primary author’s ideas and publications on forming the concept of “cognitive culture”. It appears as the author’s concept with some components of logically interrelated issues of understanding the sub­ject of cognition, types, genera, and types of cognitive culture, and its relation­ship with the problem of truth. Pointing to his numerous publications, the author argues that refining subjective metrics in modern science and culture is difficult both by the complexity of isolating individual consciousness from the collective one and by the existentialization of subjective operations in which human inter­est is maximized. The author’s work traces the dynamics of the subject in its epistemological and epistemological sections from “elimination of the subject” to “death of the subject”. According to the author of the article, classification into rational and irrational types of cognitive culture is productive in clarifying the connection between truth and knowledge, substantiating the idea of inquiring and extra-knowing existence of truth, which is essential for defining truth. Iden­tifying the complex influence of subjective levels, operational mechanisms, and their creative products on concrete-historical interpretations of truth allows us to establish the correspondence of a particular kind of cognitive culture to the gen­eral concepts of truth. As a result, the philosophical and conceptual understand­ing of truth is quite correctly admissible by the methodology of the polylogue of cognitive cultures.

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