A Kierkegaard AnthologyModern Library, 1959 - 494 pagine The selections in this book have been chosen, first, with a view to the only kind of reading which the editor of an anthology has any right to expect; but secondly, in the hope that possibly a few persons may read it through from beginning to end. So read, it gives a picture of Kierkegaard's intellectual and spiritual development from the age of twenty-one (the date of the first passage from the Journals) until his death a little over twenty years later. This picture is traced by the hand of S.K. himself in the excerpts taken from his various works and arranged (with one or two exceptions) in chronological order. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 51
Pagina 227
... reality my own reality , which is impossible.1 For if I make the foreign reality my own , this does not mean that I become the other through knowing his reality , but it means that I acquire a new reality , which belongs to me as ...
... reality my own reality , which is impossible.1 For if I make the foreign reality my own , this does not mean that I become the other through knowing his reality , but it means that I acquire a new reality , which belongs to me as ...
Pagina 228
... reality within possibility . By not asking about reality aesthetically and intellectually , but only ethically , and again only in the direction of one's own ethical reality , each individual will be ethically isolated . Irony and ...
... reality within possibility . By not asking about reality aesthetically and intellectually , but only ethically , and again only in the direction of one's own ethical reality , each individual will be ethically isolated . Irony and ...
Pagina 230
... reality . But by being muddle - headed in the intellectual sphere , one acquires a certain resemblance to a believer . A believer is one who is infinitely interested in another's reality . This is a decisive criterion for faith , and ...
... reality . But by being muddle - headed in the intellectual sphere , one acquires a certain resemblance to a believer . A believer is one who is infinitely interested in another's reality . This is a decisive criterion for faith , and ...
Sommario
EITHEROR 1843 | 19 |
TWO EDIFYING DISCOURSES 1843 | 108 |
FEAR AND TREMBLING 1843 | 116 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
able absolute aesthetic banquet beautiful becoming a Christian beginning believe choice choose Christ Christendom Christian consciousness Cordelia death Deer Park despair discourse discover divine earthly Either/Or eternal ethical everything evil existential existing individual expression eyes fact faith father fear Fear and Trembling feel finite forget give hand happy heart heaven Hegel hence human illusion imagine impossible instant inwardness Johannes Kierkegaard knight knight of faith learner live look lover marriage means merely movement multitude of sins never object once one's oneself paradox passion perhaps person Philosophical Fragments philosophy poet possible precisely reality reflection relation relationship religious repetition romantic love sense Sickness unto Death significance Socrates Søren Kierkegaard soul speak spirit Stages on Life's suffering surely talk theater thee thing thought tion true truth unchangeable understand Walter Lowrie whole wish woman word