Kierkegaard's Writings, Volume 3Princeton University Press, 1978 - Literature |
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Page 39
... philosophy . If he thinks there is any movement in what has been said , this demonstrates the same thing . But for those listeners who are able to follow me , al- though I do not move , I shall now elucidate the eternal truth by which ...
... philosophy . If he thinks there is any movement in what has been said , this demonstrates the same thing . But for those listeners who are able to follow me , al- though I do not move , I shall now elucidate the eternal truth by which ...
Page 506
... philosophy . My barber , too , an older but well - read man , who has followed the movements of modern Danish philosophy with energy and interest , main- tains that Denmark has never had such philosophers as it has now ; the beginning ...
... philosophy . My barber , too , an older but well - read man , who has followed the movements of modern Danish philosophy with energy and interest , main- tains that Denmark has never had such philosophers as it has now ; the beginning ...
Page 507
... philosophy showed clearly that it stood in an essential relation to the previous epoch in modern Danish philosophy ; it had contact with it and forsook its conclusion only to find one higher . The first epoch worked toward a sound under ...
... philosophy showed clearly that it stood in an essential relation to the previous epoch in modern Danish philosophy ; it had contact with it and forsook its conclusion only to find one higher . The first epoch worked toward a sound under ...
Contents
THE IMMEDIATE EROTIC STAGES | 49 |
THE TRAGIC IN ANCIENT Drama | 137 |
THE FIRST Love | 243 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
able absolute actually Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger Antigone anxiety ASKB aunt beautiful become Charles Clavigo comic continually Copenhagen Cordelia Danish Danish philosophy dare deceiver Dervière desire Don Giovanni Don Juan Either/Or Elvira Emmeline engaged erotic love esthetic eternity everything expression eyes Faust fear feel final draft following paragraph forget G.W.F. Hegel Greek Greek mythology happy hear heart I-II idea individual infinite interest Johan Ludvig Heiberg JOHANNES Kierkegaard kiss Leporello letter live Loeb look means Molière mood Mozart nature never nevertheless occasion once opera pain passion perhaps person philosophy play poet present recollection reference relation Rinville secret seducer sense sensuous situation sketch someone Søren Kierkegaard soul speak spirit stage Supplement thereby thing thought tion tragedy tragic turn unhappy W. D. Ross walk Werke whole wish woman words young girl