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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... of explanation in which his reflection tried to imprison him, and finally restoring order. It was this agonising sense of the dislocation between thought and existence which drove him, as he grew up, to INTRODUCTION 9.
... sense of freedom and duty and the belief that “one can do what one wills” which supported him through all the trials and crises of his life. But when the crisis came involving his father, his whole world came crashing about his cars. It ...
... sense of isolation could centre and round which his melancholy coagulated. Kierkegaard's father, Michael Pedersen Kierkegaard, was born in Saeding, a hamlet in the poorest district on the moors of Jutland, where the peasants scraped a ...
... sense for her death—perhaps she had learnt of his relations with their servant. If Kierkegaard's expressions are any guide, he accused himself of seducing, if not raping, the girl who lived under his roof and under his protection, and ...
... senses his father sent him for a holiday to Gilleleje, on the north coast of Zealand, where the first entries in this selection were written in August 1835. For a moment Kierkegaard pulled himself together and the deeper note in his ...
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The Soul of Kierkegaard: Selections from His Journals Søren Kierkegaard,Alexander Dru No preview available - 2003 |