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Soren Kierkegaard
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1:The most common form of despair is not being who you are.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
2:It is so hard to believe because it is so hard to obey.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, [T5],#KEYS
3:to have faith is precisely to lose one's mind so as to win God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
4:Come, sleep and death; you promise nothing, you hold everything. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
5:Music finds its way where the rays of the sun cannot penetrate.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
6:Life is not a problem to be solved, but a reality to be experienced. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
7:Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
8:To dare is to lose ones footing momentarily. Not to dare is to lose oneself.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
9:Every man has in himself the most dangerous traitor of all. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, Works of Love, [T5], #KEYS
10:The only intelligent tactical response to life's horror is to laugh defiantly at it
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
11:It is not the path which is the difficulty; rather, it is the difficulty which is the path.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
12:What if everything in the world were a misunderstanding, what if laughter were really tears?
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
13:The most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one you'll never have. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
14:There's nothing more fragrant, more sparkling, more intoxicating than the infinity of possibilities
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
15:God creates everything out of nothing. And everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
16:The function of prayer is not to influence God, but rather to change the nature of the one who prays.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
17:I feel as if I were a piece in a game of chess, when my opponent says of it: That piece cannot be moved. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
18:The tyrant dies and his rule is over, the martyr dies and his rule begins.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Journals of Kierkegaard,#KEYS
19:If you name me, you negate me. By giving me a name, a label, you negate all the other things I could possibly be. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
20:There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn't true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
21:If men had forgotten what it means to exist religiously, they had doubtless also forgotten what it means to exist as human beings. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
22:Even though it be true that the conception of God is absolute help, it is also the only help which is absolutely capable of revealing to man his own helplessness. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
23:God creates out of nothing. Wonderful you say. Yes, to be sure, but he does what is still more wonderful: he makes saints out of sinners.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Journals of Kierkegaard,#KEYS
24:With every increase in the degree of consciousness, and in proportion to that increase, the intensity of despair increases: the more consciousness the more intense the despair. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Sickness Unto Death, #KEYS
25:... the more one needs God the more perfect he is. To need God is nothing to be ashamed of but is perfection itself. It is the saddest thing in the world if a human being goes through life without discovering that he needs God! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
26:Let us eat and drink, because tomorrow we shall die - but this is sensuality's cowardly lust for life, that contemptible order of things where one lives in order to eat and drink, instead of eating and drinking in order to live. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
27:The greatest hazard of all, losing one's self, can occur very quietly in the world, as if it were nothing at all. No other loss can occur so quietly; any other loss - an arm, a leg, five dollars, a wife, etc. - is sure to be noticed.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Sickness Unto Death,#KEYS
28:It doesn't occur to me at this moment to say more; another time, perhaps tomorrow, I may have more to say, but always the same thing and about the same, for only gypsies, robber gangs and swindlers follow the adage that where a person has once been he is never to go again. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #KEYS
29:If I were to wish for anything, I should not wish for wealth and power, but for the passionate sense of the potential, for the eye which, ever young and ardent, sees the possible. Pleasure disappoints, possibility never. And what wine is so sparkling, what so fragrant, what so intoxicating, as possibility!
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
30:What I really need is to get clear about what I must do, not what I must know, except insofar as knowledge must precede every act. What matters is to find a purpose, to see what it really is that God wills that I shall do; the crucial thing is to find a truth which is truth for me, to find the idea for which I am willing to live and die.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#KEYS
*** WISDOM TROVE ***
1:All comparisons injure. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 2:My sorrow is my castle. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 3:What labels me, negates me. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 4:Don't forget to love yourself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 5:Be that self which one truly is. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 6:Once you label me you negate me. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 7:Sleeping is the height of genius ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 8:My standpoint is armed neutrality. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 9:Hope is a passion for the possible. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 10:There can be no faith without risk. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 11:Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 12:The Bible is God's love letter to us ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 13:The door to happiness opens outward. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 14:Hope is passion for what is possible. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 15:May new sufferings torment your soul. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 16:Purity of heart is to will one thing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 17:The God that can be named is not God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 18:Faith is the highest passion in a man. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 19:Fate, then, is the nothing of anxiety. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 20:Humor (is) intrinsitc to Christianity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 21:The meaning lies in the appropriation. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 22:To be a saint is to will the one thing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 23:Confidence is the present tense of hope. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 24:I must find a truth that is true for me. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 25:Pleasure disappoints; possibility never. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 26:Take it and return it: the kiss of love. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 27:Without risk, faith is an impossibility. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 28:Genius never desires what does not exist. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 29:Irony is a qualification of subjectivity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 30:It is impossible to exist without passion ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 31:I would have perished had I not perished. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 32:If you think you understand, it isn't God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 33:Above all, do not lose your desire to walk. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 34:Men who not religious or artists are fools. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 35:Wherever there is a crowd there is untruth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 36:Do it or don't do it - you will regret both. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 37:Love is all, it gives all, and it takes all. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 38:Now, with God's help, I shall become myself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 39:One can advise comfortably from a safe port. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 40:Future is everything that past has forgotten. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 41:There is peace and rest and comfort in sorrow ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 42:Where there are two people, there is untruth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 43:Nothing is as heady as the wine of possibility ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 44:The thing that cowardice fears most is decision ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 45:Leap of faith ‚Äì yes, but only after reflection ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 46:To love another person is to help them love God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 47:Life is lived forwards, but understood backwards. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 48:Only the noble of heart are called to difficulty. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 49:Love does not alter the beloved, it alters itself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 50:What our age lacks is not reflection, but passion. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 51:Happiness is the greatest hiding place for despair. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 52:I do not lack the courage to think a thought whole. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 53:Love believes all things and yet is never deceived. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 54:A man who cannot seduce men cannot save them either. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 55:A possibility is a hint from God. One must follow it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 56:If a man cannot forget, he will never amount to much. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 57:Prayer is a silent surrendering of everything to God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 58:Christianity demands the crucifixion of the intellect. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 59:Everyone looks the same to me in a photograph: stupid. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 60:Repetition is the reality and the seriousness of life. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 61:The conclusions of passion are the only reliable ones. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 62:Absolute passion cannot be understood by a third party. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 63:Genius, like a thunderstorm, comes up against the wind. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 64:It is so hard to believe because it is so hard to obey. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 65:The person who praises God is on the tracks of justice. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 66:It is very important in life to know when your cue comes. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 67:.. lurks at the door of faith and threatens to devour it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 68:My melancholy is the most faithful sweetheart I have had. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 69:Once you are born in this world you’re old enough to die. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 70:Prayer does not change God, but it changes him who prays. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 71:The most common form of despair is not being who you are. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 72:I stick my finger into existence and it smells of nothing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 73:We live as if we were unaware of our impending destruction ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 74:If you want to be loathsome to God, just run with the herd. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 75:At the bottom of enmity between strangers lies indifference. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 76:Comparison is the most dangerous acquaintance love can make. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 77:I have only one confidant, and that is the silence of night. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 78:It is not where we breathe, but where we Love, that we live. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 79:Take away paradox from the thinker and you have a professor. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 80:The truly simple way of presenting Christianity is to do it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 81:To venture causes anxiety. Not to venture is to lose oneself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 82:Dread is a sympathetic antipathy and an antipathetic sympathy. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 83:Our life always expresses the result of our dominant thoughts. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 84:Faith is holding onto uncertainties with passionate conviction. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 85:In my great melancholy, I loved life, for I love my melancholy. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 86:It's better to get lost in the passion than to lose the passion ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 87:Personality is only ripe when a man has made the truth his own. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 88:To be lost in spiritlessness is the most terrible thing of all. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 89:to have faith is precisely to lose one's mind so as to win God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 90:God does not think; he creates. He does not exist; he is eternal. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 91:I go fishing for a thousand monsters in the depths of my own self ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 92:On the secretly blushing cheek is reflected the glow of the heart ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 93:Who am I? How did I come into the world? Why was I not consulted? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 94:Backwards understood be only can but, forwards lived be must life. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 95:The more a person limits himself, the more resourceful he becomes. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 96:Life is not a problem to be solved, but a reality to be experienced. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 97:The deepest form of despair is to choose to be another than himself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 98:The object of (Christian) faith is not the teaching but the Teacher. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 99:You live life looking forward, you understand life looking backward. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 100:Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 101:Life has its own hidden forces which you can only discover by living. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 102:Most people rush after pleasure so fast that they rush right past it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 103:No one is so terribly deceived as he who does not himself suspect it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 104:Only one deception is possible in the infinite sense, self-deception. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 105:... why bother remembering a past that cannot be made into a present? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 106:Boredom is the root of all evil - the despairing refusal to be oneself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 107:The highest of all is not to understand the highest but to act upon it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 108:Therefore do not deceive yourself! Of all deceivers fear most yourself! ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 109:Trouble is the common denominator of living. It is the great equalizer. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 110:I have attacked no one as not being a Christian, I have condemned no one. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 111:Patience is necessary, and one cannot reap immediately where one has sown. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 112:There is no greater evil one can suffer than to hate reasonable discourse. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 113:The tyrant dies and his rule is over, the martyr dies and his rule begins. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 114:I believe that there is a longing in my soul that searches the whole world. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 115:It takes moral courage to grieve; it requires religious courage to rejoice. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 116:This age will die not as a result of some evil, but from a lack of passion. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 117:Christendom has done away with Christianity without being quite aware of it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 118:Face the facts of being what you are, for that is what changes what you are. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 119:Most men pursue pleasure with such breathless haste that they hurry past it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 120:Philosophy is life's dry-nurse, who can take care of us - but not suckle us. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 121:Take a chance and you may lose. Take not a chance and you have lost already. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 122:Whoever has learned to be anxious in the right way has learned the ultimate. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 123:People settle for a level of despair they can tolerate and call it happiness. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 124:To dare is to lose one's footing momentarily. Not to dare is to lose oneself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 125:A poet is not an apostle; he drives out devils only by the power of the devil. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 126:Far from idleness being the root of all evil, it is rather the only true good. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 127:Language has time as its element; all other media have space as their element. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 128:That is the road we all have to take - over the Bridge of Sight into eternity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 129:The wisdom of the years is confusing. Only the wisdom of eternity is edifying. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 130:The best news the World has ever heard came from a graveyard - Christ is risen! ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 131:Are you not aware that there comes a midnight hour when everyone must unmask... ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 132:All moral elevation consists first and foremost of being weaned from the momentary. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 133:The question is not "To be or not to be," it is what we should be until we are not. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 134:The task must be made difficult, for only the difficult inspires the noble-hearted. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 135:During the first period of a man's life the greatest danger is not to take the risk. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 136:For without risk there is no faith, and the greater the risk, the greater the faith. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 137:Christ has not only spoken to us by his life but has also spoken for us by his death. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 138:The great trick with a woman is to get rid of her while she think's she's rid of you. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 139:The thinker without a paradox is like a lover without a feeling: a paltry mediocrity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 140:When you were called, did you answer or did you not? Perhaps softly and in a whisper? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 141:Where am I? Who am I? How did I come to be here? What is this thing called the world? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 142:Men are not on such intimate terms with the sublime that they really can believe in it ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 143:A & 144:Job endured everything - until his friends came to comfort him, then he grew impatient. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 145:The reign of the tyrant ends with his death, and the reign of the martyr starts with it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 146:Geniuses are like thunderstorms: they go against the wind, terrify people, clear the air. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 147:I would rather be a swineherd, understood by the swine, than a poet misunderstood by men. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 148:Most people believe that the Christian commandments are intentionally a little too severe ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 149:I'm so misunderstood that people misunderstand me even when I tell them I'm misunderstood. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 150:There are men who are wanting in the comparative, they as a rule are the most interesting. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 151:Truth is not introduced into the individual from without, but was within him all the time. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 152:It is not the path which is the difficulty; rather, it is the difficulty which is the path. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 153:Out of love, God becomes man. He says: & 154:Adversity not only draws people together, but brings forth that beautiful inward friendship. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 155:Sin is in itself separation from the good, but despair over sin is separation a second time. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 156:Ulysses was not comely, but he was eloquent, Yet he fired two goddesses of the sea with love ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 157:What if everything in the world were a misunderstanding, what if laughter were really tears? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 158:All the shrewdness of & 159:To Dare is to risk losing your foothold for a moment, Not to Dare is to risk losing yourself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 160:Had I to carve an inscription on my tombstone I would ask for none other than "The Individual." ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 161:The self-assured believer is a greater sinner in the eyes of God than the troubled disbeliever. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 162:I have never fought in such a way as to say: I am the true Christian, others are not Christians. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 163:Irony is a disciplinarian feared only by those who do not know it, but cherished by those who do ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 164:Only when it is a duty to love, only then is love eternally and happily secured against despair. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 165:To be a teacher in the right sense is to be a learner. I am not a teacher, only a fellow student. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 166:Any truth is only true up to a certain point. When one oversteps the mark, it becomes a non-truth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 167:The most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one you'll never have. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 168:The question is asked in ignorance, by one who does not even know what can have led him to ask it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 169:Only one human being recognized as one's neighbour is necessary in order to cure a man of self-love ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 170:People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 171:The unhappy person is never present to themself because they always live in the past or the future. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 172:It is the normal state of the human heart to try to build its identity around something besides God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 173:Theology sits rouged at the window and courts philosophy's favor, offering to sell her charms to it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 174:If anyone on the verge of action should judge himself according to the outcome, he would never begin. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 175:If I could prescribe only one remedy for all the ills of the modern world, I would prescribe silence. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 176:The function of prayer is not to influence God, but rather to change the nature of the one who prays. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 177:To be a teacher does not mean simply to affirm that such a thing is so, or to deliver a lecture, etc. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 178:What is existence for but to be laughed at if men in their twenties have already attained the utmost? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 179:God creates everything out of nothing. And everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 180:A road well begun is the battle half won. The important thing is to make a beginning and get under way. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 181:Freedom's possibility is not the ability to choose the good or the evil. The possibility is to be able. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 182:Which is more difficult, to awaken one who sleeps or to awaken one who, awake, dreams that he is awake? