Keirkegaard's Metaphors offers an explaination of a more accessible way to understand Kierkegarrd by analyzing his persistent use of metaphors.
A highly original rereading of Kierkegaard through the concept of birthing, highlighting a speculative hypothesis about the nature of Being in Kierkegaard’s work.
Originally presented in German as the author's doctoral thesis (Universitat Freiburg im Breisgau, 1984), published by de Gruyter Verlag in 1986; the English text is based on the original English...
Simple listing of one hundred quotes of Soren Kierkegaard's on life, religion and redemption.
" -Eugene Peterson, author, Subversive Spirituality Provocations contains a little of everything from Kierkegaard's prodigious output: his famously cantankerous (yet wryly humorous) attacks on what he calls the "mediocre shell" of ...
"This study proposes to investigate the central metaphors of journey and silence as they as found in Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling. Relying primarily on Paul Ricoeur's corrective to the tradition...
"--Mike Tyson "This book is the best of two worlds: a rich collection of quotations from Kierkegaard that also provides a quick introduction to the central core of his thinking.
This book, which is the first that directly addresses Kierkegaard's parables, argues that they help the reader undergo transformative change.
In this work, Kierkegaard does not deny his Christian past; rather, he asserts that this religious doctrine must be internalized by the individual according to their own subjective demands.
2 the most frequent occurrence of the word “thoughtlessness” in Kierkegaard's published works is in the Concluding Unscientific Postscript, followed by The Concept of Anxiety, with the third place being shared by Stages on Life's Way ...
Kierkegaard's decision not to marry regine olsen had a profound impact on his life and writing.4 He pens in his 1843 journal, “if i had had faith, i would have stayed with regine.”5 On the tenth anniversary of their engagement, ...