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RIPE IN DENMARK.


Kierkegaard
A Biography
Alastair Hannay
Cambridge University Press,
$39.95, 510 pp.


There is no better conversation partner for thinking about faith than the lyrical Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard Noun 1. Soren Kierkegaard - Danish philosopher who is generally considered. along with Nietzsche, to be a founder of existentialism (1813-1855)
Kierkegaard, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
 (1813-55). Kierkegaard, of course, has earned his place in Woody Allen's scripts and in New Yorker cartoons as the epitome of hard-to-fathom profundity. He is not for those who demand their epiphanies in tear-off calendar format. So when you decide to make friends with Kierkegaard's writings, do not be ashamed to consult a guide or three. Bring Gregor Malantschuk's Kierkegaard's Thought, Bruce Kirmmse's, Kierkegard in Golden Age Denmark, and Alastair Hannay's new biography, Kierkegaard.

Hannay has been walking with the Dane for decades. He is not only one of the most penetrating and prolific Kierkegaard scholars in the world, but also a philosopher of great acuity and breadth himself. A master of both the analytic and continental traditions, he has written on problems as diverse as artificial intelligence and Aquinas's view of despair. As if that were not enough, he is a gifted and experienced translator, and his knowledge of both Kierkegaard's Danish and his milieu reverberates throughout this monumental study.

Kierkegaard, unlike that other Galileo of the inner world, Freud, did not leave much of a trail of his personal life. Still, by all accounts, he was a strange bird who came from a strange and (by yesterday's no less than today's account) a dysfunctional family dysfunctional family Psychology A family with multiple 'internal'–eg sibling rivalries, parent-child– conflicts, domestic violence, mental illness, single parenthood, or 'external'–eg alcohol or drug abuse, extramarital affairs, gambling, . While Hannay's study is rightly advertised as an "intellectual biography," no biographer of Kierkegaard could legitimately ignore the familial loam loam, soil composed of sand, silt, clay, and organic matter in evenly mixed particles of various sizes. More fertile than sandy soils, loam is not stiff and tenacious like clay soils. Its porosity allows high moisture retention and air circulation.  out of which Kierkegaard's thought grew.

Hannay's short story of Kierkegaard's early life works very well. Most important, he offers a compelling account of Kierkegaard's petulant pet·u·lant  
adj.
1. Unreasonably irritable or ill-tempered; peevish.

2. Contemptuous in speech or behavior.



[Latin petul
 relationship with his father, Michael Pedersen Michael Pedersen was born on March 1, 1986 and is a cricketer. He is a left-handed batsman and a right-arm offbreak bowler. He has played List A cricket for Denmark since 2005, having previously lined up for the Under-19s.  Kierkegaard (1756-1838). In his posthumously published intellectual autobiography (From the Point of View of My Work as an Author), Kierkegaard observed that his father ruined his chances for worldly happiness but prepared him well for the only thing that was important, namely, the task of faith. Kierkegaard's father died while Kierkegaard was still rebelling against him. Twenty-five at the time, he had been dawdling while taking a degree in theology. After the death of the old man, Kierkegaard set frenetically to work. By 1841, he had written and defended his famous dissertation, On the Concept of Irony with Constant Reference to Socrates. There can be no doubt that Kierkegaard's father was a father to him in more ways than one. Once a poor shepherd boy from Jutland, but later an enormously successful business man in Copenhagen, Kierkegaard's father was a theological conservative in a world that was increasingly coming to see faith in Hegelian terms, that is, as a kind of "philosophy made simple." On Hannay's insightful reading, Kierkegaard's work was an indirect defense of his father's faith against the sneering attitudes of the Danish intelligentsia. Ultimately this defense was transmogrified into a virulent attack on the Danish State Lutheran Church.

