From the Aesthetic to the Leap of Faith: Søren Kierkegaard

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  • Опубліковано 29 кві 2018
  • The President's Class | Stages along Life's Way: How We Become Who We Are
    Greg Salyer, Ph.D.
    Learn more about PRS, online classes, and find sources of practical and profound wisdom at www.prs.org/.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 70

  • @richardzellers
    @richardzellers 3 роки тому +28

    I visited Kierkegaard's grave in Copenhagen. Hans Christian Anderson is buried about 50 yds away.....AND Regina Olsen is also buried in the same cemetery.

  • @garrettlemieux4620
    @garrettlemieux4620 4 роки тому +101

    One of the better kierkegaard lectures I've had the pleasure of hearing on here. I also immediately trust any professor who's favorite philosopher is kierkegaard.

    • @travislewis2991
      @travislewis2991 4 роки тому +8

      Agreed :) few people like Kierkegaard who were truly trustworthy to listen to and if someone says he's their favorite it raises my respect and eyelids immediately. God rest

    • @Alwaysiamcaesar
      @Alwaysiamcaesar 3 роки тому +4

      Do you maybe have a few other lectures you enjoyed on Kierkegaard? I also loved the clarity of this one, and I find myself faced with a lot of amateurish clutter when I just search for Kierkegaard on UA-cam. I’d appreciate if you could recommend some. Thanks!

    • @YoLpIsBest
      @YoLpIsBest 3 роки тому

      @@Alwaysiamcaesar If you haven't already, check out Gregory Sadler.

    • @grantg8638
      @grantg8638 2 роки тому

      As a ‘13 UVA philosophy graduate, it shames me how little attention is granted Kierkegaard in today’s institutions. Regardless, I found him and, like the speaker, view him as my favorite philosopher.

    • @biblicallybasedbelievers
      @biblicallybasedbelievers 2 роки тому +1

      @@grantg8638 it’s because he’s Christian

  • @Eternalised
    @Eternalised 3 роки тому +13

    12:50 He says, quote: I have just now come from a party where I was its life and soul; witticisms streamed from my lips, everyone laughed and admired me, but I went away - yes, the dash should be as long as the radius of the earth's orbit ----------- and wanted to shoot myself.”

  • @KenshoBeats
    @KenshoBeats 4 роки тому +14

    It's so much easier to absorb a presentation when it's brought with soul. Thank you 🙏

  • @lindahuang3809
    @lindahuang3809 5 років тому +20

    Enjoyed this lecture! Subtle in your humor and an obviously sincere affection for Kierkegaard :)

  • @mindsoflatecapitalism8344
    @mindsoflatecapitalism8344 4 роки тому +11

    Looks like we've got a Kierkegaard fan here. 😬💯👏

  • @sarahfaith6531
    @sarahfaith6531 5 років тому +36

    thank you so much. this a great talk. it's in depth without being overly wordy. you're an effective and knowledgeable speaker.

    • @rnck4487
      @rnck4487 5 років тому +1

      Sarah Faith agreed!

  • @judsonbox9845
    @judsonbox9845 5 років тому

    Thanks for uploading this. I love hearing discussion of Kierkegaard's work.

  • @Grace-vt3wx
    @Grace-vt3wx 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you very much.

  • @ironyusa3885
    @ironyusa3885 4 роки тому +4

    28:40 - I think this exactly how Kierkegaard wants people to interact with his writings. Fear and Trembling had a similar effect on me.

  • @overlex
    @overlex 3 роки тому +5

    Subjectivity: not trying to find your place in a world somebody else created for you; because it probably isn’t working for them either.
    LOVE IT ❤️

  • @gabrielmillee8745
    @gabrielmillee8745 5 років тому +1

    Thank you for this information.

  • @scioarete7987
    @scioarete7987 6 років тому +4

    By far my favorite UPRS and President's Class video that I have ever seen.

  • @Wingedmagician
    @Wingedmagician 4 роки тому +2

    This was the guy to talk about Kierkegaard. His love is infectious.

  • @KashifKhan17
    @KashifKhan17 3 роки тому +2

    A beautiful and lucid interpretation of Kierkegaard... Thank you for this!!

