in 2017 Pisarev was one of the writers who propelled the democratic-revolutionary trend in Russia during the 1860s. The next generation of Russians, made famous by the events of 1905 and 1917, acknowledged Pisarev's influence.
Nadezhda Krupskaya, Lenin's wife, once wrote, "
Lenin was of the generation that grew up under the influence of Pisarev". Pisarev was also noted for his support of Russian natural science, particularly biology, and his works greatly influenced the career choice of the young
Ivan Pavlov. He considered himself a
positivist, although his incorporation of imagination and style somewhat contradicted that school of thought. He did not believe in romantic ideas because they reminded him of the oppressive tsarist government under which he lived. His basic beliefs were "an extreme anti-aesthetic scientistic position." He focused his efforts on defining the relation between literature and the environment. Pisarev wanted, more than anything else, for his readers to learn to think independently. This desire he pursued through philosophy, literary criticism and social and family analyses.
Influence on Lenin Lenin, in the fifth chapter of
What Is To Be Done?, quoted these lines from an article by Pisarev: == Works ==