Reviving the Dead: A Kierkegaardian Turn from the Self-Positing to the Theological Self
Abstract
:1. The Conversation
2. Fichte’s Original Insight
For Fichte, this abstract logical principle of identity is not the first principle of philosophy, but merely a preliminary “clue” for a far more fundamental truth: I = I. According to “I = I,” the I—or the self—is posited, or put into being, by itself. It exists absolutely by and for its own assertion.16 According to this principle, the self is not called into existence by Another, but it issues forth its own summons. The conscious subject does not observe itself as an object, but it is immediately aware of itself.17 The self is its own creator and has no outside determining factors or influences. Everything is encompassed within itself: there is no outside. Therefore, he writes, “As [the self] posits itself, so it is; and as it is, so it posits itself; and hence the self is absolute and necessary for the self.”18 In short, self-consciousness both constitutes and contains being.[The] above proposition can also be expressed as follows: if A is posited in the self, it is thereby posited, or, it thereby is. Thus the self asserts, by means of X, that A exists absolutely for the judging self, and that simply in virtue of its being posited in the self as such; which is to say, it is asserted that within the self—whether it be specifically positing, or judging, or whatever it may be—there is something that is permanently uniform, forever one and the same; and hence the X that is absolutely posited can also be expressed as I = I, I am I.
3. Fichte’s Border
Where now will the philosopher, who presupposes belief in God, search for the necessary ground which he is supposed to furnish? Should he base himself on the alleged necessity with which the existence of the nature of the world of the senses implies a rational author? The answer must be an emphatic “no.” For he knows only too well that such an inference is totally unwarranted, although misguided thinkers have made such a claim in their embarrassment to explain something whose existence they cannot deny but whose true ground is hidden from them. The original understanding, which is placed under the guardianship of reason and the direction of its mechanism, is incapable of such a step. One may regard the world of the senses either from the point of view of commonsense which is also that of the natural sciences or else from the transcendental standpoint. In the former case reason is required to stop at the existence of the world as something absolute: the world exists simply because it does and it is the way it is simply because it is that way… From this point of view, the world is an organized and organizing whole containing the ground of all phenomena within itself and its immanent laws. If, while occupying the standpoint of the pure natural sciences, we demand an explanation of the existence and nature of the universe in terms of an intelligent cause, our demand is total nonsense.
From [the practical point of view] there is a world that exists independently of us, which we can only modify; from [this point of view] the pure I, which does not completely vanish even for this point of view, is posited outside of us and called God. How else could we have arrived at the properties that we ascribe to God and deny of ourselves if we had not found them in ourselves and then only denied them of ourselves in a certain respect (as individuals)?
4. Fichte’s Dead End
Fichte’s account of the self, though striking and original, raises a question that would vex him for the duration of his philosophical career: if the self posits the I, yet also posits the I as limited by the not-I, how is the self able to posit itself, especially since its “self” is necessarily in a relationship with the not-self? Though this question applies generally to Fichte’s account of the I-world relationship, it also applies to his account of self-consciousness. The basic problem is that consciousness is a unity of the subject–object relationship, and this relationship is somehow constitutive of, yet posited by, itself.
For Fichte, 1799 was a year filled with disappointment. Not only did he lose his job, but he also began to lose many of his most prominent philosophical allies, including Reinhold, who had briefly become an enthusiastic exponent of the Wissenschaftslehere. Schelling, the most conspicuous and prolific of the young “Fichteans,” continued, despite Fichte’s disapproval, to pursue his interest in “the philosophy of nature,” while Jacobi, whom, for all their philosophical difference, Fichte greatly admired, published a long Open Letter to Fichte, in which he devastatingly characterized the Wissenschaftslehere as “nihilism.” Finally, in August 1799, Kant himself issued a public “declaration” in which he repudiated Fichte’s system and disavowed any relationship between his own philosophy and the Wissenschaftslehre.
5. How to Revive the Dead
6. A Twist
A human being is spirit. But what is spirit? Spirit is the self. But what is the self? The self is a relation that relates itself to itself or is the relation’s relating itself to itself in the relation; the self is not the relation but is the relation’s relating itself to itself. A human being is a synthesis of the infinite and the finite, of the temporal and the eternal, of freedom and necessity, in short, a synthesis. A synthesis is a relation between two. Considered in this way, a human being is still not a self.