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 183:I feel as if I were a piece in a game of chess, when my opponent says of it: That piece cannot be moved. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 184:It is the duty of the human understanding to understand that there are things which it cannot understand. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 185:Spirit is the third, yet in such a way that one can speak of a synthesis only when the spirit is posited. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 186:When you read God's Word, you must constantly be saying to yourself, "It is talking to me, and about me". ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 187:Human relations are like the irregular verbs in a number of languages where nearly all verbs are irregular. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 188:In the Christianity of Christendom the Cross has become something like the child’s hobby-horse and trumpet. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 189:The extreme rarity of transitional forms in the fossil record persists as the trade secret of paleontology. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 190:Most people live dejectedly in worldly joys or sorrows. They sit on the sidelines and do not join the dance. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 191:People understand me so poorly that they don't even understand my complaint about them not understanding me. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 192:What a misfortune to be a woman! And yet, the worst misfortune is not to understand what a misfortune it is. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 193:Shows itself in the notion that what may be objectively true may in the mouth of certain people become false. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 194:To the frivolous Christianity is certainly not glad tidings, for it wishes first of all to make them serious. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 195:My scholarly expectation is then that I may succeed in becoming clever in philosophy in spite of my stupidity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 196:To be a woman is something so strange, so confusing and so complicated that only a woman could put up with it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 197:This, then, is the ultimate paradox of thought: to want to discover something that thought itself cannot think. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 198:For he who loves God without faith reflects on himself, while the person who loves God in faith reflects on God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 199:To grumble about the world and its unhappiness is always easier than to beat one's breast and groan over oneself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 200:Whoever has the world's treasures has them no matter how he got them. In the world of the spirit it is otherwise. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 201:Why I so much prefer autumn to spring is that in the autumn one looks at heaven& 202:What looks like politics, and imagines itself to be political, will one day unmask itself as a religious movement. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 203:Affliction is able to drown out every earthly voice. . . but the voice of eternity within a person it cannot drown. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 204:There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn't true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 205:To stand on one leg and prove God's existence is a very different thing from going on one's knees and thanking him. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 206:For love is exultant when it unites equals, but it is triumphant when it makes that which was unequal equal in love. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 207:My tactics were, by God's aid, to employ every means to make it clear what the requirement of Christianity truly is. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 208:The crucial thing is to find a truth which is truth for me, to find the idea for which I am willing to live and die. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 209:If I am capable of grasping God objectively, I do not believe, but precisely because I cannot do this I must believe. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 210:With respect to physical existence, one needs little, and to the degree that one needs less, the more perfect one is. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 211:Death cannot explain itself. The earnestness consists precisely in this, that the observer must explain it to himself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 212:Faith is the highest passion in a human being. Many in every generation may not come that far, but none comes further. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 213:No one may pride himself at being more than an individual, and no one despondently think that he is not an individual. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 214:It belongs to the imperfection of everything human that man can only attain his desire by passing through its opposite. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 215:It seems essential, in relationships and all tasks, that we concentrate only on what is most significant and important. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 216:The more people who believe something, the more apt it is to be wrong. The person who's right often has to stand alone. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 217:To pace about, looking to obtain status, looking to attain & 218:Busyness, keeping up with others, hustling hither and yon, makes it almost impossible for an individual to form a heart. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 219:The presence of irony does not necessarily mean that the earnestness is excluded. Only assistant professors assume that. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 220:In a mathematical proposition, for example, the objectivity is given, but therefore its truth is also an indifferent truth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 221:It is more blessed to give than to receive, but then it is also more blessed to be able to do without than to have to have. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 222:... there is one thing that all Satan's cunning and all the snares of temptation cannot take by surprise - an undivided will. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 223:Pleasure disappoints, possibility never. And what wine is so sparkling, who so fragrant, what so intoxicating, as possibility. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 224:There is nothing with which every man is so afraid as getting to know how enormously much he is capable of doing and becoming. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 225:And this is one of the most crucial definitions for the whole of Christianity; that the opposite of sin is not virtue but faith. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 226:Every day I walk myself into a state of well-being and walk away from every illness; I have walked myself into my best thoughts. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 227:I begin with the principle that all men are bores. Surely no one will prove himself so great a bore as to contradict me in this. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 228:The minority is always stronger than the majority, because the minority is generally formed by those who really have an opinion. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 229:This is the miracle of life: that each person who heeds him or herself knows what no scientist can ever know: who he or she is. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 230:On the whole, the longing for solitude is a sign that there still is spirit in a person and is a measure of what spirit there is. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 231:What I really need is to get clear out about what I must do, not what I must know, except insofar as knowledge precedes every act. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 232:Man is spirit. But what is spirit? Spirit is the self. But what is the self? The self is a relation which relates itself to itself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 233:The truth is a trap: you cannot get it without it getting you; you cannot get the truth by capturing it, only by its capturing you. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 234:Intelligence has got the upper hand to such an extent that it transforms the real task into an unreal trick and reality into a play. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 235:Preparation for becoming attentive to Christianity does not consist in reading many books ... but in fuller immersion in existence. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 236:The highest and most beautiful things in life are not to be heard about, nor read about, nor seen but, if one will, are to be lived. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 237:I found I had less and less to say, until finally, I became silent, and began to listen. I discovered in the silence, the voice of God ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 238:The more men believe an idea to be true the greater the likelihood that the idea is mistaken. Those who are right usually stand alone. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 239:Since my earliest childhood a barb of sorrow has lodged in my heart. As long as it stays I am ironic - if it is pulled out I shall die. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 240:In the eyes of God, the infinite spirit, all the millions that have lived and now live do not make a crowd. He only sees each individual ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 241:Jurists say that a capital crime submerges all lesser crimes; and so it is with faith. Its absurdity makes all petty difficultiesvanish. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 242:This is all that I've known for certain, that God is love. Even if I have been mistaken on this or that point: God is nevertheless love. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 243:God creates out of nothing. Wonderful you say. Yes, to be sure, but he does what is still more wonderful: he makes saints out of sinners. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 244:Seek first God's Kingdom, that is, become like the lilies and the birds, become perfectly silent - then shall the rest be added unto you. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 245:All essential knowledge relates to existence, or only such knowledge as has an essential relationship to existence is essential knowledge. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 246:If the ethical - that is, social morality- is the highest ... then no categories are needed other than the Greek philosophical categories. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 247:Faith is a marvel, and yet no human being is excluded from it; for that in which all human life is united is passion, and faith is a passion. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 248:I stick my finger into existence.. it smells of nothing. Where am I? Who am I? What is this thing called the world? What does this word mean? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 249:It is a frightful satire and an epigram on the modern age that the only use it knows for solitude is to make it a punishment, a jail sentence. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 250:Christians remind me of schoolboys who want to look up the answers to their math problems in the back of the book rather than work them through. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 251:When all combine in every way to make everything easier, people will want difficulty. I conceived it as my task to make difficulties everywhere. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 252:No time of life is so beautiful as the early days of love, when with every meeting, every glance, one fetches something new home to rejoice over. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 253:A man prayed, and at first he thought that prayer was talking. But he became more and more quiet until in the end he realized prayer is listening. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 254:It seems to be my destiny to discourse on truth, insofar as I discover it, in such a way that all possible authority is simultaneously demolished. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 255:Old age realizes the dreams of youth: look at Dean Swift; in his youth he built an asylum for the insane, in his old age he was himself an inmate. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 256:To venture causes anxiety, but not to venture is to lose one's self... . And to venture in the highest is precisely to be conscious of one's self. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 257:The most common despair is... not choosing, or willing, to be oneself... [but] the deepest form of despair is to choose to be another than oneself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 258:To cheat oneself out of love is the most terrible deception; it is an eternal loss for which there is no reparation, either in time or in eternity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 259:Choose to be who you are. . . The individual who would become a person must at some point take over his entire being - must, that is, choose herself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 260:Our age is essentially one of understanding and reflection, without passion, momentarily bursting into enthusiasm and shrewdly relapsing into repose. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 261:Who is also aware of the tremendous risk involved in faith - when he nevertheless makes the leap of faith - this [is] subjectivity ... at its height. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 262:A man's personality is matured only when he appropriates the truth, whether it is spoken by Balaam's ass or a sniggering wag or an apostle or an angel. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 263:Marriage brings one into fatal connection with custom and tradition, and traditions and customs are like the wind and weather, altogether incalculable. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 264:Teach me, 0 God, not to torture myself, not to make a martyr out of myself through stifling reflection, but rather teach me to breathe deeply in faith. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 265:When you open the door which you shut in order to pray to God, the first person you meet as you go out is your neighbour whom you shall love. Wonderful! ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 266:Every mental act is composed of doubt and belief, but it is belief that is the positive, it is belief that sustains thought and holds the world together. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 267:It is perfectly true, as philosophers say, that life must be understood backwards. But they forget the other proposition, that it must be lived forwards. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 268:One could construe the life of man as a great discourse in which the various people represent different parts of speech (the same might apply to states). ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 269:Philosophy always requires something more, requires the eternal, the true, in contrast to which even the fullest existence as such is but a happy moment. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 270:Irony is the cultivation of the spirit and therefore follows next after immediacy; then comes the ethicist, then the humourist, then the religious person. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 271:The more a man can forget, the greater the number of metamorphoses which his life can undergo; the more he can remember, the more divine his life becomes. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 272:The present state of the world and the whole of life is diseased. If I were a doctor and were asked for my advice, I should reply, & 273:For the sadness in legitimate humour consists in the fact that honestly and without deceit it reflects in a purely human way upon what it is to be a child. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 274:How absurd men are! They never use the liberties they have, they demand those they do not have. They have freedom of thought, they demand freedom of speech. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 275:In the deepest sense, the being in a state of sin is the sin, the particular sins are not the continuation of sin, they are expressions of its continuation. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 276:It was completely fruitless to quarrel with the world, whereas the quarrel with oneself was occasionally fruitful and always, she had to admit, interesting. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 277:Deep within every man there lies the dread of being alone in the world, forgotten by God, overlooked among the tremendous household of millions and millions. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 278:A good decision is our will to do everything we can within our power. It means to serve God with all we've got, be it little or much. Every person can do that. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 279:Because of its tremendous solemnity death is the light in which great passions, both good and bad, become transparent, no longer limited by outward appearances. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 280:God has given each of us our "marching order." Our purpose here on Earth is to find those orders and carry them out. Those orders acknowledge our special gifts. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 281:Irony limits, finitizes, and circumscribes and thereby yields truth, actuality, content; it disciplines and punishes and thereby yields balance and consistency. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 282:It is modest of the nightingale not to require anyone to listen to it; but it is also proud of the nightingale not to care whether any one listens to it or not. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 283:Boredom rests upon the nothingness that winds its way through existence; its giddiness, like that which comes from gazing down into an infinite abyss, is infinite. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 284:The proud person always wants to do the right thing, the great thing. But because he wants to do it in his own strength, he is fighting not with man, but with God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 285:With the daguerreotype, everyone will be able to have their portrait taken . . . and at the same time everything is being done to make us all look exactly the same. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 286:There is something almost cruel about the Christian's being placed in a world which in every way wants to pressure him to do the opposite of what God bids him to do. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 287:The truth is a snare: you cannot have it, without being caught. You cannot have the truth in such a way that you catch it, but only in such a way that it catches you. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 288:But the life of freedom requires a beginning, and here a beginning is a resolution, and the resolution has its work and its pain-thus the beginning has its difficulty. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 289:It is better to try something and fail than to try nothing and succeed. The result may be the same, but you won't be. We always grow more through defeats than victories. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 290:Instruction begins when you, the teacher, learn from the learner; put yourself in his place so that you may understand . . . what he learns and the way he understands it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 291:It is intelligent to ask two questions: (1) Is it possible? (2) Can I do it?. But it is unintelligent to ask these questions: (1) Is it real? (2) Has my neighbor done it? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 292:It is very dangerous to go into eternity with possibilities which one has oneself prevented from becoming realities. A possibility is a hint from God. One must follow it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 293:There are, as is known, insects that die in the moment of fertilization. So it is with all joy: life's highest, most splendid moment of enjoyment is accompanied by death. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 294:Silence is the demon's trap, and the more one is silenced, the more terrible the demon; but silence is also the divinity's mutual understanding with the single individual. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 295:... the person who surrenders absolutely to God, with no reservations, is absolutely safe. From this safe hiding-place he can see the devil , but the devil cannot see him. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 296:The truth must essentially be regarded as in conflict with this world; the world has never been so good, and will never become so good that the majority will desire the truth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 297:I am so fed up and joyless that not only have I nothing to fill my soul, I cannot even conceive of anything that could possibly satisfy it - alas, not even the bliss of heaven. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 298:What a difference! Under the esthetic sky, everything is buoyant, beautiful, transient! when ethics arrives on the scene, everything becomes harsh, angular and infinitely boring ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 299:What is a poet? An unhappy person who conceals profound anguish in his heart but whose lips are so formed that as sighs and cries pass over them they sound like beautiful music. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 300:A man who as a physical being is always turned toward the outside, thinking that his happiness lies outside him, finally turns inward and discovers that the source is within him. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 301:The truth is lived before it is understood. It must be fought for, tested, and appropriated. Truth is the way... Anyone will easily understand it if he just gives himself to it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 302:Worldly wisdom thinks that love is a relationship between man and man. Christianity teaches that love is a relationship between man-God-man, that is, that God is the middle term. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 303:How ironical that it is by means of speech that man can degrade himself below the level of dumb creation - for a chatterbox is truly of a lower category than a dumb creature. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 304:Dread is a womanish debility in which freedom swoons. Psychologically speaking, the fall into sin always occurs in impotence. But dread is at the same time the most egotistic thing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 305:... he who always hopes for the best becomes old, deceived by life, and he who is always prepared for the worst becomes old prematurely; but he who has faith, retains eternal youth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 306:But doubt is wily and cunning and never, as it is sometimes said to be, loud or defiant. It is unassuming and sly, not bold or assertive - and the more unassuming, the more dangerous. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 307:I divide my time as follows: half the time I sleep, the other half I dream. I never dream when I sleep, for that would be a pity, for sleeping is the highest accomplishment of genius. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 308:Luther, you had 95 theses . . . The matter is far more terrible-there is only one thesis. The Christianity of the New Testament does not exist at all. Here there is nothing to reform. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 309:Adversity draws men together and produces beauty and harmony in life's relationships, just as the cold of winter produces ice-flowers on the window-panes, which vanish with the warmth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 310:. . .the larger the crowd, the more probable that that which it praises is folly, and the more improbable that it is truth; and the most improbable of all that it is any eternal truth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 311:You train yourself in the art of being mysterious to everyone. My dear friend! What if there were no one, who cared about guessing your riddle, what pleasure would you then take in it? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 312:A genius may perhaps be a century ahead of his age and hence stands there as a paradox, but in the end, the race will assimilate what was once a paradox, so it is no longer paradoxical. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 313:It occurs to me that artists go forward by going backward, something which I have nothing against intrinsically when it is a reproduced retreat - as is the case with the better artists. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 314:You should therefore say: alone in one's boat, alone with one's care, alone with one's despair, which one is craven enough to want rather to keep than submit to the pain of being healed. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 315:I see it all perfectly; there are two possible situations - one can either do this or that. My honest opinion and my friendly advice is this: do it or do not do it - you will regret both. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 316:There are many people who reach their conclusions about life like schoolboys: they cheat their master by copying the answer out of a book without having worked the sum out for themselves. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 317:In addition to my other numerous acquaintances, I have one more intimate confidant. ... My depression is the most faithful mistress I have known - no wonder, then, that I return the love. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 318:The question of immortality is of its nature not a scholarly question. It is a question welling up from the interior which the subject must put to itself as it becomes conscious of itself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 319:It is perhaps the misfortune of my life that I am interested in far too much but not decisively in any one thing; all my interests are not subordinated in one but stand on an equal footing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 320:The thing is to understand myself: the thing is to find a truth which is true for me, to find the idea for which I can live and die. That is what I now recognize as the most important thing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 321:Just as in the great moment of resignation one does not mediate but chooses, now the task is to gain proficiency in repeating the impassioned choice and, existing, to express it in existence. