Kierkegaard's Dancing Tax Collector: Faith, Finitude, and Silence
Autor Sheridan Houghen Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 aug 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198739999
ISBN-10: 0198739990
Pagini: 292
Dimensiuni: 144 x 201 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198739990
Pagini: 292
Dimensiuni: 144 x 201 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Written in lively, engaging narrative form, Hough's book would make a good point of entry to those newcomers who find the idea of starting with the man himself too daunting, and with a student's guide too dreary.
Hough deserves praise for bringing forcefully to the fore the real challenge involved in any attempt to affirm the value of human existence. An ardent advocacy of Kierkegaard, Hough's book reflects an impressive mastery of his corpus ... this readable book vigorously asks the right (and difficult) questions, and does so in a way which intentionally diverges from more conventional philosophical discussion.
Would that more philosophers were novelists. The novel would be much better were this true. More important, Sheridan Hough's philosophical work provokes imaginings of what philosophy could become if there were more people writing with such verve and panache and thinking with such lucid and compelling worldliness. In her hands phenomenology becomes what it could never become in Husserl or Heideggerâa philosophical perspective capable of convincing us that Kierkegaard's multiple perspectives on life provides dramatic renderings of spiritual values we can find nowhere else.
A lively and thought-provoking account of Kierkegaard's understanding of faith and love. Sheridan Hough's book is a pleasure to read, especially her illuminating comments on commitment and silence, in particular Heidegger on reticence. The book is an appreciation of Kierkegaard that is well worth reading.
It's unusual to find a study of Kierkegaard focussed on just one character from amongst his variegated and often weird cast of pseudonyms, parables, and fictional personalities, but this is what Sheridan Hough does in this new and lively study ... Hough's tax-collector proves to be a point of departure for what is a brilliant reading of Kierkegaard that shows how Kierkegaardian faith can illuminate intractable issues of human beings' experiences of horrific and pointless suffering ... thanks to her lightness of touch and patent existential passion this is not just another academic book about Kierkegaard but a moving statement of what his thought can mean and do for us today.
Hough deserves praise for bringing forcefully to the fore the real challenge involved in any attempt to affirm the value of human existence. An ardent advocacy of Kierkegaard, Hough's book reflects an impressive mastery of his corpus ... this readable book vigorously asks the right (and difficult) questions, and does so in a way which intentionally diverges from more conventional philosophical discussion.
Would that more philosophers were novelists. The novel would be much better were this true. More important, Sheridan Hough's philosophical work provokes imaginings of what philosophy could become if there were more people writing with such verve and panache and thinking with such lucid and compelling worldliness. In her hands phenomenology becomes what it could never become in Husserl or Heideggerâa philosophical perspective capable of convincing us that Kierkegaard's multiple perspectives on life provides dramatic renderings of spiritual values we can find nowhere else.
A lively and thought-provoking account of Kierkegaard's understanding of faith and love. Sheridan Hough's book is a pleasure to read, especially her illuminating comments on commitment and silence, in particular Heidegger on reticence. The book is an appreciation of Kierkegaard that is well worth reading.
It's unusual to find a study of Kierkegaard focussed on just one character from amongst his variegated and often weird cast of pseudonyms, parables, and fictional personalities, but this is what Sheridan Hough does in this new and lively study ... Hough's tax-collector proves to be a point of departure for what is a brilliant reading of Kierkegaard that shows how Kierkegaardian faith can illuminate intractable issues of human beings' experiences of horrific and pointless suffering ... thanks to her lightness of touch and patent existential passion this is not just another academic book about Kierkegaard but a moving statement of what his thought can mean and do for us today.