His career as a professor, philosopher and contributions to Colombian and universal philosophy.
Darío Botero Uribe (July 1938 – June 21, 2010) was a Colombian writer, thinker, professor emeritus and teacher at the National University of Colombia; he received a Doctorate degree from the National University with the title of Master.[1]
He studied law, political science and philosophy at the same university, where he held the position of Dean of the Faculty of Law, Political and Social Sciences (1986-1988). He developed an original philosophical project that he called Cosmic Vitalism.[2] He was vitalist and utopian. He contributed to Colombian and Latin American thought.[3]
In 1960, he participated with other Colombian intellectuals and professionals, including Camilo Torres, Orlando Fals Borda, Eduardo Umaña Luna, María Cristina Salazar, Virginia Gutiérrez de Pineda, Carlos Escalante, and Tomás Ducay, in the foundation of the first Faculty of Sociology in Latin America. at the National University of Colombia.[4]
Botero was a philosopher of culture, social life and law, who frequently gave seminars and conferences on philosophical, cultural and political topics. He was the founder and director of Politeia magazine, of which he edited 29 issues. The magazine featured essays by novelist Rafael Humberto Moreno Durán, philosopher Iván Soll, professor Mario Bettati, Germán Andrés Molina Garrido, Jesús Martín Barbero, among other renowned authors in Latin America and the world.[6]
He was also founder and director of Planeta Sur magazine, with 3 editions. He published more than 15 books and numerous essays on the subjects of his specialty.[7]
Botero was founder and member of the board of directors of the Colombian Association of Philosophy of law and Social Philosophy. He was also a speaker at scientific and philosophical seminars at the main universities in Colombia and some in Latin America.
Cosmic Vitalism
At the end of his life, he developed an original philosophical project that he called Cosmic Vitalism,[8] which seeks to think about the world from a Latin American perspective. Cosmic Vitalism posits life as the three-dimensional concept: cosmic life, biological life, and psychosocial life. In this way, the concept of life and its projection in cultural and social praxis are enriched.[6][1]
After a general theoretical development and an examination of the great conceptions of nature, he concludes with an environmental theory that seeks to discipline citizen behavior towards nature and outlines a concrete humanism based on transnature and not anthropology, as a response to the critics of the humanism of Martin Heidegger and Michel Foucault.[2]
El Estado y la cultura en la Grecia Antigua (1975). Published by the Faculty of Law of the National University of Colombia. Editor: Fabio Barrera Téllez. Maps by Mauricio Cortés.
El Estado y la cultura en la Grecia Antigua (1979). Reissue of the Tercer Mundo bookstore. Bogotá.
Unidimensional racional a la pluridimensionalidad humana (1991)