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Kierkegaard: A Critical Reader

av Jonathan Rée

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For the first time, this collection brings together a selection of philosophically challenging interpretations of Kierkegaard's thought in a coherent critique of his own philosophy.
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A polarized collection (most are). Several mediocre essays buoyed by the humorous (brilliant) piece by Garff and an exacting treatment by Ricoeur.

1. Philosophy after Kierkegaard - Paul Ricoeur
perhaps the only essay which grasps (is a serious treatment of the material rather than an occasion to reiterate the same 'important points' which have been decided in advance) - add here hegels dialectic on "ethics" religion and graven images (hegel) vs kierkegaardian necessity (this dialectic is inferior to the previous). appropriate (earnest) critique of S.K. from a hegelian perspective which one has to admit if approaching the material earnestly. pre-emptively critiques conceptual "post-kierkegaardian existentialism" and "the end of philosphy", which are naively put forth in subsequent essays in this collection.

2. Existence and Ethics - Levinas
highly metaphorical writing (visual light/landscape/bodily sensation , these images are distracting).
"revleation itself does not contradict the essence of the crucified truth, and whether the suffering of God and and the total misrecognition of truth might not reach their sublime fulfillment in total lack of recognition, an incognito"
[levinas actually makes the point (in response to S.K.'s rhetorical flourishes regarding the Biblical Incarnation as the 'greatest imaginable paradox' that a still greater paradox can be imagined: that of the Incarnation which goes unrecognized. I had made this exact point in my notes when first reading the S.K. texts, and to read it again in print had me hooting.]

"But one may wonder whether the authenticity which kierkeaard succeeded in promoting does not bring with it a certain forgetting or rpression of Kierekegaardian subjectivitiy in tension over itself, and whether a certain self-renunciation ought not to accompany that concern for salvation which systematic philosophyizing tends to make too cheap."

rhetorical flourishes (which don't always make sense / ungrounded). "Belief [...], a condition of absolute poverty, a poverty which is radicall yand irremediably poor - poor with the absolute hunger which, in the final analysis, is the meaning of sin"
--> "This kind of existence, whose inwardness exceeds exteriority and cannot be contained by it, thus participates in the violence of themodern world, with its cult of Passion and Fury [sic]. It bring irresponsibility in its wake and a ferment of destruction."

" 'being a self', this irruption of selfhood or ipseity into being, is equivalent to an explosion of responsiblity"

regarding Nietzsche (and Heidegger): This hard and aggressive style of thinking, which ahs always been associatd with the most unscrupulous and cynical forms of action, could now be taken seriously as a kind of justification for violence and terror"
attempted elevation of the ethical to ultimate category (necessary for selfhood) ultimately falls into the same dialectic (by not disrupting the religious teleology and instead hypostatizing it as an aethetic-ethical relation). also taking the double movement from complete abnegation in the teleological suspension of the ethical to the absolute arrogance it implies, and then applying that absolute arrogance to suspend the ethical as a category of action for all without restraint as if it were the primary movement involved in the dialectic.
--> "The self is infinitely responsible when it stands before Others. The Other is poor and destitute, and nothing that touches this Stranger can be indifferent to the Self. It reaches the peak of its existence as a Self precisely when it relates to everything as Others." (response: this just is not true imo)

ostensibly repudiates SK's harsh 'hammering' religious ferver, but then re-instates an even harsher criterion for judgment. if teleological emphasis is placed on the Ethical Obligation to the Other 'over which death has no power', this is not 'mutual respect among mankind' (the lax interpretation), but stricto sensu re-instates S.K.'s repudiated stringency (one can always be doing more) i.e. 'no such an one was ever comforted by the phrase "one does what one can"' and in addition must necessitate the confidence to know precisely what 'ethical action' consists of in a given instance. when transcendence is repudiated (as in this anlysis), when situating onself to make an 'ethical judgment' one immediately becomes 'the highest' and is then guilty of the passing critique of kierkegaard in this essay 'that he had made himself into god'.