Such a relation that relates itself to itself, a self, must either have established itself or have been established by another. If the relation that relates itself to itself has been established by another, then the relation is indeed the third, but this relation, the third, is yet again a relation and relates itself to that which established the entire relation. The human self is such a derived, established relation, a relation that relates itself to itself and in relating itself to itself relates itself to another.
Rather than securing the self’s freedom and autonomy, Anti-Climacus says attempting to be one’s own establishing power leads to its death—or worse, sickness unto death, which is the state of wanting to die without being able to:And this is the self that a person in despair wills to be, severing the self from any relation to a power that has established it, or severing it from the idea that there is such a power. With the help of this infinite form, the self in despair wants to be master of itself or to create itself, to make his self into the self he wants to be, to determine what he will have or not have in his concrete self. His concrete self or his concretion certainly has necessity and limitations, is this very specific being with these natural capacities, predispositions, etc. in this specific concretion of relations, etc. But with the help of the infinite form, the negative self, he wants first of all to take upon himself the transformation of all this in order to fashion out of it a self such as he wants, produced with the help of the infinite form of the negative self—and in this way he wills himself. In other words, he wants to begin a little earlier than do other men, not at and with the beginning, but “in the beginning.”
[Despair] is veritably a self-consuming, but an impotent self-consuming that cannot do what it wants to do. What it wants to do is consume itself, something it cannot do, and this impotence is a new form of self-consuming, in which despair is once again unable to do what it wants to do, to consume itself… This comfort is precisely the torment, is precisely what keeps the gnawing alive and keeps life in the gnawing, for it is precisely over this that he despairs (not as having despaired): that he cannot consume himself, cannot get rid of himself, cannot reduce himself to nothing.
Here again, Anti-Climacus shows how the experience of the sickness unto death destroys the self’s illusion of self-mastery. The height of the sickness unto death is when the self is conscious of the truth about itself and yet refuses to be cured.Just as the weak, despairing person is unwilling to hear anything about any consolation eternity has for him, so a person in [defiant] despair does not want to hear anything about it either, but for a different reason: this very consolation would be his undoing—as a denunciation of all existence. Figuratively speaking, it is as if an error slipped into an author’s writing and the error became conscious it itself as an error—perhaps it actually was not a mistake but in a much higher sense an essential part of the whole production—and now this error wants to mutiny against the author, out of hatred toward him, forbidding him to correct it and in maniacal defiance saying to him: No, I refuse to be erased; I will stand as a witness against you, a witness that you are a second-rate author.
7. The Method behind the Move
Come further suggests that any categories or concepts in Kierkegaard’s authorship forward are always “subject to the control and correction of the phenomenological.”45 Anti-Climacus’s approach is a perfect example of this method. He undoubtedly considers tri-relationality to be a universal structure of the self, but he takes a phenomenological route to arrive at this conclusion. The phenomenon of despair initially discloses the self to itself as a contingent rather than an autonomous being. To be sure, some selves are aware of their despair and others are not.46 However, this lack of awareness proves that despair is a phenomenon with “forms of hiddenness and absence [that] are essential to [its] makeup…”47 By attending to the phenomenon of despair, the self sees the structures of its consciousness more clearly. It recognizes itself as a dependent being who is infinitely qualitatively different from the power that established it.What I mean when I say that his basic method is phenomenological can be stated simply: he begins his every exploration of human existence with an analysis of his own self, his own experience, whether the topic is sin, anxiety, despair, faith, love or God. And his goal, his ending is not a system of ideas or even understanding but is to turn his “subjective reflection” toward the task of transformation of his concrete existence as a self.
8. A Switch
9. Significance of the Structure
The point is that the previously considered gradation in the consciousness of the self is within the category of the human self, or the self whose criterion is man. But this self takes on a new quality and qualification by being a self directly before God. This self is no longer the merely human self but is what I, hoping not to be misinterpreted, would call the theological self, the self directly before God. And what infinite reality the self gains by being conscious of existing before God, by becoming a human self whose criterion is God!
