kierkegaard general Flashcards

1
Q

the self, the ethical and suffering

A
  • Self-consciousness is not just constituted by relationship to ‘other’
  • At ethical and level of freedom, agency is fulfilled through participation in the universal
  • Ethics of self-realisation/positive freedom
  • The self is only itself through process of realisation
  • Suffering is crucial for becoming an adult
  • If you want freedom to rather than freedom from, you have to engage with negativity
  • Ethical = mediation of otherness
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2
Q

personal context - pseudonyms

A

Problem of pseudonyms – to what extent is the text an expression of K’s own views?
Fear and Trembling by Johannes de Silentio (K later claims that he made a mistake in renouncing Regina. It is not clear that the Kantian-Hegelian view of ethics would be accepted by K. This work seems to be part of a dialectical move within a much wider strategy)

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3
Q

personal context - family

A

K’s father had a guilt complex because he cursed God as a child serf in Jutland and seduced the maid – whom he married (K junior’s mum)
- Wife and five children died prematurely – K senior thought this was a punishment
- Lived in guilt-induced world
As a child he was vital but physically weak – developed bitter wit as defence
- Physical weakness vs. intellectual power
- Thought was ‘the idea for which I can live or die’

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4
Q

personal context - engagement

A

Regina Olsen = engagement to eligible lady. Central event

Broke off engagement and ignited public scandal – felt a ‘divine protest’ calling him to be an ‘individual’

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5
Q

philosophical fragments

A

K starts writing – Philosophical Fragments published in 1844

  • Anti-Hegelian. Rejects Hs’s idea of systems
  • Particular view of Xianity in ethics – refusal to identify Xianity with Hegelian Sittlichkeit
  • To be free is to be free from, not free to
  • He was fascinated with vigorous immoralists like Don Juan who were living passionately
  • He thought more of this stage of existence than mere conventional morality
  • Those living in Sittlichkeit are not truly living
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6
Q

criticism of religion

A
  • K was critical of modern society – viewed it as conformist and anti-individualist
  • Attacked state Protestantism as ‘worldly well being and soft-hearted mediocrity’
  • K saw himself as a missionary with the purpose of reintroducing Xianity into Christendom
  • It is not doctrinal as much as existential communication with one’s self: ‘the precise opposite of speculation’
  • Viewed Hegelianism as having led people to forget how to live as Xians
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7
Q

hegelianism summarised

A
  • H advocated revival of natural theology
  • Reason = objective structure, not just the minds of particular subjects
  • H is last of great speculative Xian Platonists
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8
Q

hegelianism concerns on freedom and dualism

A

Freedom is the basis of morality
- Link to Kant and Kierkegaard – all concerned with role of freedom in morality
Hegel cannot accept Kant’s dualism
- Questions noumenal vs. phenoumenal distinction

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9
Q

hegels speculative theology

A
  • Religion = knowledge possessed by the finite mind of its nature as absolute mind – in religion, finite life rises to the infinite - Hostile towards church thought
  • Universe = unity of elements and philosophy
  • lutheran - religion and philosophy have the same content, imaginative in religion and conceptual in philosophy
  • existentialist, existence precedes essence. emphasis on the I
  • but also need to presuppose an ‘other’, defined by position in society
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10
Q

hegels view on man and god

A

god is man - eternal activity of god’s self-manifestation. in self-creation, god is man

man is god - god creates man’s consciousness as an element of his. god thinks through us

more emphasis on god as process

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11
Q

K response to Hegel’s speculative theology

A
  • H’s mode of religious thought threatens individual’s faith
  • H’s view institutionalises religion too much
  • For K, you need to recognise your individual calling
  • Hegel seems to abolish faith
    In the conclusion of the Postscript, K says that ‘man only begins to exist in faith’
  • Before this choice has been made, reason and faith will always appear to conflict because reason alone is inadequate: ‘life must be lived forwards, but understood backwards’
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12
Q

Hegel’s political thought and Kierkegaard response

A

Hegel’s political thought

  • Truth = unity of universal and subjective will
  • Universal = found in the state, which is the divine idea on earth

K’s response to H’s political thought

  • ‘the individual is the category through which, form a religious point of view, our age, our race must pass’
  • ‘how often have I shown that fundamentally Hegel makes men into heathens…for in the animal world the individual is always less important than the race. But it is the peculiarity of the human race that just because the individual is created in the image of God the individual is above the race’
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13
Q

k on knowledge

A

In Philosophical Fragments, K took up the old Socratic paradox concerning how one can learn that which one does not already (in some sense) know
- S came to conclusion in Meno that knowledge is recollection and a sense ‘within’
- K contrasts this with the view that in Xianity, truth comes from ‘without’. A teacher is required to reveal to man that he is in error
- Contrasting with Socratic view
- JC does not simply draw out pre-existing ideas but presents radically new ideas
- Only from this point on can man distinguish truth from falsehood – the ‘moment’ is vital
- The learner is changed from total ignorance to possessing eternal knowledge and thereby becoming a new creature is a leap of faith – not a rational transition
- The learner is faced with the paradox of the incarnation – the idea that the eternal enters into the temporal
- This is a scandal to ‘reason’ – the reason for this paradox is illuminate after the leap (cf. analogy of king and maiden)
Need to recognise error to achieve this state

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14
Q

point of the book - general

A
  • To attack upon Hegel as part of the Platonic succession
  • Instead of cogito ergo sum, ‘being is faith’ - Necessity of faith
  • Cf. use of figure of Abraham
    Abraham is the father of faith and for K, he is a model of the Xian life in fear and trembling, facing the paradox and absurdity of faith
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15
Q

pont of the book - the ethical

A

Wants to challenge the idea of the sufficiency of the ethical
Faith is outside the domain of human standards of rationality
Contrast between standpoint of faith represented by Abraham and ethics
Faith is the ‘highest passion of a person’

