Kierkegaard's Concluding Unscientific PostscriptOxford University Press, 1945 - 577 pagine |
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Pagina 155
... immortality ; the consciousness of my immortality belongs to me alone , precisely at the moment when I am conscious of my immortality I am absolutely subjective , and I cannot become immortal in partnership with three single gentlemen ...
... immortality ; the consciousness of my immortality belongs to me alone , precisely at the moment when I am conscious of my immortality I am absolutely subjective , and I cannot become immortal in partnership with three single gentlemen ...
Pagina 156
... immortality . In the second case , he asks what significance it may have for the whole of his human existence that the highest thing in life becomes something like a prank , so that the passion of freedom within him is relegated to ...
... immortality . In the second case , he asks what significance it may have for the whole of his human existence that the highest thing in life becomes something like a prank , so that the passion of freedom within him is relegated to ...
Pagina 157
... immortality is made fantastically ludicrous , just as the converse is ludicrous , when people who have fantastically made a mess of every- thing and have been every possible sort of thing , one day ask the clergy- man with deep concern ...
... immortality is made fantastically ludicrous , just as the converse is ludicrous , when people who have fantastically made a mess of every- thing and have been every possible sort of thing , one day ask the clergy- man with deep concern ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
absolute telos abstract thought admiration aesthetic assume become a Christian beginning believe certainty comic communication confusion contradiction decisive despair dialectical dialectician difficulty direct Docents doctrine doubtless earnest Either-Or enthusiasm entire essentially eternal decision eternal happiness ethical everything existential existing individual existing subject explain expression fact faith fantastic fear and trembling finite Fragments God-relationship Hegel Hegelian hence highest historical humor immanence immortality infinitely interested inwardness Jacobi knowledge lative leap learned Lessing manner means mediation merely misunderstanding objective one's oneself paganism paradox pathos perhaps Philosophical Fragments position possible precisely presupposition principle Privatdocent problem pseudonymous pure thought question reader reality reflection relation relationship religious sense significance Socrates speak speculative philosophy speculative thought sphere spirit Stages on Life's striving stupid subjective thinker suppose sure System systematic task thing tion transformed true truth understand understood wish word world-historical