There is a clear logical progression to SUD, one that meets the unbelieving reader where they are. By using the epistemic resources available to them, Anti-Climacus helps the reader see themself as a contingent rather than a self-positing being. Furthermore, he helps them recognize their experience of despair as directly related to a mis-relation between them and the power that establishes them. The progression of the text indicates that Anti-Climacus hopes to accompany the reader on a deeper consideration of these matters through revealed theology. Thus, while he respects the distinction between what is available to human understanding and what is only accessible through revealed theology, it is clear the author has a higher theological aim that directs the text as a whole.For Anti-Climacus… the story of Christ as the manifestation of the truly human opens the possibility of a new way of applying the Socratic method. If Christ is the true human and faith is the only way of appropriating this truth, lack of faith will prevent the realization of the truly human in a way that supposedly is psychologically explorable. The approach chosen in The Sickness unto Death is thus a kind of via negative through which the author explores the psychological consequences of faith’s absence in the hope of evoking recognition in his readers, thus finding an indirect route to showing the relevance of a Christ-centered anthropology.
10. Breakthrough
Revelation tells the self that it is a sinner, an offense to a holy God. The self, in turn, is offended by the notion that it is an offense. It is easy to overcome a mistake, but how is the self to deal with sin?The possibility of offense lies in this: There must be a revelation from God to teach man what sin is and how deeply it is rooted. The natural man, the pagan, thinks like this: “All right, I admit that I have not understood everything in heaven and on earth. If there has to be a revelation, then let it teach us about heavenly things; but it is most unreasonable that there should be a revelation informing us what sin is. I do not pretend to be perfect, far from it; nevertheless, I do know and am willing to admit how far from perfect I am. Should I, then, not know what sin is?” But Christianity replies: No, that is what you know least of all, how far from perfect you are and what sin is—Note that in this sense, looked at from the Christian point of view, sin is indeed ignorance: It is ignorance of what sin is.
Continuing his thought, Anti-Climacus says that a Pharisee is one who “in despair manages a sort of legal righteousness” by avoiding surface-level sins while, deep down, continuing to assert itself as its own establishing power. It is possible for the self to maintain outward morality while still refusing to rest transparently in the power that establishes it. Through self-justification, the Pharisee retains its self-mastery rather than surrendering to God as its master.A definition of sin can never be too spiritual (unless it becomes so spiritual that it abolishes sin), for sin is specifically a qualification of spirit. Furthermore, why is it assumed to be too spiritual? Because it does not mention murder, stealing, fornication, etc.? But does it not speak of these things? Are not they also self-willfulness against God, a disobedience that defies his commandments? On the other hand, if in considering sin we mention only such sins, we so easily forget that, humanly speaking, all such things may be quite in order up to a point, and yet one’s whole life may be sin, the familiar kind of sin: the glittering vices, the self-willfulness that either in spiritlessness or with effrontery goes on being or wants to be ignorant of the human self’s far, far deeper obligation in obedience to God with regard to its every clandestine despair and thought, with regard to its readiness to hear and understand and its willingness to follow every least hint from God as to his will for the self. The sins of the flesh are the self-willfulness of the lower self, but how often is not one devil driven out with the devil’s help and the last condition becomes worse than the first.
Sin severs the God–man relationship to the extent that, as Torrance says, “there is ‘nothing whatever’ that human beings can do, in and of themselves, to relate themselves directly or positively to God.”59 In contrast to the Fichtean self, in which everything is contained within the immanence of the Absolute Self, Anti-Climacus emphasizes that the non-ego is not just ontologically distinct from the ego, it is infinitely, qualitatively, different from it.The teaching about sin—that you and I are sinners—a teaching that unconditionally spits up “the crowd,” confirms the qualitative difference between God and man more radically than ever before, for again, only God can do this; sin is indeed: before God. In no way is a man so different from God as in this, that he, and that means every man, is a sinner, and is that “before God,” whereby the opposites are kept together in a double sense: they are held together, they are not allowed to go away from each other, but by being held together in this way the difference show up all the more sharply, just as when two colors are held together, opposita juxta se posita magis illucesunt [the opposites appear more clearly by juxtaposition].
