Keyword [Kierkegaard] Result: 121 - 140 | Page: 7 of 8 |
121. | Don Juan's masked voice: Seduction and truth in Kierkegaard's pseudonymous works (Soren Kierkegard) |
122. | Kierkegaard: Indirect communication and ignorant knowledge |
123. | A Kierkegaardian phenomenology of authorship |
124. | The aesthetic-religious nexus in Theodor W. Adorno's interpretation of the works of Soren Kierkegaard and its influence on Adorno's aesthetic theory |
125. | Expressions ethiques de l'interiorite: Analyse des effets de la distance theorique sur la sphere ethique de Kierkegaard |
126. | Corrections and convergences: The ethical and the religious in Kierkegaard's signed and unsigned works from 'Either/Or' through the 'Postscript' (Soren Kierkegaard) |
127. | Law and spirit: An exploration of the ethics of Kant and Kierkegaard (Immanuel Kant, Soren Kierkegaard) |
128. | Freedom, self -knowledge, and self -deception: A problematic in the thought of Kant, Hegel, and Kierkegaard |
129. | The philosophy of struggle, the struggle of philosophy: Unamuno, Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche and the relation to Modernism |
130. | Love's rhetoric: Irony and upbuilding in Kierkegaard's Christian anthropology |
131. | Soren Kierkegaard's Christian anthropology and the relation between his pseudonymous and religious writings |
132. | 'Ars divina': Kierkegaard's conception of Christian poetic living |
133. | Kierkegaard's Christian existentialism: Unresolved tensions in 'The Sickness Unto Death' |
134. | Irony and religious belief: An examination and comparison of the ironic philosophies of Soren Kierkegaard and Richard Rorty |
135. | Kierkegaard, Adler and the communication of revelation |
136. | On aristocratic radicalism. Singularities of Georg Brandes, Friedrich Nietzsche and Soren Kierkegaard |
137. | The draw of the absolute: Kierkegaard's apophatic thought |
138. | The living word: Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and their relation to Socrates |
139. | Wittgenstein's Kierkegaardian heritage |
140. | Soren Kierkegaard and Anglo-American literary culture of the thirties and forties |
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