Reasonableness of faith : a study of Kierkegaard's Philosophical fragments /
Main Author: | |
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
New York :
Peter Lang,
[2012], ©2012
New York : c2012 New York : ©2012 |
Series: | American university studies Germanic languages and literatures ;
v. 318. American university studies Theology and religion ; v. 318. |
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Machine generated contents note: ch. I Reading Philosophical Fragments
- The General Problem of Faith and Reason in the Philosophical Fragments
- The Importance of Kierkegaard in Accounting for Faith and Reason
- The Intention behind Fragments
- The Nature of Each Sub-Problem Addressed in the Fragments
- On Kierkegaard's Pseudonyms
- ch. II The Truth and the Ideal
- The General Problem of Faith and Reason in the Philosophical Fragments
- The Indemonstrability of God: The Case of Spinoza
- Religious Faith as Proof of God's Existence
- The Subjective in Climacus
- An Analysis of the Climacean Transcendental Critique in Fragments
- Summary of the Differences between Husserl and Climacus
- ch. III The Absolute Paradox
- The Paradox of God's Appearance in the World
- The Objectivity of the Paradox
- The Empirical and Ideal Dialectic in Philosophy
- ch. IV Existence and Absolute Knowledge
- Climacus and the Case of Hegelian Philosophy
- Hegel's Absolute Idealism: Looking into Its Epistemological Tenets and Metaphysical Implications
- The Problem of Hegelian Philosophy's Elimination of the Transcendent
- Summary
- ch. V The Relation between Faith and Reason
- The Distinction between Faith (Eternal) and Reason (Historical)
- "Coming into Existence"
- Religious Faith versus Historical Belief
- Objectivity and Subjectivity in Climacus
- The Concept of the "Offense"
- The "Moment" and the "Condition"
- Passion, Existence, and Faith
- The Leap
- The Will
- ch. VI Summary and Conclusions