No teaching on earth has ever really brought God and man so close together as Christianity, nor can any do so, for only God himself can do that, and any human fabrication remains just a dream, a precarious delusion. But neither has any teaching ever protected itself so painstakingly against the most dreadful of all blasphemies, that after God has taken this step it should be taken in vain, as if it all merges into one—God and man—never has any teaching been protected in the same way as Christianity, which protects itself by means of the offense.
11. A New and Better Self
Christianity teaches that everything essentially Christian depends solely upon faith; therefore it wants to be precisely a Socratic, God-fearing ignorance, which by means of ignorance guards faith against speculation, keeping watch so that the gulf of qualitative difference between God and man may be maintained as it is in the paradox and faith, so that God and man do not, even more dreadfully than ever in paganism, do not merge in some way, philosophice, poetice, etc., into one—in the system.
A self directly before Christ is a self intensified by the inordinate concession from God, intensified by the inordinate accent that falls upon it because God allowed himself to be born, become man, suffer, and die also for the sake of this self. As stated previously, the greater the conception of God, the more self; so it holds true here: the greater the conception of Christ, the more self.
12. Conclusions
Anti-Climacus begins Sickness unto Death by casting a similar vision for philosophy, one where both philosophy and theology exist for part of a larger goal: edification. He writes:As the philosopher and the theologian cross the Rubicon, they will have no choice in passing each other but to let themselves be transformed—each one by the other. The first will teach the second about the human journey. The second will make the first see that he cannot refuse to open himself—upon a decision of course—to the transcendence of the One who comes to “metamorphose” everything… Working neither in pure opposition nor in simple complementary—and even less in competition, the two disciplines present themselves and articulate a discourse according to a common ascesis or spiritual exercise…
Anti-Climacus’s description braves the prohibition separating philosophy, which is aimed at rigor, and theology, which is aimed at spiritual edification. He refuses the assumption that theology contaminates philosophy or that philosophy must disregard theology. Instead, both disciplines should be appropriately employed for the purpose of edification. The image of the doctor working at a sickbed should capture the imagination of both the theologian and the philosopher, uniting them in a higher calling and inspiring them to relate more, not less.Many will find the form of this “exposition” strange; it may seem to them too rigorous to be upbuilding and too upbuilding to be rigorously scholarly. As far as the latter is concerned, I have no opinion. As to the former, I beg to differ; if it were true that it is too rigorous to be upbuilding, I would consider it a fault. …From the Christian point of view, everything, indeed everything, ought to serve for upbuilding… Everything essentially Christian must have in its presentation a resemblance to the way a physician speaks at the sickbed; even if only medical experts understand it, it must never be forgotten that the situation is the bedside of a sick person. It is precisely Christianity’s relation to life (in contrast to scholarly distance from life) or the ethical aspect of Christianity that is upbuilding, and the mode of presentation, however rigorous it may be otherwise, is completely different, qualitatively different, from the kind of scienticity and scholarliness that is “indifferent”.
