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Context
Soeren Aabye Kierkegaard was born on May 5, 1813, in Copenhagen. His father had
been a feudal laborer on church lands, and had so hated his work that one day he
walked to the top of a hill and solemnly cursed God. At the age of twenty-one,
his father was released from his vassalage, and moved to Copenhagen where he
became rich as a wholesaler. He never was able to shake off the guilt he felt
for cursing God, a guilt that was only compounded by the early deaths of five of
his seven children and of his wife. This guilt gave him a somber disposition,
which he passed onto Soeren Kierkegaard, along with a strict religious
upbringing.
Kierkegaard spent a great deal of his youth as a man-about-town and a student,
studying for a degree in theology. In 1840, he became engaged to a young woman
named Regine Olsen. A year later, shortly before receiving his doctorate, he
broke off the engagement quite suddenly. Though the reasons were not clear,
even to himself (a great deal of his writing approaches the question of why he
broke with Regine), it seems he felt his ethical obligation to her as a husband
and as a good citizen could not be reconciled with his higher, literary and
intellectual, obligations. Soon after the break, he began writing
pseudonymously at a prodigious rate. Fear and
Trembling is one of his earlier works, published in 1843, on the same day as
another of his books, Repetition. He became increasingly frustrated with
the hypocrisy of the Danish church, and his feud with the clergy exploded into
an open, and very cutting, exchange of pamphlets and editorials. Kierkegaard
poured what was left of his considerable inheritance into funding the
publication of pamphlets against the church. In 1855, he collapsed in the
street, and died of a lung infection on November 11. Against his expressly
stated will, the Danish church officiated at his funeral.
At the time of his death, Kierkegaard was almost universally hated in
Copenhagen, and his works were largely ignored. The first monograph about
Kierkegaard was not published until 1877, and he had to wait until the twentieth
century to come into vogue. Since then, he has exercised tremendous influence
on a number of intellectual movements, particularly existentialism, which claims
him as a forefather.
The philosophy of Kierkegaard's Denmark was overwhelmingly dominated by the
thought of G. W. F. Hegel. Hegel is perhaps the most influential philosopher in
Continental philosophy in the past two hundred years, and Fear and
Trembling is written as a sustained response to his ideas. Hegel's
philosophy was based on the dialectic, a process according to which two
opposing concepts--a thesis and antithesis--could be resolved in a synthesis,
which would then in turn become one half of a new thesis/antithesis pair. For
instance, being might be a thesis set in opposition to the antithesis of
nothingness, which is then resolved into the synthesis of becoming. Through the
process of dialectic, philosophy is slowly but surely approaching the truth.
This absolute, final truth is called the Absolute Mind, and Hegel
constructed a logical system that could guide our inquiries toward this
truth.
An important aspect of Hegel's system is his definition of the ethical as
universal. The highest goal for the single individual, according to
Hegel, is to lose oneself in the universal. That is, one must annul one's
personal desires and ambitions and be motivated exclusively by the general
interest of all. Becoming a part of the universal is the only way to gain the
omniscient perspective of the Absolute Mind.
Hegel's system exercised a great deal of indirect influence on the development
of both Communism and Nazism. It should come as no great surprise that a
philosopher such as Kierkegaard, who so prized the individual, should be
repelled by Hegel's communitarian ethic.
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