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Kierkegaard's way to the truth: an introduction to the authorship of Søren Kierkegaard

[København]: C.A. Reitzels Forlag. Edited by Alastair McKinnon (1963)

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  1. Kierkegaard's "new argument" for immortality.Tamara Monet Marks - 2010 - Journal of Religious Ethics 38 (1):143-186.
    This essay examines texts from Kierkegaard's signed and pseudonymous authorship on immortality and the resurrection, challenging the received opinion that Kierkegaard's account of eternal life merely connotes a temporal, existential modality of experience as a present eternity. Kierkegaard's thoughts on immortality are more complicated than this reading allows. I demonstrate that Kierkegaard's ideas on the afterlife emerge out of a context in which the topic had been vigorously debated in both Germany and Denmark for more than a decade. In responding (...)
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  • I. Salvation: A reply to Harrison Hall's reading of Kierkegaard.Gordon D. Marino - 1985 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 28 (1-4):441-449.
    On Harrison Hall's reading, Kierkegaard uses the terms translated ?eternal happiness? and ?salvation? to refer to a quality of this?worldly life. As I understand him, the author denies that Kierkegaard believed in an afterlife. While acknowledging the vein of meanings that ?Love and Death . . .? point to, I argue that Kierkegaard did in fact look forward to an eternal life in the traditional, Biblical, and so?called common sense of the term. In connection with his views on the question (...)
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