Either/Or : Part 1 Kierkegaard's Writings. Edna H. Hong, Howard V. Hong, Soren Kierkegaard

Either/Or : Part 1 Kierkegaard's Writings


Either.Or.Part.1.Kierkegaard.s.Writings.pdf
ISBN: 0691020419,9780691020419 | 728 pages | 19 Mb


Download Either/Or : Part 1 Kierkegaard's Writings



Either/Or : Part 1 Kierkegaard's Writings Edna H. Hong, Howard V. Hong, Soren Kierkegaard
Publisher: Princeton University Press




I don't recall ever having read about K. Whatever is to be said for or against him, Kierkegaard Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, his works, which emphasize human passions and the unassailable integrity of the individual, have experienced a new international wave of popularity in Eastern Europe and China, among other places. Jennifer commented on letter 8 rilke on solitude and: “I was actually curious, who was the translator of your copy of that letter? For only eternity has the ability to confer . This is the way, I suppose, the world will come to an end – amid the universal hilarity and applause of wits and wise guys who think it's all just a joke. Kierkegaard acknowledges, and In this way the Christian understands that temporal life allows one plane of existence (either lose or whirpool) while eternity offers another (victory). Kierkegaard's Works of Love - Part II - Love Hopes All Things and Is Never Put to Shame. It was as true in the nineteenth century as the twenty-first. (I think I've read the ones on Habermas and I took a course in Kierkegaard a few years ago and our readings were Fear and Trembling, Either/Or, Philosophical Fragments, and a few generous helpings from the Concluding Unscientific Postscript. We read a great essay and we applaud. This website provides an archive for my teaching and writing on religion and theology, and the reversals which occur therein. In such a book–especially not as part of that “great cloud of witnesses” evangelicals like to look back to–our heroes and spiritual ancestors. Clown-on-fire3.jpg So often in academic theology we read as if it's merely about the insightfulness of the arguments. His pseudonymous works ( you mention several– Fear and Trembling, Sickness Unto Death, Either/Or, et cetera) are excellent, but aren't meant to be taken as direct theology, which makes them a bit difficult to work with. I haven't read Kierkegaard and can't vouch for this particular book, but I have found these "Very Short Introduction" books useful when getting into a new area or author.