Kierkegaard's The concept of dread

by Søren Kierkegaard

Other authorsWalter Lowrie
Paper Book, 1944

Status

Available

Call number

BT720.K52

Publication

Princeton : Princeton University Press, c1944.

Description

This edition replaces the earlier translation by Walter Lowrie that appeared under the title The Concept of Dread. Along with The Sickness unto Death, the work reflects from a psychological point of view Søren Kierkegaard's longstanding concern with the Socratic maxim, "Know yourself." His ontological view of the self as a synthesis of body, soul, and spirit has influenced philosophers such as Heidegger and Sartre, theologians such as Jaspers and Tillich, and psychologists such as Rollo May. In The Concept of Anxiety, Kierkegaard describes the nature and forms of anxiety, placing the domain of anxiety within the mental-emotional states of human existence that precede the qualitative leap of faith to the spiritual state of Christianity. It is through anxiety that the self becomes aware of its dialectical relation between the finite and the infinite, the temporal and the eternal.… (more)

LCC

BT720.K52

Original publication date

1844

Physical description

xiii, 154 p.; 23 cm

Barcode

31342000005651
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