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 |
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... individual man in a deathly silence where he will be face to face with the one thing necessary: the fusion of thought and existence. For it is only then that the spirit of man is born, and he becomes “the individual.” That unswerving ...
... individual” depicted in a series of scenes and situations which define the stages or levels of existence: the aesthetic, ethical and religious levels which are presented both as alternatives and again as the material to be co-ordinated ...
... individual” begins to exist and becomes a complete man. The error of rationalism is therefore twofold. It limits man to being “a rational animal,” and because it excludes feeling, limits him to one form of communication which, by ...
... individual.” That fusion takes place in the “choice.” For the choice is not the choice of something external (a view of life, a particular corpus of knowledge) but of oneself, of a complete existence. Prior to that constitutive act man ...
... individual” which, unlike the aesthetic humanism of the bourgeois period, is open to all men equally, and in the fact that his conception of the complete man was an indirect proof of Christianity: not a demonstration which could be ...
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The Soul of Kierkegaard: Selections from His Journals Søren Kierkegaard,Alexander Dru No preview available - 2003 |