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16
Q

point of the book - individual > universal

A

Particularity of the relation of agent to God (no intermediary)
- Figure of Abraham = particularly lonely
The infinite resignation re. finite goods (not wish fulfilment)
The Knight of Faith as a heroic figure who lives in virtue of the God relationship
The pathos of the teleological suspension of the ethical is ‘fear and trembling’
- A = paralysed by fear

17
Q

truth as knowledge

A

K’s notion of ‘truth as knowledge’ is exemplified by Plato’s Theory of Ideas
- Platonic Ideas = eternal, objective, independent from an individual’s changing existence and distinct from the world of the sensory
For K, this is incompatible with Xianity
- Becoming Xian involves a way of existing in relationship to God and this relationship is characterised by faith rather than knowledge
- His ‘polemic against the truth as knowledge’ is aimed primarily against Hegelian theology

18
Q

truth as faith

A

Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice Isaac exemplifies the truth of faith
- ‘what did Abraham achieve? He remained true to his love’
this is the kind of truth that one brings into being – it belongs to finite existence rather than eternity
For K, the religious life offers the highest truth in so far as it involves the actualisation of love
The knight of faith’s (Abraham) relationship to God is one of love given and received – receiving God’s love means experiencing one’s own life as a divine guest
K suggests that living in this way is the most difficult thing as there is a risk of suffering and loss
- ‘every moment to see the sword hanging over the beloved’s head and yet not to find rest in the pain of resignation but to find joy by virtue of the absurd – this is wonderful. The person who does this is great, the only great one’ - reminiscent of betrothal to Regina?

19
Q

analyse this quote from problem I - ‘the difference between the tragic hero and Abraham is clearly evident. The tragic hero still remains within the ethical. He lets one expression of the ethical find its telos in a higher expression of the ethical…here there can be no question of teleological suspension of the ethical itself. With Abraham the situation was different. By his act he overstepped the ethical entirely and possessed a higher telos outside of it’ (69)

A
  • the tragic hero has to do something terrible but the basis of the terrible deed is ethical - Agamemnon has to sacrifice his daughter to the state
  • whatever pain he may feel, he is still with the universal
  • he has the consolation that whatever his personal loss, he is conforming with the universal objective
  • thus he can expect the sympathy and respect of others
  • A breaches the ethical and reaches a ‘higher telos’
  • He relinquishes the universal and is alone and isolated
  • As an individual he is in ‘an absolute relation to the absolute’
  • Higher telos = religious. The only justification is the Divine command to him alone
20
Q

dialectic in K

A
  • Truth and understanding as in motion – Hegelian idea
  • More explicitly dialectical strand seen in Either/Or
    o Aesthetic mode of life
    o Puritanical judge William in second half
    ♣ Symbolises Copenhagen conformity to ethical principles
    o Resolution of the notion of religious life – combining it with aesthetic. Thesis/antithesis structure
    o F&T is dialectical but in looser sense than E/O which is structured as a dialectic text
21
Q

abraham = specific example that combines the universal and individual

A

o Embodies the individual that nonetheless captures something truly universal between individual seized with meaning of authentic existence and connection to divine
o Non-negotiably personal address from divine. Complete commitment of faith
o Move away from dry ethical concepts of contemporary Copenhagen – gripping narrative that connects us to the universally applicable

22
Q

kant general on universal

A

o There is no divine on the outside – that would be heteronomy
o Universal for K is only the fact that every human is rational
o No command from outside, all about moral law within exercised by will
o Universal as all humans have it, but still from within
o But not connected to extrinsic and morally binding source (which is the case for Kierkegaard – individual is summoned to call from beyond that shatters comfort of universal)

23
Q

why would Kant not agree with Kierk’s understanding

A

♣ 1793 – religion within the limits of reason alone
• scripture is not to be taken as more than pictorial prompt – does not disclose moral truth/truth about relationship between divinity and reality with individual subject
♣ we cannot know anything about reality of God – we must think there is such a thing for architechture of duty/value. But is a regulative ideal
♣ just as we must postulate that we are free, despite realm of phenomenal suggesting that freedom is impossible e.g. gravity. Science cannot study free acts
♣ but for respect of Achtung (moral law), we must be free to act otherwise
♣ we must assume freedom despite it being beyond theoretical grasp

24
Q

lyric in K

A

o aesthetic dimension – poetic mode. Not legalistic. Musical expression with stories and parables
♣ but…limit to this is in systematic evaluation of 4 scenarios etc.
o but also individual focus on J’s voice and his attempt to understand Abraham’s faith

25
Q

attack on ethics?

A
  • Partially attacks universal ethics, but still views it as necessary outside of extremity of A
  • Necessary teleological suspension of ethical
  • Existential authenticity is necessary and is not found in society – have to be shocked out of social convention
    o A story makes us question how we understand ethics
    o Link to context of Genesis – child sacrifice = normal
    o Function of Gen 22 is to reprise this in a dramatic way – common trope in thought
    ♣ But deliberate reminder of trope followed by radical subversion of it
    ♣ Most important part is that Isaac is NOT sacrificed
26
Q

strength of the absurd

A
  • Ethical = suspended with trust in divine
    o Cannot rly know whether A thought G would ask him to sacrifice
    o This would require it to be a live ethical question – it would bring back the ethical
27
Q

divine command theory?

A
  • Euthyphro dilemma
  • To a certain extent yes
  • But wrong lens to think about text
    o It is a theory about DC as transcending ethics – it is not a theory of ethics but of what must transcend any ethical theory that you can offer
    o Cannot be reduced to ethical theory