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Corporeality, Consciousness and Religion
Cód:
491_9783639153330
The present analysis situates the thought of SørenKierkegaard in the context of the language andcategories proper to the philosophical world ofGerman Idealism and the Enlightenment. As emphasizedin contemporary research, Kierkegaards stages arenot levels of consciousness of the Absolute,mirroring Gods self-awareness. The stages are shapedby finite human existence, which strives towardsidentity by successive interpretations of the self interms of normative presuppositions. Nevertheless, theapproach determining Kierkegaards philosophy ofexistence is itself immanent to an idealist method ofself-grounding. Such self-grounding is originallyconceptualized in Fichtes interpretation of Kantstranscendental ego, with his radical attribution ofthe inexplicable power of world-creation toknowledge. The simultaneous crisis of the rationalworld-construction, giving rise to the category ofreligion as a challenge to the nihilism of purelyautonomous reason, is not due to the impact of newideas, but to an internal amplification of theidealist philosophy of the self. The study aims toemphasize and delineate this often-ignoredhermeneutic synthesis at play in Kierkegaard.
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