Conflicts of Interest
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2 | Included in this group are Michel Henry (1922–2002), Jean-Luc Marion (1946–), Jean-Louis Chrétien (1952–), Jean-Yves Lacoste (1953–), and Emmanuel Falque (1963–). |
3 | (Falque 2016, p. 21). Falque calls this technique a “counterblow” to philosophy by theology, but this concept deserves some clarification. A counterblow is designed to overpower and defeat an opponent, which is not what New Phenomenologists attempt to do to philosophy. They seek to breach the closed walls of philosophy for its benefit, not its demise. Falque imagines a counterblow to be a loving struggle, much like an athletic competition, whereby both philosophy and theology engage one another with passion and intensity in order to strengthen both. This approach, Falque says, “defines another and a new relationship between philosophy and theology with careful attention to the conjunction—and—rather than to their disjunction—or—as is most often practiced today.” (Falque 2016, p. 18). The endeavor is not to collapse the two disciplines into one, nor is it to transition from one to the other. Rather, New Phenomenologists imagine how the two disciplines fruitfully relate and benefit each other. |
4 | This slogan is originally coined by Dominique Janicaud in his infamous essay critiquing New Phenomenology. He intends it to mean that philosophy and theology are entirely incommensurable and should have nothing to do with one another on principal. Though he does not discount theology as a discipline, he believes that theological content would be a contaminant to philosophical, specifically phenomenological, rigor. Therefore, a wall of division should be maintained in order to protect the purity of both. See Dominique Janicaud, “The Theological Turn of French Phenomenology,” in (Janicaud 2000, p. 99). J. Aaron Simmons and Bruce Ellis Benson offer a softer interpretation of this maxim, suggesting that while the disciplines should remain distinct as unique professional discursive communities, it is possible—even beneficial—to share resources under certain conditions. See (Simmons and Benson 2013). This essay suggests Kierkegaard’s text, (Kierkegaard 1983) models the softer interpretation. |
5 | It is important to note that the relationship between philosophy and theology is intensely debated even among New Phenomenologists. While they minimally agree that the two are not incompatible and that it is acceptable for philosophy to draw from a theological archive, some, such as Jean-Luc Marion, maintain a strong disciplinary boundary between the two. Others, like Emmanuel Falque and Jean-Yves Lacoste, would like to dissolve the distinction between the two altogether. In fact, Jean-Yves Lacoste looks to Kierkegaard to legitimize this approach, arguing that the Dane models what happens when conventional disciplinary boundaries disappear and “nothing, then, remains of the gap between the object of reason and the object of belief, which is to say, between what is exclusively open to reason and exclusively open to belief.” (Lacoste 2018, p. 71). Lacoste represents the opposite end of the spectrum in the debate on the relationship between philosophy and theology, and his own stance on the matter becomes a hermeneutical grid through which he approaches the Kierkegaardian texts. |
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7 | Beyond his master’s thesis, The Concept of Anxiety, Kierkegaard’s authorship rarely references German Idealist philosophers by name. Nonetheless, Hün and Schwab argue that Kierkegaard “addresses idealist positions in the context of his own thought projects. And even when he does this, it is often with the aim of sharpening and clarifying his own approach by differentiating it from that of idealism.” (Hün and Schwab 2013, p. 64). Consistent with his method of indirect communication, throughout his authorship Kierkegaard and his pseudonyms make reference to specific concepts and even authors without directly addressing them by name. |
8 | See (Hün and Schwab 2013, p. 62). David J. Kangas comes to the same conclusion specifically regarding Kierkegaard’s relationship to Fichte. By his assessment, Kierkegaard both appropriates and distances himself from Fichte’s thought. (Kangas 2007, pp. 67–95). |
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10 | For a deeper discussion, see (Beiser 1987) and (Henrich 2003). |
11 | (Lumsden 2014, p. 41). Lumsden explains, “Dogmatism is a very broad rubric for Fichte, under which much of the philosophical tradition lies; it includes Spinozism, naturalism, and realism. In summary, he takes dogmatic philosophy as offering causal explanations... As Fichte sees it, causal explanations, for example of consciousness and the intellect, present them as caused by something other… [this] reduces knowing and experience to a deterministic relation that negates human freedom… since the consistent dogmatist would have to reject the independence of the I, characterizing it as just another thing” (41). |
12 | See (Lumsden 2014), Hegel, Heidegger, and the Post-Structuralists, p. 43. |
