Part One of the text volume examines the truth of Christianity as an objective issue, Part Two the subjective issue of what is involved for the individual in becoming a Christian, and the volume en…
The observation is not perhaps unequivocally cheerful; for may it not be that in our time, still more than in the days of the author, there is nothing to persecute? The world does not persecute wor…
In this new collections, Oxford theologian George Pattison translates and selects Sqren on spirituality works that greatly deepen our phy and literature, Kierkegaard is generally perceived as epito…
Fear and Trembling is probably Kierkegaard's clearest and most vivid interpretation of faith, seen through the story of Abraham and Isaac. God has asked Abraham, who with his wife Sarah has waited …
A companion piece to the concept of anxiety, this work continues the author's radical and comprehensive analysis of human nature in a spectrum of possibilities of existence. Present here is a remar…
This volume , and another of equal size which iI propose to bring out on the same date, contain between them six works which originally were published separately, but which now are all of them, wit…
One of the most remarkable philosophical works of the nineteenth century, The Sickness Unto Death is also famed for the depth and acuity of its modern psychological insights. Writing under the pseu…
This volume, and another of equal size which the author propose to bring out on the same date, contain between them six works which originally were published separately, but which now are all of th…
These Christian discourses are not intended to "satisfy the idle curiosity of the moment." If, on the contrary, but one single sufferer, who has perhaps also lost his way in the multiplicity of his…
"What Kierkegaard has to say is often deeply moving, not only because of the beautifully restrained frankness with he discloses his inner life, but also because of the merciless anaysis of the diff…