Boris Bogoslovsky
Boris Basil Bogoslovsky (29 April 1890, Ryazan – December 2, 1966 in Charleston, Illinois) was a Russian-American teacher and United Nations official.
Bogoslovosky emigrated to the United States, where he became a naturalized citizen.[1] He married a Swedish teacher, Christina Staël von Holstein, and the pair taught at the Cherry Lawn School, a progressive boarding school in Darien, Connecticut. In 1933 they became co-directors of the school. Bogoslovosky taught science there until 1945, when he joined the United Nations as a translator in the UN's Russian Language Section.[1] He was also an observer for the US government at the Nuremberg Trials.[2][3]
Works
- The Technique of Controversy: Principles of Dynamic Logic (1928; in the series The International Library of Psychology, Philosophy and Scientific Method)
- The Ideal School (1936)
- "The Third Revolution and the Foundation for Fifth Estate," Main Currents in Modern Though, Vol. XIV, No. 1 (1957)
References
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- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Christian E. Burckel, ed., Who's Who in the United Nations, 1951
- ↑ Cherry Lawn School History
- ↑ J. E. Bunting, Private independent schools: The American private schools for girls and boys, 1972, p.78