Kierkegaard #2 - Complete Flashcards

1
Q

What does Kierkegaard mean by ‘truth is subjectivity’? Example.

A

Anything that is true is true for a subject.

Example:
The subjective approach to the truth in relation to God: one would aim to experience a god-like, or absolute aspect of oneself.
- Consider the story of Abraham and Isaac (Abraham’s inward passionate experience)

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2
Q

What is Kierkegaards ‘Subjective Truth’?

A

If only the mode of this relationship is in the truth, the individual is in the truth, even if he should happen to be thus related to what is true.

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3
Q

What is Kierkegaards ‘Objective Truth’?

A

If only the object to which he is related is the truth, the subject is accounted to be in the truth (this pen is red. If it is really red then I am in the truth).

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4
Q

What is Kierkegaard’s divine principle?

A

The act of freedom.

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5
Q

Describe the freedom available in the Ethical Lifestyle.

A

It arises from being committed to a socially-shared set of laws.
Freedom comes from the sense of contribution to the construction of those laws.

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6
Q

Describe the freedom available in the Ethical Lifestyle.

A

It arises from being committed to a socially-shared set of laws.
Freedom comes from the sense of contribution to the construction of those laws.

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7
Q

Describe the freedom available in the Religious Lifestyle.

A

Freedom experienced in making ungrounded choices, with nothing but oneself to rely on.
The experience of freedom as a ‘leap of faith’ that involves anxiety and uncertainty.

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8
Q

Describe the freedom available in the Religious Lifestyle.

A

Freedom experienced in making ungrounded choices, with nothing but oneself to rely on.
The experience of freedom as a ‘leap of faith’.

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9
Q

How does Kierkegaard describe the relationship between truth and belief?

A

If one has NO objective support for one’s beliefs and BELIEVES them wholeheartedly, one is
CLOSER to the TRUTH.

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10
Q

What is the best way to become a true Christian, according to Kierkegaard?

A

By making leaps of faith.

By embodying the divine principle one becomes a jesus-like figure (because God was internalised by Jesus)

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11
Q

What is the absolute aspect of ourselves that Kierkegaard is trying to experience?

A

The EXPERIENCE OF AND ACT OF PURE FREEDOM in making an ungrounded choice.

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12
Q

What does the absolute aspect of ourselves that Kierkegaard is trying to experience involve?

A

This involves UNCERTAINTY, and hence absolute faith.

It involves ANXIETY, since the outcome is unclear.

It involves SELF-DETERMINATION since the choice is not based on any objective reasons.

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13
Q

What does Kierkegaard emphasise about experience?

A

The multi-interpretability.

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14
Q

How does Kierkegaard show the multi-interpretability of experience?

A

By showing a variety of lifestyles and described by a variety of literary styles.

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15
Q

What does Kierkegaard imply to be the most profound philosophical expression?

A

Art, rather than science.

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16
Q

What does Judge William criticise?

A

Kierkegaard’s Aesthetic Lifestyle

17
Q

What does Judge William say about Kierkegaard’s Aesthetic Lifestyle? THREE things.

A

Life is a masquerade, and for you this is an inexhaustible material for amusement.

No one has succeeded in knowing you, for every revelation is an illusion.

You yourself are nothing.

18
Q

What is a critique of Kierkegaard’s aesthetic lifestyle?

A

Life of despair.

Meaningless in a world that is always changing - inconsistent.

Masquerade - a joke.

You’re unknown.

Facade/mask.

No sense of real self.

19
Q

What is a critique of Kierkegaard’s Ethical lifestyle?

A

No sufficient sense of personal depth.

May want a different way to the search for meaning.

20
Q

A criticism of the way Kierkegaard present’s himself.

A

Expresses himself in an aesthetic, literary way - wears many masks.

BUT criticises the Aesthetic Lifestyle.

21
Q

What is a critique of Kierkegaard’s advocacy of the religious lifestyle?

A

Promotes religious lifestyle.

YET, it is:

  • Extremely individualistic.
  • Requires a disregard for reason and objective evidence.
22
Q

What is the freed versus reason argument? (Kierkegaard)

A

One can question the extent t which absolute freedom (truth is subjectivity) is, more important as a guide to life than reason (truth and objectivity).