  • @henkverhaeren3759
    @henkverhaeren3759 2 роки тому

    The being Plato strives for, is existence in its purest and most authentic form and by that it is action in nature.

  • @deenriqo
    @deenriqo 4 роки тому +3

    Geez, Kierkegaard was brilliant.

  • @lilliannieswender266
    @lilliannieswender266 4 роки тому +5

    This was an excellent discussion, thank you.

  • @lisaclausen1502
    @lisaclausen1502 3 роки тому +1

    Bravo!!

  • @sirsluggard7819
    @sirsluggard7819 4 роки тому

    What a valuable piece to have immortalized online. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @chuckmartin935
    @chuckmartin935 3 роки тому +1

    Wow, powerful easy to understand, scholarly lecture. Can u guys do more on the great 18th and 19th cent philosophers?

  • @priscillakhapai3623
    @priscillakhapai3623 4 роки тому +6

    Thank you so much...I'm gonna start reading fear and trembling soon

    • @travislewis2991
      @travislewis2991 4 роки тому

      How was fear and trembling for you? Been a awhile since I've read it. Enjoyed?

    • @srenfrederiksen1633
      @srenfrederiksen1633 3 роки тому

      Blew my mind 30 years ago. A before-and-after point of my life.

  • @yukgio6989
    @yukgio6989 5 років тому +2

    Great lecture! Can you please cite that quote/ passage from Kierkegaard?

  • @kimsherlock8969
    @kimsherlock8969 3 роки тому

    Most great thought to my understanding
    Is to step outside of Institutions manifested
    Believing in a God as a social Norm of goodness.

  • @voxkoshka
    @voxkoshka 4 роки тому +9

    i want to start becoming Kierkegaard

  • @deszyoliver_
    @deszyoliver_ 5 років тому +1

    Thank you sir!

  • @joshuaklein2859
    @joshuaklein2859 2 роки тому

    If you know you don’t know something than you know something!

  • @grapparna
    @grapparna 3 роки тому

    Sick! Thx

  • @djmasterspanks3172
    @djmasterspanks3172 4 роки тому +2

    Fantastic lecture

  • @Bagavond
    @Bagavond 4 роки тому +8

    Though it is true that kirke means church and Gaard/gård means farm, the word Kirkegaard means graveyard or churchyard

  • @gerasimosmakris8664
    @gerasimosmakris8664 4 роки тому +6

    This is fantastic. One of the best lectures on the subject. But please, who is the speaker?

    • @uprsedu
      @uprsedu  4 роки тому +9

      Greg Salyer, Ph.D., President/CEO of the Philosophical Research Society. Thank you for asking.

    • @davidbcalhoun
      @davidbcalhoun 4 роки тому +4

      @@uprsedu Thank you! Please add this to the video description if you get a chance!

  • @siyaindagulag.
    @siyaindagulag. 3 роки тому +5

    We interfere with what we comment on by commenting on it.? Well , in my own tiny, existential sphere at least.

  • @Ai-he1dp
    @Ai-he1dp 5 років тому +3

    A very good presentation...a human touch.

  • @Unknown-rq8rm
    @Unknown-rq8rm 2 роки тому

    good video

  • @bjarkifreyrbjarnason9419
    @bjarkifreyrbjarnason9419 4 роки тому +4

    Thank you for a great presentation on the most interesting philosopher of the 19th century. I highly recommend a fairly new book on him by philosopher Claire Carlisle.

  • @junemoonchild69
    @junemoonchild69 3 роки тому +3

    And... Soren Kierkegaard wrote that one gets out of anything one reads exactly what one one reads into it.

  • @ssamiuddin1
    @ssamiuddin1 3 роки тому +1

    What's the artwork on the slide at 52:50?

    • @uprsedu
      @uprsedu  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks for asking. It's pretty powerful. www.thefourdrinier.com/annegret-soltau-spider

  • @junemoonchild69
    @junemoonchild69 3 роки тому +3

    The lecturer also forgets to mention Kierkegaard's digression into a story about "the Merman" in the middle of his analysis of the story of Abraham and Isaac. :)Lol

  • @shiniesnjazz1377
    @shiniesnjazz1377 4 роки тому

    Is it not better translated as a leap into faith? Haha just teasing, keep it up!!

