En este artículo informativo sobre unos aspectos de la filosofia actual en lengua espaňola se da cuenta de très más relevantes manifestaciones filosóficas desarrolladas con motivo del centenario 1898-1998 en Espaňa y en America Latina, particularmente del I Congreso Iberoamericano de Filosofia; con vistas a la significación general y al impacio del discurso inaugurai pronunciado alli por Luis Villoro, se incluye su traducción integrai. - En el apéndice se critican y ponen de relieve numerosas insuficiencias y faltas del artículo de Pavel Štěpánek, „Espana como mediadora del conocimiento y de la difusión de la filosofia antigua“, publicado en Filosofický časopis (3/1999, p. 411-440). and The article is concerned with certain aspects of contemporary philosophy in the Spanish speaking community. It reports on three of the most important meetings of philosophers which took place on the occasion of the one-hundredth anniversary 1898-1998 in Spain and in Latin America. Attention is paid in particular to the first Ibero-American Philosophical Congress; in light of its significance, a full translation of Luis Villor’s inaugural address is here included. - The appendix adverts to numerous errors in Pavel Štěpánek’s article “The Role of Spain in Understanding and Spreading Classical Philosophy” and presents critical remarks about it.
After 1918, the newly created Czechoslovakian Republic offered a helping hand to many thousands of Ukrainians who had fled their native country, which had been occupied by the Soviet Union. The young Ukrainian intelligentsia studied at Czech secondary schools and universities, in Prague at the Mikhail Drahomanov Pedagogical Institute (1923–1933), and in Řevnice, near Prague, at a Ukrainian Secondary School. Several dozens of Ukrainian students studied, supported by the Czechoslovakian state, at Prague Conservatoire. Special attention is paid here to the students of composition (including Mykola Kolessa, Hryhory Dyachenko, Zenovy Lysko, Nestor Nyjankivsky and Roman Simovych).
This paper focuses on the memoirs of František Ježek, politician and member of the Czechoslovak National Democratic Party (after 1935 the National Union). In 1938 Ježek was a member of the Czechoslovak cabinet as the Minister of Public Health. His text is one of the most important unpublished Czechoslovak memoirs dealing with the topic of the Munich Agreement in 1938. This manuscript provides detailed information on the activities of the Czechoslovak government and political parties in the critical year of 1938. and Článek zahrnuje poznámkový aparát pod čarou