The other person who held constant court in Kierkegaard's consciousness was Regine Olsen Regine Schlegel née Olsen (January 23, 1822 - March 18, 1904) was a Danish woman chiefly remembered for being briefly engaged to the philosopher and theologian Søren Kierkegaard from September 1840 to October 1841.  (1822-1904). Kierkegaard had ambitions that would take him out of the ordinary gyres of life but he fell in love just as lesser mortals do. He met Regine at one of the open houses hosted by her parents in 1837. A few years and encounters later, Kierkegaard shocked Regine by proposing to her. Swept off her feet, Regine accepted but almost immediately Kierkegaard's doubts began to trickle. Kierkegaard scandalized everyone when after a short time he sought to break off the engagement. Regine fought fiercely to keep him, but in August 1841 she relented and returned her engagement ring. Though some scholars have called his reasoning lame, in his journals Kierkegaard explained that he did not want to bring Regine into the crushing melancholy that seemed to afflict af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
 his family. Though Regine ended up marrying a former suitor SUITOR. One who is a party to a suit or action in court. One who is a party to an action. In its ancient sense, suitor meant one Who was bound to attend the county court, also, one who formed part of the secta. (q.v.) , she may as well have been right down the hall. Kierkegaard was always thinking of the woman he jilted jilt  
tr.v. jilt·ed, jilt·ing, jilts
To deceive or drop (a lover) suddenly or callously.

n.
One who discards a lover.
. As Hannay documents, in a letter containing his last wishes, Kierkegaard proclaimed:
   It is, of course, my will that my former fiancee, Mrs. Regine Schlegel,
   inherit unconditionally whatever little I can leave behind... What I want
   to express in this way is that to me an engagement was and is just as
   binding as a marriage.


A Freudian would say that it was no mistake that Kierkegaard's muse arrived just as Regine was going out the door. In the early 1840s, books began to cascade from his pen, one philosophical-spiritual classic after another. Hannay makes it clear that the Danes did not know what to do with the flaneur flâ·neur  
n.
An aimless idler; a loafer.



[French, from flâner, to idle about, stroll, of Germanic origin; see pel
 who seemed to suddenly morph into a genius. While I think Hannay has given short shrift to what the secular world deems Kierkegaard's minor, straightforwardly Christian works, he provides astute commentary on the required texts of any Kierkegaard reading list, such as Either/Or, Philosophical Fragments, Stages on Life's Way, The Concluding Unscientific unscientific Unproven, see there  Postscript, and Works of Love Works of Love (Danish:Kjerlighedens Gjerninger) is a work by Søren Kierkegaard (1847) dealing primarily with Christian love. Kierkegaard uses this value / virtue to understand the existence and relationship of the individual Christian. . Hannay's guide-wire readings offer support to those new to Kierkegaard while his interpretations are rich enough to challenge people who have been squinting squint  
v. squint·ed, squint·ing, squints

v.intr.
1. To look with the eyes partly closed, as in bright sunlight.

2.
a. To look or glance sideways.

b.
 over Kierkegaard's manuscripts for decades.

Hegel is often understood to be the bull's-eye of Kierkegaard polemical writings. Although it is true that Kierkegaard, no less than Schopenhauer, was highly critical of the German speculative philosopher, Hannay does the English-speaking world the great service of showing that Kierkegaard's antagonists were more often than not other Danes. At last, Kierkegaard is presented on his true cultural stage as Hannay introduces Hans Lassen Martensen Hans Lassen Martensen (born August 19, 1808 in Flensburg, Duchy of Schleswig (now Germany); died February 3, 1884 in Copenhagen, Denmark) was a Danish divine and academic. Early life
Hans L.
, Johan Ludvig Heiberg Johan Ludvig Heiberg may be
  • Johan Ludvig Heiberg (poet), Danish poet and dramatist, husband of Johanne Luise Heiberg
  • Johan Ludvig Heiberg (1854-1928), philologist and historian of mathematics
, Bishop Jakob Mynster, and other Copenhagen addressees of Kierkegaard's works.

This is the first full-scale biography of Kierkegaard in English to appear in decades, and it concludes with a sparkling chapter on Kierkegaard's second life as a world historical thinker. Hannay sketches Kierkegaard's ongoing lively reception as well as his acknowledged influence on Heidegger, Sartre, and other existential luminaries. The book's coda consists of a revealing reflection on Georg Lukacs's reading and rereading of Kierkegaard. Like its subject, this book does not make difficult matters easy, but Hannay's readers will find the door to Kierkegaard's texts easier to open, and therein lies no small spiritual treasure.

Gordon Marino is associate professor of philosophy and director of the Hong/Kierkegaard Library at Saint Olaf College Saint Olaf College, at Northfield, Minn.; Lutheran; coeducational; founded 1874 by Norwegians as a school, became a college 1886, chartered 1889. It offers special programs on Scandinavian culture and houses the Norwegian-American Historical Association. .
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Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:'Kierkegaard: A Biography'
Author:Marino, Gordon
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Mar 8, 2002
Words:1047
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