3. Kierkegaard on Death and Dying - Wilhelm Anz
Sunday-school sermon

4. Thinking God in the Wake of Kieregaard - David Wood
erudite, well-intenetioned Tripe
An interesting prelude becomes Madlibs because it ends up applying to every Fact: "No knowledge could ever communicate directly (because no historical advance could recuperate it): failure lived in despair. Those who died of anguish, of hunger, of exhaustion, those defeated in the past by force of arms, are so many gaps in our knowledge in so far as they existed: Subjectivity constitutes nothing for objective knowledge since it is a non-knowledge, and yet failure demonstrates that it has an absolute existence. IN this way Soren Kierekgaard [replace with any name], conquered by death and recuperated by historical knowledge, triumphs at the very moment he fails, by demonstrating that History cannot recover him. As a dead man, he remains the insurpassable scandal of subjectivity; though he may be known through and through, he eludes History by the very fact that it is History that constitutes his defeat and that he lived it in anticipation. In short, he eludes History because he is historical."

5. The Eyes of Argus - Joakim Garff
By far the best essay in this collection. Opens up the dialectic on The Point of View of My Work as an Author (heretofore one of S.K.'s most boring works) by reading Kierkegaard against Kierekegaard. Excellent sense of humor, which the other essays in this collection conspicuously lack.

6. The Wound of Negativity (two kierkegaardian texts) - George Steiner
wikipedia-level analysis. the essay raises the interesting question of whether the author has actually read the 'two texts' which feature so prominently in the title of the essay.

7. Kierkegaard and the Novel - Gabriel Josipovici
takes as its material precisely the humorous (and excellent) introduction to The Book on Adler which the previous essay has conspicuously omitted. although to apply this analysis toward the stock post-modernist conclusion (the signified is not indicated by the signifier) and the biographical focus on questions of authorship (is S.K. the real subject of the discourse? why write at all?) is played-out.
"Such a thinker, he says, is conscious of 'the negativity of the infinite in existence; he always keeps open the wound of negativity, which at times is a saving factor.' The others let the wound heal over and become positive; they cease to be learners and become teachers."

p123-124 possiblitiy and actuality of thought (mental objects are always false) although this does not take my line which proceeds in reverse (the construction of real mental objects)

8. We are not Sublime - Sylviane Agacinski
dangerous
though in being 'cleverer than the professor' in many ways, this makes all the more transparent as mercenary argument the literalist interpreation of johannes climacticus as "one not capable of becoming the knight of faith" (with, again, reference to Regine) -thereby attempting to capture it within 'the realm of aesthetics'. does not confront the obvious socratic interpretation "i know nothing" in a didactic/ironic sense. subsequently the confident relegation of the pseudonymn (and his entire production) to the sphere of aesthetics is curious in light of S.K.'s discussion of aesethetic production with relation to the ethical and religious subject (herein, or is it elsewhere?). per S.K. the ethical cannot be conveyed in the aesthetic context (this is to distort the ethical), yet, paradoxically, the religious, by relating itself directly to the absolute, can come authentic contact with the aethetic (apologia for the Bible - post-hoc). this also appears to coincide with Hegel's concept of religious represented in poetry (mentioned in this very essay) yet the author does not extend the analysis to so-called 'Johannes's poetry of the religious' - though it almost begs the question.
- making every sacrifice (losing the sublime) to recover love, but only in the form of its manifestation as "common sense" - to explain the phenomenon which persists in a (low) unreflected state

9. Whom to Give to - Derrida
passable summary of the material of the text with supplemental information/interpretation. has the benefit of giving the effect of not actually believing what he is saying (contrast with the fawning preface/introduction)
- schopenhaauer's trick of re-constituting experienc extactly as it currently exists (th latter books of will and represeentation), performed here: ethical duty vs absolute duty - ethical duty to those close to us vs those unknown/far away (everyone equally) -> the impossiblity of fulfilling ethical duty -> actually every individual is 'the absolute other' --> normal behavior (which is dutiful towards those one knows) is actually fulfillment of the Absolute above the universal (compressing the polemic) --> normal behavior explained by a grand underpinning which outsizes it.
- explicit mention of socratic irony (extending it with reference to Bartleby 'i would prefer not to') though neglecting to mention this with respect to Kierkegaard's pseudonymous narrator (I believe he intentionally does not critique it in this way so he can make the rhetorical point 'none of us can be sure about faith/the-other')................ ( )
  Joe.Olipo | Nov 26, 2022 |
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