"Newsletter on the Results of Scholarly Work in Sociology, Criminology, Philosophy and Political Science" is the German multidisciplinary scholarly journal founded in January 2020 and published under the auspices of the European Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. The journal’s main subject is criminology; other scientific disciplines include psychology, philosophy, sociology, political science.


The newsletter focuses on multidisciplinary original research across social sciences with an emphasis on studying phenomena such as crime, organized crime, corruption, criminal money laundering, psychology of committing crimes, criminal psychology, criminology as a research discipline, philosophical aspects of crime investigation, political analysis of the influence of crime and its activity on society, public and state structures.
The journal provides an opportunity to publish scholarly articles, as well as articles written at the intersection of the disciplines. The journal seeks to publish original scientific and popular scientific papers that are related to the areas of criminology, psychology, philosophy, sociology and political science. The editorial board accepts articles in English language.


The journal provides immediate open access to its content, making research available for free to the public to support a broader global exchange of knowledge and multidisciplinary debate. If you would like to submit your article, please read the rules.

Vol. 4 No. 2 (2023): Results of Scholarly Work

As editor-in-chief of an academic journal, I am ultimately tasked with the responsibility of deciding whether or not a submitted manuscript will be published. The criteria used to judge academic acceptability will often produce an issue replete with articles destined for scholarly oblivion. Such is the nature of publications cherished by many in the academic community. This issue, as all issues of this journal, cuts the Gordian Knot of impenetrable obscurity with its relevant presentations.

Not in the order of their appearance or importance within this issue, we call your attention to the work of Oleg Maltsev, Phenomena of the Mind: Related to Human Perceptions and Representations, a fresh and fascinating journey into the workings of the human mind. Vadym Palahuta continues the voyage by exploring the concept subjectivity in his The Identity of the Modern Human Problem of Social and Humanitarian Knowledge.

As we wander away from delving into the human mind, we turn our attention to the human condition. The latter is addressed by both Dwight Wilson in Mass Shooting and Events. This article tackles problems all too common in today’s society, i.e., violence and lawlessness. Valentyna Voronkova et al., and Steve Gennaro address the digital world impact on the human condition in Formation and Development of Society 5.0 and Reclaiming the Right to Play in the Googleburg Galaxy, respectively. And Douglas Keller in Media Culture, Politics, and Society addresses the media’s role in framing the conditions that impact the human condition in today’s digital society that is often plagued by violence and lawlessness.

For those interested in keeping abreast with a specific region of the world, Frédéric Conrod and Vladimir Skvorets do not disappoint. In Hombre, Claro … : A Reflection on Narcissism in Spanish Culture, Conrod addresses the impact narcissism had and has on Spain and its cultural output. Skvorets in Theory of Social Change in Post-Soviet Ukrainian Society helps clarify the importance of the contributions of Ukrainian scholars in a post-Soviet world.

Our readers in want of esoteric, albeit fascinating, topics will find Marco Andreacchio and Mark Horvath and Adam Lovasz of much interest. In Thomas Pangle’s Neo-Epicurean Reading of Aristotle’s Biology, Andreacchio takes on Pangle’s central contentions in his 2020 reading of Aristotle’s work. Horvath and Lovasz present for our esoteric appetite their research, An Absentological Analysis of the Trace: Pre-Cambrian Arche-writing, and Jacques Derrida’s Realism. A work sure to please the informed and edify the neophyte.

Hoping you enjoy our presentations in this issue of Results of Scholarly Works. We are committed to bringing you cutting-edge research and dynamic opinion that illuminates and educates our readers. Until our next issue, we remain academically yours.

Sincerely, Harvey W. Kushner Long Island University, Brookville, New York.

Published: 2023-09-17

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