The Soul of Kierkegaard: Selections from His Journals"The primary source for any understanding of either the man or his thought." — The Times (London) Literary Supplement |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 15
... gift of penetrating the minds of others. When Hans Brochner, later Professor of Philosophy at the University, first met him, he assumed he must be some little clerk from an office. But it was not long before he was disillusioned on that ...
... gifts it encouraged his singularity and made him old before his time. Then and afterwards, his father was the only man with whom he lived on equal terms, whose cast of mind was in many respects like his own, and on whom he could count ...
... gifts of our family were only given to us in order that we should rend one another to pieces.” Kierkegaard had found the infallible law which explained all the facts; the “great earthquake” shattered his world and left him stranded ...
... gifts and genius, but in the depth and riches of the spiritual life which is the spring of action. It is that inward action, as Kierkegaard says in one of the earliest entries, which means everything, and then the rest, the objective ...
... gifts of our family were only given to us in order that we should rend each other to pieces: then I felt the stillness of death grow around me when I saw my father, an unhappy man who was to outlive us all, a cross on the tomb . of all ...
Other editions - View all
The Soul of Kierkegaard: Selections from His Journals Søren Kierkegaard,Alexander Dru No preview available - 2003 |