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Kant, Hegel, and Kierkegaard’s Supposed Irrationalism: A Reading of Fear and Trembling

  • Daniel M. Johnson
Published/Copyright: November 24, 2011
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Articles in the same Issue

  1. Preface
  2. Contents
  3. Section 1: Sourcework Studies
  4. Kierkegaard’s Forking for Extracts from Extracts of Luther’s Sermons: Reviewing Kierkegaard’s Laud and Lance of Luther
  5. Anthropology in Kierkegaard and Kant: The Synthesis of Facticity and Ideality vs. Moral Character
  6. Kant, Hegel, and Kierkegaard’s Supposed Irrationalism: A Reading of Fear and Trembling
  7. Hegel and Kierkegaard on Freedom
  8. Hegel’s Historical Methodology in The Concept of Irony
  9. Kierkegaard’s Hidden Polemics against Heiberg and Martensen in the Last Chapter of The Concept of Irony
  10. Die eigentlichen Adressaten von Kierkegaards Kritik, den Glauben als „das Unmittelbare“ zu bezeichnen
  11. Section 2: The Theory of Selfhood
  12. Puzzles of Self-Deception and Problems of Orientation: Kierkegaard and the Current Debate in the Philosophy of Psychology
  13. Kierkegaard’s “Self” and Augustine’s Influence
  14. Mimesis in Kierkegaard’s “Does a Human Being Have the Right to Let Himself Be Put to Death for the Truth?” Remarks on the Formation of the Self
  15. “To Be Joy Itself”: Kierkegaard on Being Present to Oneself and Others in Faith
  16. Holy Hypochondria. Narrative and Self-Awareness in The Concept of Anxiety
  17. What is Qualitative about Qualitative Dialectic?
  18. Saving Kierkegaard’s Soul: From Philosophical Psychology to Golden Age Soteriology
  19. Being and Becoming a Virtual Self: Taking Kierkegaard into the Realm of Online Social Interaction
  20. Section 3: The Ethical and the Religious
  21. Making Sense of the Ethical Stage: Revisiting Kierkegaard’s Aesthetic-to-Ethical Transition
  22. Authenticity and Imitation. On the Role of Moral Exemplarity in Anti-Climacus’ Ethics
  23. Job’s Suffering
  24. Das Dämonische bei Kierkegaard
  25. Kierkegaard’s Constitutivism: Agency, the Stages of Existence and the Issue of Motivation
  26. Section 4: Reception History
  27. Christoph Schrempfs Tätigkeit als Übersetzer und Interpret Søren Kierkegaards
  28. Wittgenstein’s Relations to Kierkegaard Reconsidered: Wittgenstein’s Diaries 1930–1932, 1936–1937
  29. Abbreviations
  30. List of Contributors
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