Title: Group Timed Writing 35 students
1(No Transcript)
2Group Timed Writing (3-5 students)
- 1. In general, whats going on in Philosophical
Fragments, or what is it about? - 2. Which part did you find most interesting and
why? Explain the central argument of this part?
3Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855)
- Life
- Writings
- Journals Papers 20 volumes
- Collected Works 20 Volumes
- Father of Existentialism
- Wrote for that individual
4Kierkegaards Writings
- Early Academic and Polemic writings From the
Papers of One Still Living (1838), The Concept of
Irony with Constant Reference to Socrates (1841) - The Authorship Proper
- The Pseudonymous Works (aesthetic
productivity) Either/Or, Fear and Trembling,
The Concept of Anxiety, Concluding Unscientific
Postscript - The Veronymous Works (religious productivity)
Edifying Discourses, Christian Discourses, Works
of Love - Posthumous Works The Point of View for My Work
as an Author
5Reading Kierkegaard
- Task to make difficulties everywhere
- The problem of pseudonymity
- Existential truth and indirect communication
- The thing is to find a truth which is truth for
me, to find that idea for which I want to live
and die. (Papers, 1835) - Only the truth which edifies is truth for you.
(Either/Or, 1843) - Truth is subjectivity. (Concluding Unscientific
Postscript, 1845) - Central problem What does it mean to become a
Christian?
6Philosophical Fragments (1844)
- By Johannes Climacus
- Edited by S. Kierkegaard
- Questions
- Can a historical point of departure be given for
an eternal consciousness how can such a point of
departure be of more than historical interest
can an eternal happiness be built on historical
knowledge? - Epigraph Preface
- I Though-Project
- Can the truth be Learned?
7What is Truth?
- Were asking about essential truth, i.e., truth
that is essentially related to an existing human
being. - This truth is ethical-religious truth.
- What are the two different perspectives on the
truth described in Philosophical Fragments?
8Can the truth be learned?
- Socratic view
- Eternal Truth is innate
- Learning involves Recollection
- Teacher as midwife
- Any point of departure in time is accidental
- A Different View
- Eternal Truth comes into existence in time
- Learner is outside of the truth and lacks the
condition for receiving the truth - Teacher must transform learner and provide the
condition, such a teacher is a savior - The moment in time has decisive significance.
9Is what is elaborated here thinkable?
- a. The Preceding State
- Untruth Sin
- b. The Teacher
- God Savior Deliverer Judge
- c. The Follower
- Conversion Repentance Rebirth
10- II. The God as Teacher and Savior (A Poetical
Venture) - On Gods Love and Suffering
- III. The Absolute Paradox (A Metaphysical
Caprice) - The passion of thought, to discover what cannot
be thought - Godthe Unknown
11The Folly of Existence Proofs
- Generally one reasons from existence, not to it
(e.g., a stone, a criminal) - Against the Ontological Argument
- Existence is presupposed and I simply develop the
content of my conception (or ideality) - Against the Teleological Argument
- Do works prove existence?
- What are the gods works?...Do we not encounter
the most terrible spiritual trials here? (42)
12How does Gods existence emerge from the proof?
The Leap of Faith
- Attempt to prove
- Subject is engaged/ attached to the proof
- Premises
- No existence
- Proof
- Subject is disengaged/ detached
- Conclusion
- Existence
13Faith begins where thinking leaves off.
- The Unknown
- The limit, frontier, border of reason, no
distinguishing mark other than the absolutely
different - The Absolute Paradox
- We cannot understand God because he is absolutely
different, yet we understand him as absolutely
different - The God-Man (Jesus Christ)
- God makes himself altogether like me, so that I
can understand him, but I cannot understand him,
because I am absolutely unlike him.
14Appendix Offense at the Paradox (An Acoustical
Illusion)
- The understanding thinks it produces the echo
of offense, but it comes from the paradox, which
is an offense to reason. - All offense is suffering, which comes into
existence with the paradox, in the moment. - The understandings relation to the paradox can
be either unhappy (offense) or happy
(Faithpassion).