13 | There has been a resurgence of interest in Fichte’s thought in recent years as scholars found his texts to be relevant for contemporary issues in epistemology, philosophy of mind, and theory of action. Fichte has been traditionally read as a radical solipsist. For an example of this kind of reading, see (Copleston 1965). Henrich paved the way for an alternative reading of Fichte that provides a non-naturalistic view of the self. See (Henrich 2003). Some have arguably overdrawn on Fichte as a resource for contemporary issues at the expense of reading him anachronistically. (Martin 1997) and (Pippin 2000) argue that Fichte’s idealism makes only epistemological claims rather than metaphysical ones. They suggest he critiques dogmatism for making metaphysical claims about the existence of things-in-themselves and instead prefers to talk about the intentionality of mental states. While this reading, as (Hicky 2004), does draw fresh attention to Fichte’s project, it misreads Fichte’s clear metaphysical assertions. |
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16 | Fichte explains that the formula A = A is conditional: if A exists then it is A. In contrast, the first principle I = I is an unconditional statement. There is no hypothetical “if” when it comes to the existence of the I. It exists unconditionally and its identity is tied to its unconditional existence. (Fichte 1982, p. 96). |
17 | See (Neuhouser 1990, p. 83). He explains, “[Fichte’s] subject is to be understood not as a mere fact, a Tatsache, but as a Tathandlung, a ‘Fact-act.’ In creating this new term for the subject Fichte starts with the word Tatsache, but replaces Sache (‘thing’) with Handlung (‘act’), thereby expressing what will become the central point of his theory of the subject: The I is not to be understood as a thing but as an activity. Furthermore, the subject is a ‘Tat’-handlung, an activity that is at the same time a deed, or fact. The point of joining Tat with Handlung to coin a new term for the subject is to suggest that the existence of the I, its facticity, stands in some intimate relation to its activity and, further, that it is this relation that essentially distinguishes a subject from a thing.” (Neuhouser 1990, p. 106). |
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24 | (Beiser 2008, p. 277). It is worth noting that Fichte’s account of self-determination anticipates later atheistic existentialist articulations of radical freedom. Kierkegaard’s critique of complete self-determination demonstrates not only his critical distance to German Idealism, but also the lack of resemblance between Kierkegaard and existentialist philosophers such as Sartre and DeBeauvoir. It is Fichte, not Kierkegaard, who seems to be the father of their thought on freedom. |
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32 | (Breazeale 1993, p. 146). As stated earlier, recent scholarship has sought to exonerate Fichte’s work by offering better readings than those of his contemporaries, however, the aim of this essay is not to engage with contemporary uses of Fichte’s thought, but to focus on Kierkegaard’s strategic movement in relation to it as a precedent for contemporary discourse. |
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38 | The reference to God in part one is open enough that some scholars conclude it does not require a theological interpretation in a dogmatic sense. For an example of this line of reasoning, see (Lundsgaard-Leth 2018). Another a-theological reading of SUD focusing on the content of part one comes from (Klee 2017). For both, “God” as the establishing power of the Kierkegaardian self in part one can mean a vague relation to the infinite that exceeds it or to the self’s own ideals or projects. What these authors get right is that the notion of God in part one does not carry much determinative content at all. Stopping at the end of part one may allow the reader to fill in the notion of God with whatever she wants it to be, but at the cost of bifurcating a singular text and interrupting the author’s progression of thought halfway. |
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40 | Anti-Climacus explains that though he identifies two forms of despair they are related. Speaking of weak despair, he writes, “To call this form of despair in weakness already casts a reflection on the second form, in despair to will to be oneself. Thus, the opposites are only relative. No despair is entirely free of defiance; indeed, the very phrase ‘not to will to be’ implies defiance. On the other hand, even despair’s most extreme defiance is never really free of some weakness. So the distinction is only relative.” (Kierkegaard 1983, p. 49). |
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44 | There has been some attention given to the question of whether Kierkegaard can be considered a type of phenomenologist. See (Hanson 2010). The authors in Hanson’s volume largely agree that he shares similar concerns, themes, and approaches with classical phenomenology even though it would be anachronistic to put him in the Husserlean tradition. While Husserl provides a strict definition of the phenomenological method, (Simmons and Benson 2013) point out that the edges of that definition have been in constant negotiation from the start. Phenomenology has never been a static discipline, but one that continually evolves and expands to be able to explore all areas of human experience. They suggest the figures in phenomenology share more of a family resemblance than a rigid set of doctrines. Kierkegaard obviously did not learn phenomenology from Husserl, but he did learn it from Hegel, who was performing a kind of phenomenological analysis