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 27
... point of View. Muller's early death, in the spring of 1838, touched him deeply and a few days later, he took up his interrupted [ournal again. The first sign of change is Kierkegaard's reconciliation with his father. At about this time ...
... view this was the more important point, the new form of communication which the role of feeling demands. Briefly and crudely stated, Kierkegaard's argument is that abstract thought is incapable of grasping “what it means to exist ...
... point of view, is a new level of existence. “Life” he says elsewhere, “must be lived forward, but understood backwards” so that there never can be a complete, all-embracing and systematic explanation of life, since man cannot stand ...
... point of view of reason alone, it is “the absurd” which reason cannot digest, as long as it is uninflected by feeling and undetermined by will, choice and action. But in the concrete everything is reversed, and the second or mature form ...
... point of view and at one essential point altered the character of his work. “The communication of Christianity must ultimately end in bearing witness, the maieutic (indirect) method can never be final. For truth from the Christian point of ...
Other editions - View all
The Soul of Kierkegaard: Selections from His Journals Søren Kierkegaard,Alexander Dru No preview available - 2003 |