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Striving before God: Kierkegaard and the concept of religious authorship

Posted on:2010-12-19Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The Claremont Graduate UniversityCandidate:Lane, Keith HFull Text:PDF
GTID:1445390002972654Subject:religion
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation explores Kierkegaard's concept and practice of religious authorship. Focusing primarily on Kierkegaard's late authorship, with special attention to The Point of View and Kierkegaard's Journals and Papers, it reviews Kierkegaard's development of religious authorship, shows how religious authorship may have similarities to philosophical authorship and wherein the two differ, and elucidates aspects unique to religious authorship.;Setting religious authorship over-against a Wittgensteinian view of philosophy, Chapter Two examines the relation between philosophical authorship and religious authorship and draws distinctions between a religious interest and a philosophical interest in philosophy of religion and where the two may share common ground, even though they have different motives.;Chapter Three discuss the possible threat philosophy can bring to faith. Kierkegaard asserts that the answer to a perceived philosophical threat to faith is first to understand how faith and doubt are actually encountered in a religious life. Though doubt may arise from a philosophical investigation, it does not follow that it necessarily must and Kierkegaard illuminates the character of doubt and the religious way of responding to doubt.;Chapter Four explores the use of philosophical apologetics in religious authorship. Kierkegaard generally saw a philosophical defense of Christianity as a mistake. Nevertheless, Kierkegaard is an advocate of Christianity but in a qualified way. Kierkegaard's philosophical advocacy largely consists of helping one come to see the point of Christianity and then leaving one to judge.;Chapter Five argues that religious authorship has a persuasive end and must go beyond clarity (though clarity is a key part). With a foundation in Aristotle's conception of the rhetorical appeals of ethos, pathos and logos, it explores the complexities of rhetoric and persuasion for the religious author. Kierkegaard argues for indirect communication, but also makes room for persuasive, rhetorical aspects beyond philosophical clarity.;Chapter Six discusses the mixture of certainty and uncertainty in Kierkegaard's religious authorship. There is naturally something of certainty that goes with religious authorship but also, in communicating the religious to others, an uncertainty. This condition allows the religious author to write with conviction, while retaining a humility that should welcome criticism and correction.
Keywords/Search Tags:Religious, Kierkegaard, Philosophical
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