Phenomenology of concealment and self-disillusionment in Kierkegaard
Resumen
This essay presents a critical analysis of the constitution of the “I” and the “other” as these are found in two of Kiekegaard’s most important texts, Works of Love, published in 1847, and Sickness unto Death, published in 1849. It particularly elucidates, with regard to the concepts of “I” and “other”, the nature of Kierkegaard’s discourse, which is based on a phenomenological strategy of reduplication that renders impossible every definition of the phenomena that departs from a positive stipulation of a conceptual identity. Hence, once one finds the presupposition of this strategy, that is to say, once one clarifies the essential features of the typically Christian phenomena, then it becomes possible to outline the faults and aporias advanced by Kierkegaard regarding the constitution of the subject or “I” and the relation between this “I” and the “other”. These faults or indeterminacies, which are the main topic of this essay, in their turn, seem to jeopardize not only a possible social theory – which Works of Love intends to develop – but, more fundamentally, the whole of Kierkegaard’s ethical project itself.
Key words: I, other, reduplication, constitution of the subject, ethics.Descargas
Descargas
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Licencia
Concedo a revista Filosofia Unisinos – Unisinos Journal of Philosophy o direito de primeira publicação da versão revisada do meu artigo, licenciado sob a Licença Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (que permite o compartilhamento do trabalho com reconhecimento da autoria e publicação inicial nesta revista).
Afirmo ainda que meu artigo não está sendo submetido a outra publicação e não foi publicado na íntegra em outro periódico e assumo total responsabilidade por sua originalidade, podendo incidir sobre mim eventuais encargos decorrentes de reivindicação, por parte de terceiros, em relação à autoria do mesmo.