Books
Søren Kierkegaard

Sickness Unto Death

  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    Moreover, the determination of sin as a position involves also, in an entirely different sense, the possibility of offense, the paradox. For the paradox results from the doctrine of the atonement.
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    The more consciousness, the more self; the more consciousness, the more will, and the more will the more self.
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    He rages most of all at the thought that eternity might get it into its head to take his misery from him!
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    But after all it is a fact that in our age it is a crime to have spirit, so it is natural that such people, the lovers of solitude, are included in the same class with criminals.
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    An elderly woman who has now supposedly given up all illusions is often found to be as fantastic in her illusion as any young girl, with respect to how she remembers herself as a girl, how happy she once was, how beautiful, etc.
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    The older man is not plagued by the illusion of hope, but he is on the other hand by the whimsical idea of looking down at the illusion of youth from a supposedly superior standpoint which is free from illusion.
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    When immediacy is assumed to have self-reflection, despair is somewhat modified; there is somewhat more consciousness of the self, and therewith in turn of what despair is, and of the fact that one’s condition is despair; there is some sense in it when such a man talks of being in despair: but the despair is essentially that of weakness, a passive experience; its form is, in despair at not wanting to be oneself.
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    What if I were to become another, were to get myself a new self?”
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    And yet such a despairer, whose only wish is this most crazy of all transformations, loves to think that this change might be accomplished as easily as changing a coat.
  • Mustafa Kılınçhas quoted7 years ago
    When this form of despair is called the despair of weakness, there is already contained in this a reflection upon the second form (2), the despair of willing despairingly to be oneself — defiance.
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