  • @ludvigheggelund5118
    @ludvigheggelund5118 3 роки тому +1

    correct me if im wrong, but isnt Kirkegaard more corectly trenslated into graveyard?

    • @idamalte8471
      @idamalte8471 3 роки тому +1

      Yes, you are right: literally ‘church yard’, as in the church’s burial ground.

    • @rantidebmaitra9776
      @rantidebmaitra9776 2 роки тому

      Brilliantly simple

  • @junemoonchild69
    @junemoonchild69 3 роки тому +1

    P.S. If you read ONE book by Kierkegaard, may I recommend, "Works Of Love"... that's the only one, in my opinion, worth reading.

  • @yazanasad7811
    @yazanasad7811 3 роки тому +2

    Biography is philosophy

  • @Michaelmas68
    @Michaelmas68 4 роки тому +6

    you understand Kierkegaard was foremost a Christian - in the real sense of it being esoteric and on one level a methodology for change - so he meant it when he said he "chose" the faith based path over love of women. It was clearly sacrificial but the alternate was to repeat the pain of eros in loving something in the material over the spiritual. and thats because he already had the power of a man who sees the truth or if you prefer a truth... thanks for the lecture

  • @giahunggiang1797
    @giahunggiang1797 2 роки тому

    David Foster Wallace and Ludwig Wittgenstein had the same idea as Umberto Eco: "the best way to explain fully is to tell jokes". I think that's one of the reasons why the funniness of jokes is quite hard to gasp as we were teached since we were children that jokes are meant to be easy to understand.

  • @junemoonchild69
    @junemoonchild69 3 роки тому +3

    Soren Kierkegaard never wrote to become a philosopher. He was studying and graduated from the seminary, and spent a short time as a priest, who wrote and preached in Church on Sundays. His many Christian discourses are not discussed of course as much as we discuss his personal diaries and journals... Regine Olsen was likely a girl who he would have wanted to marry, but he is becoming a priest! He went to Berlin alone to sow his wild oats and does not speak much of these trips except that they were about having a good time with friends, and he implies a woman who he may have had a child with, etc. etc. His life is the life of many of us, just simply made public, and because his writing is so damn interesting. He is saying NOTHING in his writing, it was a past-time if you like, only meaningful to himself, the joke is on you the Reader who might find it all absurdly comical... which is exactly what amuses this lecturer here. The Bookbinder or printer is always the last person to touch a book, after the authors, the editors, the publishers, ad infinitum. Think about it. That's all S. K. did... hopefully you'll find something you enjoyed in his writing, and just remember it all ends in death anyway, whatever! Soren Kierkegaard, simply a man, perhaps a poet, an entertaining writer.

  • @owenkato956
    @owenkato956 4 роки тому

    Decent lecture but not everyone moves into the religious mode. The ethical which is the universal, everyone can be in. Aesthetic which is the material, is a default, but the religious is a leap of faith that not many take. Refer Abraham piece in Fear and Trembling, first essay.

    • @emmanueloluga9770
      @emmanueloluga9770 3 роки тому

      I take objection to Kierkegaard's use of Abraham's leap of faith as a central theme and point of his self proclaimed "irrational" philosophy in fear and trembling. It's almost as if to posit Abraham's actions were not premeditated and preceded by his many interactions and reasonings with GOD. The "Leap of faith" woes and implications can even be worse than any sort of systematic philosophy Kierkegaard feared.

  • @calebkepley2035
    @calebkepley2035 3 роки тому +1

    Kierkegaard is kek

  • @piushalg8175
    @piushalg8175 3 роки тому +2

    To say Socrates was sentenced to death and killed himself instead is historially wrong. He was forced to kill himself by taking the hamlock given to him by the prison warden. It was the form of execution he was sentenced to.
    According the Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy (Simon Blackburn, Oxford 2008) a Socratic Irony is "Socrates' irritating tendency to praise his hearers while undermining them, or to disparage his own superior abilities while manifesting them". A good exemple was the TV-Inspector Columbo who always disparaged his own talent to make the suspects believe he was an idiot and thereby induced them to utter contradictions or to make other mistakes they wouldn't have made otherwise.