And finally, David Lodge’s Therapy (Penguin, 1996) is an amusing and moving novel about a successful but unhappy man who studies the works of Kierkegaard and finds them
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
Jacques Derrida’s The Gift of Death,
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
Kierkegaard wrote 35 books,
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
The way he organized language was as important to him as what he had to say – another reason why reading Kierkegaard is always worthwhile. Most of us will read Kierkegaard for his extraordinary ideas and insights.
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
Kierkegaard always maintained that he was an “author without authority”. He is our postmodern contemporary by recognizing that authorial meaning is “deferred”, “ironic” or “dialogic” – never permanently stable and never “closed”
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
Logical concepts can tell you nothing about really important subjects – such as how to lead your life. Kierkegaard seems a typically postmodern anti-essentialist.
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
Kierkegaard is praised today for being in line with the tradition of “anti-philosophers” which began with Socrates and currently ends with “postmodern” philosophy. Kierkegaard distrusted essentialist metaphysics.
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
Karl Jaspers thought that Kierkegaard’s Christianity was too negative.
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
THERE IS SOMETHING RATHER SUSPECT ABOUT “WILLED BELIEF” … BELIEF IS NOT A CONCLUSION BUT A RESOLUTION.
Elena Akaevahas quoted3 years ago
Being a “Christian” is a life commitment to one’s personal relationship with God, not just passive obedience to a set of conventional rules and doctrines. A