Kierkegaard, Metaphysics, and Love
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George Pattison
Abstract
Noting Heidegger’s critique of Kierkegaard’s way of relating time and eternity, the paper offers an alternative reading of Kierkegaard that suggests Heidegger has overlooked crucial elements in the Kierkegaardian account. Gabriel Marcel and Sharon Krishek are used to counter Heidegger’s minimizing of the deaths of others and to show how the deaths of others may become integral to our sense of self. This prepares the way for revisiting Kierkegaard’s discourse on the work of love in remembering the dead. Against the criticism that this reveals the absence of the other in Kierkegaardian love, the paper argues that, on the contrary, it shows how Kierkegaard conceives the self as inseparable from the core relationships of love that, despite of death, constitute it as the self that it is.
© 2013 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Section 1: Kierkegaard’s Concepts, Motifs and Figures
- Kierkegaard on the Atonement: The Complementarity of Salvation as a Gift and Salvation as a Task
- Recognition and Its Discontents: Johannes de Silentio and the Preacher
- In Defense of a Straightforward Reading of Fear and Trembling
- Verführung nach Kierkegaard. Ein soziologischer Versuch
- Johannes Climacus on Coming into Existence: The Problem of Modality in Kierkegaard’s Fragments and Postscript
- Kierkegaard’s Passion for Equality
- The Abyss of Demonic Boredom: An Analysis of the Dialectic of Freedom and Facticity in Kierkegaard’s Early Works
- Section 2: Love and Passion
- Selfless Passion: Kierkegaard on True Love
- Kierkegaard, Metaphysics, and Love
- Self-Love and Neighbor-Love in Kierkegaard’s Ethics
- Love as a Relation to Truth: Envisioning the Person in Works of Love
- “Love” Among the Post-Socratics
- Love, Death, and the Limits of Singularity
- Kierkegaard and the Sheer Phenomenon of Love
- Love’s Hidden Laugh: On Jest, Earnestness, and Socratic Indirection in Kierkegaard’s “Praising Love”
- Passion as a Will to Existence in Kierkegaard
- Section 3: Kierkegaard in Dialogue
- Die philosophische Verflüchtigung des Glaubensbegriffs. Kierkegaards Auseinandersetzung mit Immanuel Hermann Fichte
- Kierkegaard and the Traditions of the Comic in Philosophy
- Why a Danish Golden Age? Structural Holes in 19th Century Copenhagen
- Kierkegaard and Nietzsche on Living by a Guiding Passion
- The Self as a Center of Ethical Gravity: A Constructive Dialogue Between Søren Kierkegaard and George Herbert Mead
- Section 4: Current Debates and Controversies
- The Soul of a Philosopher: Reply to Turnbull
- Abbreviations
- List of Contributors
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Preface
- Table of Contents
- Section 1: Kierkegaard’s Concepts, Motifs and Figures
- Kierkegaard on the Atonement: The Complementarity of Salvation as a Gift and Salvation as a Task
- Recognition and Its Discontents: Johannes de Silentio and the Preacher
- In Defense of a Straightforward Reading of Fear and Trembling
- Verführung nach Kierkegaard. Ein soziologischer Versuch
- Johannes Climacus on Coming into Existence: The Problem of Modality in Kierkegaard’s Fragments and Postscript
- Kierkegaard’s Passion for Equality
- The Abyss of Demonic Boredom: An Analysis of the Dialectic of Freedom and Facticity in Kierkegaard’s Early Works
- Section 2: Love and Passion
- Selfless Passion: Kierkegaard on True Love
- Kierkegaard, Metaphysics, and Love
- Self-Love and Neighbor-Love in Kierkegaard’s Ethics
- Love as a Relation to Truth: Envisioning the Person in Works of Love
- “Love” Among the Post-Socratics
- Love, Death, and the Limits of Singularity
- Kierkegaard and the Sheer Phenomenon of Love
- Love’s Hidden Laugh: On Jest, Earnestness, and Socratic Indirection in Kierkegaard’s “Praising Love”
- Passion as a Will to Existence in Kierkegaard
- Section 3: Kierkegaard in Dialogue
- Die philosophische Verflüchtigung des Glaubensbegriffs. Kierkegaards Auseinandersetzung mit Immanuel Hermann Fichte
- Kierkegaard and the Traditions of the Comic in Philosophy
- Why a Danish Golden Age? Structural Holes in 19th Century Copenhagen
- Kierkegaard and Nietzsche on Living by a Guiding Passion
- The Self as a Center of Ethical Gravity: A Constructive Dialogue Between Søren Kierkegaard and George Herbert Mead
- Section 4: Current Debates and Controversies
- The Soul of a Philosopher: Reply to Turnbull
- Abbreviations
- List of Contributors