Introduction: the humanist tradition in Russian philosophy G. M. Hamburg and Randall A. Poole
I. The Nineteenth Century: 1. Slavophiles, Westernizers, and the birth of Russian philosophical humanism /Sergey Horujy
2. Alexander Herzen / Derek Offord
3. Materialism and the radical intelligentsia: the 1860s / Victoria S. Frede
4. Russian ethical humanism: from populism to neo-idealism / Thomas Nemeth
II. Russian Metaphysical Idealism in Defense of Human Dignity: 5. Boris Chicherin and human dignity in history / G. M. Hamburg
6. Vladimir Solov'iev's philosophical anthropology: autonomy, dignity, perfectibility / Randall A. Poole
7. Russian panpsychism: Kozlov, Lopatin, Losskii / James P. Scanlan
III. Humanity and Divinity in Russian Religious Philosophy after Solov'iev: 8. A Russian cosmodicy: Sergei Bulgakov's religious philosophy / Paul Valliere
9. Pavel Florenskii's trinitarian humanism / Steven Cassedy
10. Semën Frank's expressivist humanism / Philip J. Swoboda
IV. Freedom and Human Perfectibility in the Silver Age: 11. Religious humanism in the Russian silver age / Bernice Glatzer Rosenthal
12. Russian liberalism and the philosophy of law / Frances Nethercott
13. Imagination and ideology in the new religious consciousness / Robert Bird
14. Eschatology and hope in silver age thought / Judith Deutsch Kornblatt
V. Russian Philosophy in Revolution and Exile: 15. Russian Marxism / Andrzej Walicki
16. Adventures in dialectic and intuition: Shpet, Il'in, Losev / Philip T. Grier
17. Nikolai Berdiaev and the philosophical tasks of the emigration / Stuart Finkel
18. Eurasianism: affirming the person in an 'Era of Faith' / Martin Beisswenger
Afterword: on persons as open-ended ends-in-themselves (the view from two novelists and two critics) / Caryl Emerson.