15IV. The Situation of the Contemporary Follower
- Because of the nature of the paradox, absolute
historical knowledge is impossible. God cannot be
known directly. - Faith is required as much for the contemporary
follower as for the follower at second hand, and
the condition for faith must come from the God
himself. - Thus to be an immediate contemporary with the
God-man can only serve as an occasion for
historical knowledge or receiving the condition.
In other words, theres no advantage in immediate
contemporaneity.
16Interlude Is the Past More Necessary than the
Future?
- Or, Has the Possible, by Having Become Actual,
Become More Necessary than It Was? - the Interlude represents the passage of 1843
yearsDoes this change anything? - The answer to all these questions is NO.
- To think otherwise would be a misunderstandingnec
essity and coming-into-existence belong to
distinct conceptual worlds.
17Appendix Application
- Let us return to our assumption that God has
beenwhich is not a direct historical fact but a
self-contradiction. - That this is a historical fact is a matter for
faith - In the ordinary sense of belief
- In the wholly eminent sense, whereby in asserting
to Gods having been one makes it historical and
brings it into existence.
18V. The Follower at Second Hand
- The basic thesis is this there is no follower at
second hand the first generation and the second
generation are essentially alike regarding their
relation to the paradox. - Climacus discusses differences and similarities
with contemporary followers. - The first generation of followers would perhaps
have an advantage in becoming aware of the
moment, but awareness isnt partial to faith as
offense is also possible.
19What about the latest generation of followers?
- Is the God having been more probable now? Has the
paradox been changed retroactively? - Has it been naturalized?
- Can one be born with faith (i.e., born a
Christian)? - This is all nonsense and lunacy.
- Towards the Postscript (109)
- The Moral
20Concluding Unscientific Postscript to the
Philosophical Fragments (1845)
- By Johannes Climacus
- Edited by S. Kierkegaard
- Goals
- to make things more difficult
- To clothe the issue in PF in its historical
costume, i.e., Christianity - What is the central thesis of the reading?
- Truth is subjectivity.
- Thus, the issue is not about the truth of
Christianity, but about how individuals relation
to this doctrine
21On the Differences between Objective and
Subjective Truth
- Objective truth focuses on the What
- Involves approximation (getting closer)
- Reflection is directed outward, indifferent to
subject
- Subjective truth focuses on the How
- Involves appropriation (making something ones
own, living what one believes) - Reflection is directed inward, importance of
subject
22Climacuss Definition of Truth
- An objective uncertainty held fast in an
appropriation-process of the most passionate
inwardness is the truth (319). - This is equivalent to faith.
- The objective uncertainty involves risk that
keeps one out upon the deep, over seventy
thousand fathoms of water (320).
23Other Issues and Problems
- According to Climacus, where is there more
truthpraying to the true God in a false spirit,
or praying to a false God in the true spirit?
(317) - Is suicide the only practical consequence of
objective thinking? (315) - Is Socrates a Christian? (318)
- Is subjectivity equivalent to madness? (313)
- When you think about it, isnt this notion of
subjective truth really, really dangerous?
24Faith by Richard Taylor
- Defense of Humes claim that Christianity is
founded on faith, not reason. - Faith and reason are completely separate.
- Why does a Christian belief?
- Wrong question
- The Christian cannot help it. Faith is a gift
from God, an involuntary conviction. - Faith is not
- An assumption, mere tenacity, or a creed
25Faith and Reason by Michael Scriven
- Scriven attacks the idea of faith and reason
being two separate faculties, each with its own
kind of truth. - Faith normally means confidence, which is not
incompatible with reason. - Thus to speak of faith as an alternative to
reason is odd. - All beliefs need evidence! In general (339-340).
26Faith is not another path to truth.
- Faith is not justified by
- Strong feelings
- Agreement with others
- Nor is faith on an equal par with science
- Conclusion, p. 342
27- What did you make of Robert Merrihew Adams
article Kierkegaards Arguments against
Objective Reasoning in Religion?