independent of Husserl. The phenomenological tradition, therefore, extends before and beyond Husserl’s classical method. If phenomenological analysis, by definition, excludes the transcendent, then Kierkegaard’s work is minimally phenomenological. If, however, the new movement known as New Phenomenology is correct, that utilizing the conceptual capital of Christianity does not destroy phenomenology but enhances it, then the kind of phenomenology Kierkegaard practices fits nicely within the broader tradition. The phenomenological nature of Kierkegaard’s methods presented by Anti-Climacus in Sickness unto Death is a strong indication that this approach to Kierkegaard’s corpus is more than permissible, it is profitable. It uncovers the philosophical depth in his work that would not otherwise come to light. For an insightful phenomenological analysis on despair in SUD and its relation to Hegelian phenomenology, see (Stewart 1997), “Kierkegaard’s phenomenology of despair in Sickness unto Death,” Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook 1997 (1997), pp. 117–43. |
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47 | Daniel Dahlstrom, “Freedom Through Despair: Kierkegaard’s Phenomenological Analysis,” in Kierkegaard as Phenomenologist, 75. |
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49 | (Grøn 1997, pp. 35–50) challenges readings that too sharply distinguish the self presented in parts one and two. He disagrees with the idea that part one presents a philosophical self and part two a theological self because of the fact that Anti-Climacus makes reference to God as an establishing power of the self in part one. Therefore, argues Grøn, the self described in part one is open to the transcendent and should be designated as theological. Rather than brute division, he sees lines of connection between the two parts that render the entire work cohesive. Grøn’s observation is important because it emphasizes the fact that SUD is a unified text and should not be split into two only minimally related parts. There are, in fact, lines of connection between the two parts that should be traced. It is equally important, however, not to fall off the other side of the horse by overemphasizing the unity of the text at the expense of its distinct elements. As discussed above, the god-talk Anti-Climacus includes in part one is indeterminate. It is not dependent on revealed theology but falls within the scope of what is accessible to the Socratic-human understanding. Part two draws from Christian scripture as an epistemic source of authority. |
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54 | (Alfsvåg 2014). |
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57 | (Kierkegaard 1983, p. 122). Torrance draws a helpful distinction in Kierkegaard’s authorship between sin-consciousness and guilt-consciousness. He writes, “[Sin-consciousness] leads a person to turn away from her proud autonomous existence by being drawn into a new life in relationship with God: a life that does not find fulfillment in individual self-perfection before God but rather in a humble life of relationship with God, in which a person becomes perfect. The latter, by contrast, only serves to alienate a person from God. Whereas guilt-consciousness turns a person inward to dwell on her error, sin-consciousness turns a person outward to God such that her error is dealt with. Unlike guilt-consciousness, sin-consciousness does not serve to compound an individual’s sense of existential failure, and the attendant anxiety and despair. Rather, it alerts a person to the fact that she exists in a manner that is incommensurate with the way in which God created her to exist.” (Torrance 2016, pp. 110–11). Sin-consciousness leads the self to turn to Christ for forgiveness. Guilt-consciousness leads the self to despair over forgiveness or to conclude that forgiveness is impossible. The guilt-conscious self decides to remain in its state of despair (sin). Since its relationship with God is the criterion for a healthy self, this self resigns itself to impoverished selfhood. |
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63 | (Kierkegaard 1983, p. 117). Note: by “the offense,” Anti-Climacus is referring to Christ. |
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66 | According to Anti-Climacus, “there is one way in which man could never in all eternity come to be like God: in forgiving sins” (Kierkegaard 1983, p. 122). The self never becomes its own justifier, the one who forgives itself. Rather, it is always the recipient of God’s forgiveness. |
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Bowen, A. Reviving the Dead: A Kierkegaardian Turn from the Self-Positing to the Theological Self. Religions 2019, 10, 633. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110633
Bowen A. Reviving the Dead: A Kierkegaardian Turn from the Self-Positing to the Theological Self. Religions. 2019; 10(11):633. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110633
Chicago/Turabian StyleBowen, Amber. 2019. "Reviving the Dead: A Kierkegaardian Turn from the Self-Positing to the Theological Self" Religions 10, no. 11: 633. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110633
APA StyleBowen, A. (2019). Reviving the Dead: A Kierkegaardian Turn from the Self-Positing to the Theological Self. Religions, 10(11), 633. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10110633