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 322:In actuality, no one ever sank so deep that he could not sink deeper, and there may be one or many who sank deeper. So it is always possible to be happy and grateful that things are not worse! ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 323:Father in Heaven! When the thought of thee wakes in our hearts let it not awaken like a frightened bird that flies about in dismay, but like a child waking from its sleep with a heavenly smile. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 324:Where unclarity resides, there is temptation, and there it proves only too easily the stronger. Wherever there is ambiguity, wherever there is wavering, there is disobedience down at the bottom. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 325:One must not think slightingly of the paradoxical‚Ķfor the paradox is the source of the thinker’s passion, and the thinker without a paradox is like a lover without feeling: a paltry mediocrity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 326:For like a poisonous breath over the fields, like a mass of locusts over Egypt, so the swarm of excuses is a general plaque, a ruinous infection among men, that eats off the sprouts of the Eternal. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 327:The human race in the course of time has taken the liberty of softening and softening Christianity until at last we have contrived to make it exactly the opposite of what it is in the New Testament. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 328:Those who dream must be awakened, and the deeper the people are who slumber, or the deeper they slumber, the more important it is that they be awakened, and the more powerfully must they be awakened. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 329:The melancholy have the best sense of the comic, the opulent often the best sense of the rustic, the dissolute often the best sense of the moral, and the doubter often the best sense of the religious. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 330:A human being is a spirit. But what is spirit? Spirit is the self. But what is self? The self is a relation that relates itself to itself or is the relation's relating itself to itself in the relation. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 331:About as genuine as tea made from a bit of paper which once lay in a drawer beside another piece of paper which had been used to wrap up a few tea leaves from which tea had already been made three times. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 332:If a man wants to set up as an innkeeper and he does not succeed, it is not comic. If, on the contrary, a girl asks to be allowed to set up as a prostitute and she fails, as sometimes happens, it is comic. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 333:The paradox in Christian truth is invariably due to the fact that it is the truth that exists for God. The standard of measure and the end is superhuman; and there is only one relationship possible: faith. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 334:It is not a gain that guilt should be wholly forgotten. On the contrary, it is loss and perdition. But it is a gain to win an inner intensity of heart through a deeper and deeper inner sorrowing over guilt. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 335:Most people are subjective toward themselves and objective toward all others, frightfully objective sometimes& 336:Don't you know that a midnight hour comes when everyone has to take off his mask? Do you think life always lets itself be trifled with? Do you think you can sneak off a little before midnight to escape this? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 337:I have, I believe, the courage to doubt everything; I have, I believe, the courage to fight against everything; but I do not have the courage to acknowledge anything, the courage to possess, to own anything. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 338:Maturity consists in the discovery that there comes a critical moment where everything is reversed, after which the point becomes to understand more and more that there is something which cannot be understood. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 339:Worship isn't God's show. God is the audience. God's watching. The congregation, they are the actors in this drama. Worship is their show. And the minister is just reminding the people of their forgotten lines. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 340:Your own tactic is to train yourself in the art of becoming enigmatic to everybody. My young friend, suppose there was no one who troubld himself to guess your riddle& 341:Men think that it is impossible for a human being to love his enemies, for enemies are hardly able to endure the sight of one another. Well, then, shut your eyes& 342:Not just in commerce but in the world of ideas too our age is putting on a veritable clearance sale. Everything can be had so dirt cheap that one begins to wonder whether in the end anyone will want to make a bid. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 343:Love is the expression of the one who loves, not of the one who is loved. Those who think they can love only the people they prefer do not love at all. Love discovers truths about individuals that others cannot see ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 344:The stone that was rolled before Christ's tomb might appropriately be called the philosopher's stone because its removal gave not only the pharisees but, now for 1800 years, the philosophers so much to think about. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 345:It is tragic-comic to see that all this knowledge and understanding exercises no power at all over men's lives, that their lives do not express in the remotest way what they have understood, but rather the opposite. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 346:People generally think that it is the world, the environment, external relationships, which stand in one's way, in the way of ones' good fortune... and at bottom it is always man himself that stands in his own way. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 347:Listen to the cry of a woman in labor at the hour of giving birth - look at the dying man's struggle at his last extremity, and then tell me whether something that begins and ends thus could be intended for enjoyment. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 348:Most people believe that the Christian commandments, e.g. to love one's neighbor as oneself, are intentionally a little too severe - like setting a clock half an hour ahead to make sure of not being late in the morning. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 349:I am so stupid that I cannot understand philosophy; the antithesis of this is that philosophy is so clever that it cannot comprehend my stupidity. These antitheses are mediated in a higher unity; in our common stupidity. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 350:Idleness, we are accustomed to say, is the root of all evil. To prevent this evil, work is recommended... . Idleness as such is by no means a root of evil; on the contrary, it is truly a divine life, if one is not bored. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 351:Talent warms-up the given (as they say in cookery) and makes it apparent; genius brings something new. But our time lets talent pass for genius. They want to abolish the genius, deify the genius, and let talent forge ahead. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 352:The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very well that the minute we understand, we are obliged to act accordingly. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 353:The self is a relation which relates itself to its own self, or it is that in the relation that the relation relates itself to its own self; the self is not the relation but that the relation relates itself to its own self. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 354:I am convinced that God is love, this thought has for me a primitive lyrical validity. When it is present to me, I am unspeakably blissful, when it is absent, I long for it more vehemently than does the lover for his object. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 355:Where am I? Who am I? How did I come to be here? What is this thing called the world? How did I come into the world? Why was I not consulted? And If I am compelled to take part in it, where is the director? I want to see him. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 356:People commonly travel the world over to see rivers and mountains, new stars, garish birds, freak fish, grotesque breeds of human; they fall into an animal stupor that gapes at existence and they think they have seen something. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 357:Concepts, like individuals, have their histories and are just as incapable of withstanding the ravages of time as are individuals. But in and through all this they retain a kind of homesickness for the scenes of their childhood. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 358:... the more one needs God the more perfect he is. To need God is nothing to be ashamed of but is perfection itself. It is the saddest thing in the world if a human being goes through life without discovering that he needs God! ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 359:The most terrible fight is not when there is one opinion against another, the most terrible is when two men say the same thing - and fight about the interpretation, and this interpretation involves a difference of quality. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 360:The greatest hazard of all, losing one’s self, can occur very quietly in the world, as if it were nothing at all. No other loss can occur so quietly; any other loss - an arm, a leg, five dollars, a wife, etc. - is sure to be noticed. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 361:Oh, can I really believe the poet's tales, that when one first sees the object of one's love, one imagines one has seen her long ago, that all love like all knowledge is remembrance, that love too has its prophecies in the individual. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 362:One should be an enigma not just to others but to oneself too. I study myself. When I'm tired of that I light a cigar to pass the time, and think: God only knows what the good Lord really meant with me, or what He meant to make of me. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 363:The idea of demonstrating that this unknown something [God] exists, could scarcely suggest itself to Reason. For if God does not exist it would of course be impossible to prove it, and if he does exist it would be folly to attempt it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 364:The paradox is really the pathos of intellectual life and just as only great souls are exposed to passions it is only the great thinker who is exposed to what I call paradoxes, which are nothing else than grandiose thoughts in embryo. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 365:A man may perform astonishing feats and comprehend a vast amount of knowledge, and yet have no understanding of himself. But suffering directs a man to look within. If it succeeds, then there, within him, is the beginning of his learning. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 366:What the philosophers have to say about reality is often as disappointing as a sign you see in a shop window, which reads Pressing Done Here. If you brought your clothes in to be pressed, you would be fooled: for the sign is only for sale. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 367:I have only one friend, and that is echo. Why is it my friend? Because I love my sorrow, and echo does not take it away from me. I have only one confidant, and that is the silence of night. Why is it my confidant? Because it remains silent. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 368:Destroy your primitivity, and you will most probably get along well in the world, maybe achieve great success& 369:Just as in earthly life lovers long for the moment when they are able to breathe forth their love for each other, to let their souls blend in a soft whisper, so the mystic longs for the moment when in prayer he can, as it were, creep into God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 370:Reflection is not the evil; but a reflective condition and the deadlock which it involves, by transforming the capacity for action into a means of escape from action, is both corrupt and dangerous, and leads in the end to a retrograde movement. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 371:Since boredom advances and boredom is the root of all evil, no wonder, then, that the world goes backwards, that evil spreads. This can be traced back to the very beginning of the world. The gods were bored; therefore they created human beings. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 372:That which is truly human no generation learns from the one before it. No generation learns from another how to love. No generation has a shorter task assigned to it except insofar as the previous generation shirked its task and deluded itself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 373:As the arrow, loosed from the bow by the hand of the practiced archer, does not rest till it has reached the mark, so men pass from God to God. He is the mark for which they have been created, and they do not rest till they find their rest in him. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 374:The absurd . . . the fact that with God all things are possible. The absurd is not one of the factors which can be discriminated within the proper compass of the understanding: it is not identical with the improbable, the unexpected, the unforeseen. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 375:The commandment is that you shall love, but when you understand life and yourself, then it is as if you should not need to be commanded, because to love human beings is still the only thing worth living for; without this life you really do not live. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 376:Never cease loving a person, and never give up hope for him, for even the prodigal son who had fallen most low, could still be saved; the bitterest enemy and also he who was your friend could again be your friend; love that has grown cold can kindle. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 377:... my soul always reverts to the Old Testament and to Shakespeare. There at least one feels that it's human beings talking. There people hate, people love, people murder their enemy and curse his descendants through all generations, there people sin. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 378:In order to swim one takes off all one's clothes& 379:In the life of the individual when love awakens it is older than everything else, because when it exists it seems as if it has existed for a long time; it presupposes itself back into the distant past until all searching ends in the inexplicable origin. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 380:Knowledge is an attitude, a passion, actually an illicit attitude. For the compulsion to know is like dipsomania, erotomania, and homicidal mania, in producing a character that is out of balance. It is not at all that the scientist goes after the truth. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 381:Learning to know anxiety is an adventure which every man has to affront if he would not go to perdition either by not having known anxiety or by sinking under it. He therefore who has leaned rightly to be in anxiety has learned the most important thing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 382:Doubt is thought's despair; despair is personality's doubt. . . . Doubt and despair . . . belong to completely different spheres; different sides of the soul are set in motion. . . . Despair is an expression of the total personality, doubt only of thought. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 383:He who does not know how to encircle a girl so that she loses sight of everything he does not want her to see, he who does not know how to poetize himself into a girl so that it is from her that everything proceeds as he wants it-he is and remains a bungler ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 384:If I had a humble spirit in my service who, when I asked for a glass of water, brought me the world's costliest wines blended in a chalice, I should dismiss him, in order to teach him that my pleasure consists, not in what I enjoy, but in having my own way. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 385:It will be easy for us the first time we receive that ball of yarn from Ariadne (love) and then go through all the mazes of the labyrinth (life) and kill the monster. But how many there are who plunge into life (the labyrinth) without taking that precaution? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 386:... the greatest thing each person can do is to give himself to God utterly and unconditionally - weaknesses, fears, and all. For God loves obedience more than good intentions or second-best offerings, which are all too often made under the guise of weakness. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 387:It goes against the grain for me to do what so often happens, to speak inhumanly about the great as if a few millennia were an immense distance. I prefer to speak humanly about it, as if it happened yesterday, and let only the greatness itself be the distance. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 388:God is present in the moment of choice, not in order to watch but in order to be chosen. Therefore, each person must choose. Terrible is the battle, in a person's innermost being, between God and the world. The crowning risk involved lies in the possession of choice. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 389:And if something should be found, particularly in the first part of the dissertation, that one is generally not accustomed to come across in scholarly writings, the reader must forgive my jocundity, just as I, in order to lighten the burden, sometimes sing at my work. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 390:As my prayer became more attentive and inward, I had less and less to say. I finally became completely silent... This is how it is. To pray does not mean to listen to oneself speaking. Prayer involves becoming silent, and being silent, and waiting until God is heard. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 391:Death induces the sensual person to say: Let us eat and drink, because tomorrow we shall die - but this is sensuality's cowardly lust for life, that contemptible order of things where one lives in order to eat and drink instead of eating and drinking in order to live. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 392:Human justice is very prolix, and yet at times quite mediocre; divine justice is more concise and needs no information from the prosecution, no legal papers, no interrogation of witnesses, but makes the guilty one his own informer and helps him with eternity's memory. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 393:If I were a physician, and if I were allowed to prescribe just one remedy for all the ills of the modern world, I would prescribe silence. For even if the Word of God were proclaimed in the modern world, how could one hear it with so much noise? Therefore, create silence. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 394:It doesn't occur to me at this moment to say more; another time, perhaps tomorrow, I may have more to say, but always the same thing and about the same, for only gypsies, robber gangs and swindlers follow the adage that where a person has once been he is never to go again. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 395:However much one generation learns from another, it can never learn from its predecessor the genuinely human factor. In this respect every generation begins afresh. Thus no generation has learned from another how to love, no generation can begin other than at the beginning. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 396:Pain reconciles one to existence. Infinite resignation is that shirt in the old fable. The thread is spun with tears, bleached by tears, the shirt sewn in tears, but then it also gives better protection than iron. The secret in life is that everyone must sew it for himself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 397:People have an idea that the preacher is an actor on a stage and they are the critics, blaming or praising him. What they don't know is that they are the actors on the stage; he (the preacher) is merely the prompter standing in the wings, reminding them of their lost lines. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 398:... Christ did not appoint professors, but followers. If Christianity ... is not reduplicated in the life of the person expounding it, then he does not expound Christianity, for Christianity is a message about living and can only be expounded by being realized in men's lives. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 399: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 ‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî‚Äî and wanted to shoot myself. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 400:Take a book, the poorest one written, but read it with the passion that it is the only book you will read. Ultimately, you will read everything out of it, that is, as much as there was in yourself, and you could never get more out of reading, even if you read the best of books. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 401:The more one suffers, the more, I believe, has one a sense for the comic. It is only by the deepest suffering that one acquires true authority in the use of the comic, an authority which by one word transforms as by magic the reasonable creature one calls man into a caricature. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 402:You wanted God's ideas about what was best for you to coincide with your ideas, but you also wanted him to be the almighty Creator of heaven and earth so that he could properly fulfill your wish. And yet, if he were to share your ideas, he would cease to be the almighty Father. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 403:A fire broke out backstage in a theatre. The clown came out to warn the public; they thought it was a joke and applauded. He repeated it; the acclaim was even greater. I think that's just how the world will come to an end: to the general applause of wits who believe it's a joke. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 404:... knowing God is the condition for the sanctification of a human being by God's assistance and according to His intention. Wherever God is, there He is always creating... He wants to create a new human being. To need God is to become new. And to know God is the crucial thing. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 405:The greatest danger to Christianity is, I contend, not heresies, not heterodoxies, not atheists, not profane secularism - no, but the kind of orthodoxy which is cordial drivel, mediocrity served up sweet. There is nothing that so insidiously displaces the majestic as cordiality. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 406:This fact, that the opposite of sin is by no means virtue, has been overlooked. The latter is partly a pagan view, which is content with a merely human standard, and which for that very reason does not know what sin is, that all sin is before God. No, the opposite of sin is faith. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 407:The only analogy I have before me is Socrates. My task is a Socratic task, to revise the definition of what it is to be a Christian. For my part I do not call myself a "Christian" (thus keeping the ideal free), but I am able to make it evident that the others are still less than I. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 408:Truth has always had many loud proclaimers, but the question is whether a person will in the deepest sense acknowledge the truth, allow it to permeate his whole being, accept all its consequences, and not have an emergency hiding place for himself and a Judas kiss for the consequence. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 409:The present generation, wearied by its chimerical efforts, relapses into complete indolence. Its condition is that of a man who has only fallen asleep towards morning: first of all come great dreams, then a feeling of laziness, and finally a witty or clever excuse for remaining in bed. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 410:Irony is the birth-pangs of the objective mind (based upon the misrelationship, discovered by the I , between existence and the idea of existence). Humor is the birth -pangs of the absolute mind (based upon the misrelationship, discovered by the I , between the I and the idea of the I . ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 411:In order to help another effectively, I must understand what he understands. If I do not know that, my greater understanding will be of no help to him... instruction begins when you put yourself in his place so that you may understand what he understands and in the way he understands it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 412:It is a very curious thing about superstition. One would expect that the man who had once seen his morbid dreams were not fulfilled would abandon them for the future; but on the contrary they grow even stronger just as the love of gambling increases in a man who has once lost in a lottery. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 413:... even the richest personality is nothing before he has chosen himself, and on the other hand even what one might call the poorest personality is everything when he has chosen himself; for the great thing is not to be this or that but to be oneself, and this everyone can be if he wills it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 414:Thus our own age is essentially one of understanding, and on the average, perhaps, more knowledgeable than any former generation, but it is without passion. Every one knows a great deal, we all know which way we ought to go and all the different ways we can go, but nobody is willing to move. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 415:If there were no eternal consciousness in a man, if at the bottom of everything there were only a wild ferment, a power that twisting in dark passions produced everything great or inconsequential; if an unfathomable, insatiable emptiness lay hid beneath everything, what would life be but despair? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 416:If I were to wish for anything, I should not wish for wealth and power, but for the passionate sense of the potential, for the eye which, ever young and ardent, sees the possible. Pleasure disappoints, possibility never. And what wine is so sparkling, what so fragrant, what so intoxicating, as possibility! ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 417:Out of love for mankind, and out of despair at my embarrassing situation, seeing that I had accomplished nothing and was unable to make anything easier than it had already been made, and moved by a genuine interest in those who make everything easy, I conceived it as my task to create difficulties everywhere. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 418:It was not to save a nation that Abraham went to sacrifice Isaac, nor to appease angry gods... Then why does Abraham do it? For God's sake... He does it for the sake of God because God demands proof of his faith... He was not justified by being virtuous, but by being an individual submitted to God in faith. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 419:The resolving of the ethical, is freedom; the negative resolution also has this, but the freedom, blank and bare, is as if tongue-tied, hard to express, and generally has something hard in its nature. Falling in love, however, promptly sets it to music, even if this composition contains a very difficult passage. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 420:If anyone on the verge of action should judge himself according to the outcome, he would never begin. Even though the result may gladden the whole world, that cannot help the hero; for he knows the result only when the whole thing is over, and that is not how he became a hero, but by virtue of the fact that he began. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 421:During the first period of our lives the greatest danger is not to take the risk. When once the risk has been taken, then the greatest danger is to risk too much. By not risking at first one turns aside and serves trivialities; in the second case, by risking too much, one turns aside to the fantastic and perhaps to presumption. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 422:If I am capable of grasping God objectively, I do not believe, but precisely because I cannot do this I must believe. If I wish to preserve myself in faith I must constantly be intent upon holding fast the objective uncertainty so as to remain out upon the deep, over seventy thousand fathoms of water, still preserving my faith. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 423:It requires courage not to surrender oneself to the ingenious or compassionate counsels of despair that would induce a man to eliminate himself from the ranks of the living; but it does not follow from this that every huckster who is fattened and nourished in self-confidence has more courage than the man who yielded to despair. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 424:In a theatre it happened that a fire started off stage. The clown came out to tell the audience. They thought it was a joke and applauded. He told them again, and they became still more hilarious. This is the way, I suppose, that the world will be destroyed-amid the universal hilarity of wits and wags who think it is all a joke. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 425:Nowadays not even a suicide kills himself in desperation. Before taking the step he deliberates so long and so carefully that he literally chokes with thought. It is even questionable whether he ought to be called a suicide, since it is really thought which takes his life. He does not die with deliberation but from deliberation. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 426:It is the duty of the human understanding to understand that there are things which it cannot understand, and what those things are. Human understanding has vulgarly occupied itself with nothing but understanding, but if it would only take the trouble to understand itself at the same time it would simply have to posit the paradox. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 427:My life is absolutely meaningless. When I consider the different periods into which it falls, it seems like the word Schnur in the dictionary, which means in the first place a string, in the second, a daughter-in-law. The only thing lacking is that the word Schnur should mean in the third place a camel, in the fourth, a dust-brush. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 428:This is what is sad when one contemplates human life, that so many live out their lives in quiet lostness... they live, as it were, away from themselves and vanish like shadows. Their immortal souls are blown away, and they are not disquieted by the question of its immortality, because they are already disintegrated before they die. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 429:An individual in despair despairs over something. . . . In despairing over something, he really despair[s] over himself, and now he wants to get rid of himself. Consequently, to despair over something is still not despair proper. . . . To despair over oneself, in despair to will to be rid of oneself-this is the formula for all despair. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 430:... the reason for [this age's] anxiety and unrest is because in one direction, & 431:What I really need is to get clear about what I must do, not what I must know, except insofar as knowledge must precede every act. What matters is to find a purpose, to see what it really is that God wills that I shall do; the crucial thing is to find a truth which is truth for me, to find the idea for which I am willing to live and die. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 432:A curiously interested observer sees a great deal, a scientifically interested observer is worthy of all honor, and anxiously interested observer sees what others do not see, but a crazy observer sees perhaps the most, his observation is more intense and more persistent, just as the senses of certain animals are sharper than those of man. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 433:I do not care for anything. I do not care to ride, for the exercise is too violent. I do not care to walk, walking is too strenuous. I do not care to lie down, for I should either have to remain lying, and I do not care to do that, or I should have to get up again, and I do not care to do that either. Summa summarum: I do not care at all. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 434:The difference between a man who faces death for the sake of an idea and an imitator who goes in search of martyrdom is that whilst the former expresses his idea most fully in death it is the strange feeling of bitterness which comes from failure that the latter really enjoys; the former rejoices in his victory, the latter in his suffering. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 435:No, I won't leave the world& 436:With respect to love we speak continually about perfection and the perfect person. With respect to love Christianity also speaks continually about perfection and the perfect person. Alas, but we men talk about finding the perfect person in order to love him. Christianity speaks about being the perfect person who limitlessly loves the person he sees. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 437:At one time my only wish was to be a police official. It seemed to me to be an occupation for my sleepless intriguing mind. I had the idea that there, among criminals, were people to fight: clever, vigorous, crafty fellows. Later I realized that it was good that I did not become one, for most police cases involve misery and wretchedness-not crimes and scandals. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 438:There are two kinds of geniuses. The characteristic of the one is roaring, but the lightning is meagre and rarely strikes; the other kind is characterized by reflection by which it constrains itself or restrains the roaring. But the lightning is all the more intense; with the speed and sureness of lightning it hits the selected particular points - and is fatal. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 439:Truth is not something you can appropriate easily and quickly. You certainly cannot sleep or dream yourself to the truth. No, you must be tried, do battle, and suffer if you are to acquire the truth for yourself. It is a sheer illusion to think that in relation to the truth there is an abridgement, a short cut that dispenses with the necessity for struggling for it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 440:Philosophy is perfectly right in saying that life must be understood backward. But then one forgets the other clause - that it must be lived forward. The more one thinks through this clause, the more one concludes that life in temporality never becomes properly understandable, simply because never at any time does one get perfect repose to take the stance - backward. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 441:And when the hourglass has run out, the hourglass of temporality, when the noise of secular life has grown silent and its restless or ineffectual activism has come to an end, when everything around you is still, as it is in eternity, then eternity asks you and every individual in these millions and millions about only one thing: whether you have lived in despair or not. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 442:Spiritual superiority only sees the individual. But alas, ordinarily we human beings are sensual and, therefore, as soon as it is a gathering, the impression changes - we see something abstract, the crowd, and we become different. But in the eyes of God, the infinite spirit, all the millions that have lived and now live do not make a crowd, He only sees each individual. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 443:If anyone proposes to believe, i.e., imagines himself to believe, because many good and upright people living here on the hill have believed, i.e., have said that they believedthen he is a fool, and it is essentially indifferent whether he believes on account of his own and perhaps a widely held opinion about what good and upright people believe, or believes a M√ºnchhausen. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 444:It is quite true what Philosophy says: that Life must be understood backwards. But that makes one forget the other saying: that it must be lived‚Äîforwards. The more one ponders this, the more it comes to mean that life in the temporal existence never becomes quite intelligible, precisely because at no moment can I find complete quiet to take the backward- looking position. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 445:The daily press is the evil principle of the modern world, and time will only serve to disclose this fact with greater and greater clearness. The capacity of the newspaper for degeneration is sophistically without limit, since it can always sink lower and lower in its choice of readers. At last it will stir up all those dregs of humanity which no state or government can control. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 446:A poet is an unhappy creature whose heart is tortured by deepest suffering but whose lips are so formed that when his sighs and cries stream out over them, their sound beomes like the sound of beautiful music . . . . And men flock about the poet saying, Sing for us soon again; that is to say, may new sufferings torture your soul, and may your lips continue to be formed as before. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 447:No grand inquisitor has in readiness such terrible tortures as has anxiety and no spy knows how to attack more artfully the man he suspects, choosing the instant when he is weakest; nor knows how to lay traps where he will be caught and ensnared as anxiety knows how, and no sharp-witted judge knows how to interrogate, to examine the accused, as anxiety does, which never lets him escape. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 448:To the Christian, love is the works of love. To say that love is a feeling or anything of the kind is an unchristian conception of love. That is the aesthetic definition and therefore fits the erotic and everything of that nature. But to the Christian love is the works of love. Christ's love was not an inner feeling, a full heart and what not, it was the work of love which was his life. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 449:When you say & 450:It is easy to see, though it scarcely needs to be pointed out, since it is involved in the fact that Reason is set aside, that faith is not a form of knowledge; for all knowledge is either a knowledge of the eternal, excluding the temporal and historical as indifferent, or it is pure historical knowledge. No knowledge can have for its object the absurdity that the eternal is the historical. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 451:The gods were bored and so they created man. Adam was bored because he was alone, so Eve was created. Thus boredom entered the world, and increased in proportion to the increase in population. Adam was bored alone, then Adam and Eve were bored together; them Adam and Eve and Cain and Abel were bored en famille; then the population of the world increased, and the people were bored en masse. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 452:Above all, do not lose your desire to walk. Everyday, I walk myself into a state of well-being & walk away from every illness. I have walked myself into my best thoughts, and I know of no thought so burdensome that one cannot walk away from it. But by sitting still, & the more one sits still, the closer one comes to feeling ill. Thus if one just keeps on walking, everything will be all right. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 453:What is a poet? An unhappy man who hides deep anguish in his heart, but whose lips are so formed that when the sigh and cry pass through them, it sounds like lovely music... . And people flock around the poet and say: & 454:As I stood alone and forsaken, and the power of the sea and the battle of the elements reminded me of my own nothingness, and on the other hand, the sure flight of the birds recalled the words spoken by Christ: Not a sparrow shall fall on the ground without your Father: then, all at once, I felt how great and how small I was; then did those two mighty forces, pride and humility, happily unite in friendship. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 455:... a human being not only can choose but... he must choose... for in this way God retains His honor while at the same time has a fatherly concern for humankind. Though God has lowered Himself to being that which can be chosen, yet each person must on his part choose. God is not mocked. Therefore the matter stands thus: If a person avoids choosing, this is the same as the presumption of choosing the world. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 456:Sin is: before God, or with the conception of God, in despair not to will to be oneself, or in despair to will to be oneself. Thus sin is intensified weakness or intensified defiance: sin is the intensification of despair. The emphasis is on before God, or with a conception of God; it is the conception of God that makes sin dialectically, ethically, and religiously what lawyers call & 457:Christianity does not oppose debauchery and uncontrollable passions and the like as much as it opposes... flat mediocrity, this nauseating atmosphere, this homey, civil togetherness, where admittedly great crimes, wild excesses, and powerful aberrations cannot easily occur - but where God's unconditional demand has even greater difficulty in accomplishing what it requires: the majestic obedience of submission. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 458:The difference between an admirer and a follower still remains, no matter where you are. The admirer never makes any true sacrifices. He always plays it safe. Though in words, phrases, songs, he is inexhaustible about how highly he prizes Christ, he renounces nothing, gives up nothing, will not reconstruct his life, will not be what he admires, and will not let his life express what it is he supposedly admires. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 459:Truth always rests with the minority, and the minority is always stronger than the majority, because the minority is generally formed by those who really have an opinion, while the strength of a majority is illusory, formed by the gangs who have no opinion - and who, therefore, in the next instant (when it is evident that the minority is the stronger) assume its opinion ... while Truth again reverts to a new minority. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 460:Of all ridiculous things the most ridiculous seems to me, to be busy ‚Äî to be a man who is brisk about his food and his work. Therefore, whenever I see a fly settling, in the decisive moment, on the nose of such a person of affairs; or if he is spattered with mud from a carriage which drives past him in still greater haste; or the drawbridge opens up before him; or a tile falls down and knocks him dead, then I laugh heartily. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 461:People try to persuade us that the objections against Christianity spring from doubt. That is a complete misunderstanding. The objections against Christianity spring from insubordination, the dislike of obedience, rebellion against all authority. As a result, people have hitherto been beating the air in their struggle against objections, because they have fought intellectually with doubt instead of fighting morally with rebellion. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 462:... it is presumptuous ridicule of God if someone thinks that only the person who desires great wealth chooses mammon. Alas, the person who insists on having a penny without God, wants to have a penny all for himself. He thereby chooses mammon. A penny is enough, the choice is made, he has chosen mammon; that it is little makes not the slightest difference. The love of God is hatred of the world and love of the world hatred of God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 463:Deep within every human being there still lives the anxiety over the possibility of being alone in the world, forgotten by God, overlooked among the millions and millions in this enormous household. One keeps this anxiety at a distance by looking at the many round about who are related to him as kin and friends, but the anxiety is still there, nevertheless, and one hardly dares think of how he would feel if all this were taken away. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 464:... it is not the obscure passages in Scripture that bind you but the ones you understand. With these you are to comply at once. If you understood only one passage in all of Scripture, well, then you must do that first of all. It will be this passage God asks you about. Do not first sit down and ponder the obscure passages. God's Word is given in order that you shall act according to it, not that you gain expertise in interpreting it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 465:So to be sick unto death is, not to be able to die-yet not as though there were hope of life; no, the hopelessness in this case is that even the last hope, death, is not available. When death is the greatest danger, one hopes for life; but when one becomes acquainted with an even more dreadful danger, one hopes for death. So when the danger is so great that death has become one's hope, despair is the disconsolateness of not being able to die. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 466:In order to learn true humility (I use this expression to describe the state of mind under discussion), it is good for a person to withdraw from the turmoil of the world (we see that Christ withdrew when the people wanted to proclaim him king as well as when he had to walk the thorny path), for in life either the depressing or the elevating impression is too dominant for a true balance to come about. Here, of course, individuality is very decisive. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 467:Whoever thou art, whatever in other respects thy life may be, my friend, by ceasing to take part (if ordinarily thou doest) in the public worship of God, as it now is (with the claim that it is the Christianity of the New Testament), thou hast constantly one guilt the less, and that a great one: thou dost not take part in treating God as a fool by calling that the Christianity of the New Testament which is not the Christianity of the New Testament. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 468:To despair over one's sins indicates that sin has become or wants to be internally consistent. It wants nothing to do with the good, does not want to be so weak as to listen occasionally to other talk. No, it insists on listening only to itself, on having dealings only with itself; it closes itself up within itself, indeed, locks itself inside one more inclosure, and protects itself against every attack or pursuit by the good by despairing over sin. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 469:Let others mock at you, oppose you, when you are under the influence of any passion; do not be in the least offended with those who mock at or oppose you, for they do you good; crucify your self-love and acknowledge the wrong, the error of your heart. But have the deepest pity for those who mock at words and works of faith and piety, of righteousness; for those who oppose the good which you are doing... God preserve you - getting exasperated at them. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 470:Death is not earnest in the same way the eternal is. To the earnestness of death belongs precisely that remarkable capacity for awakening, that resonance of a profound mockery which, detached from the thought of the eternal, is an empty and often brash jest, but together with the thought of the eternal is just what it should be, utterly different from the insipid solemness which least of all captures and holds a thought with tension like that of death. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 471:It is human self-renunciation when a man denies himself and the world opens up to him. But it is Christian self-renunciation when he denies himself and, because the world precisely for this shuts itself up to him, he must as one thrust out by the world seek God's confidence. The double-danger lies precisely in meeting opposition there where he had expected to find support, and he has to turn about twice; whereas the merely human self-resignation turns once. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 472:Knowledge of the truth I may perhaps have attained to; happiness certainly not. What shall I do? Accomplish something in the world, men tell me. Shall I then publish my grief to the world, contribute one more proof for the wretchedness and misery of existence, perhaps discover a new flaw in human life, hitherto unnoticed? I might then reap the rare reward of becoming famous, like the man who discovered the spots on Jupiter. I prefer, however, to keep silent. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 473:One is not unpopular because he uses peculiar expressions; that just so happens; such terms become a fad, and by and by everybody, down to the last simpleton, uses them. But a person who follows through an idea in his mind is, and always will be, essentially unpopular. That is why Socrates was unpopular, though he did not use any special terms, for to grasp and hold his & 474:There is nothing everyone is so afraid of as being told how vastly much he is capable of. You are capable of - do you want to know? - you are capable of living in poverty; you are capable of standing almost any kind of maltreatment, abuse, etc. But you do not wish to know about it, isn't that so? You would be furious with him who told you so, and only call that person your friend who bolsters you in saying: & 475:Imagine hidden in a simpler exterior a secret receptacle wherein the most precious treasure is deposited - there is a spring which has to be pressed, but the spring is hidden, and the pressure must have a certain strength, so that an accidental pressure would not be sufficient. So likewise is the hope of eternity hidden in man's inmost parts, and affliction is the pressure. When it presses the hidden spring, and strongly enough, then the contents appear in all their glory. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 476:How did I get into the world? Why was I not asked about it and why was I not informed of the rules and regulations but just thrust into the ranks as if I had been bought by a peddling shanghaier of human beings? How did I get involved in this big enterprise called actuality? Why should I be involved? Isn't it a matter of choice? And if I am compelled to be involved, where is the manager‚ÄîI have something to say about this. Is there no manager? To whom shall I make my complaint? ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 477:Irony is a disciplinarian feared only by those who do not know it, but cherished by those who do. He who does not understand irony and has no ear for its whispering lacks of what might called the absolute beginning of the personal life. He lacks what at moments is indispensable for the personal life, lacks both the regeneration and rejuvenation, the cleaning baptism of irony that redeems the soul from having its life in finitude though living boldly and energetically in finitude. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 478:The spiritual differs from the religious in being able to endure isolation. The rank of a spiritual person is proportionate to his strength for enduring isolation, whereas we religious people are constantly in need of & 479:In the end, therefore, money will be the one thing people will desire, which is moreover only representative, an abstraction. Nowadays a young man hardly envies anyone his gifts, his art, the love of a beautiful girl, or his fame; he only envies him his money. Give me money, he will say, and I am saved... He would die with nothing to reproach himself with, and under the impression that if only he had had the money he might really have lived and might even have achieved something great. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 480:Do you know of any more overwhelming and humbling expression for God's condescension and extravagance towards us human beings than that He places Himself, so to say, on the same level of choice with the world, just so that we may be able to choose; that God, if language dare speak thus, woos humankind - that He, the eternally strong one, woos sapless humanity? Yet, how insignificant is the young lover's choice between her pursuers by comparison with this choice between God and the world. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 481:It is (to describe it figuratively) as if an author were to make a slip of the pen, and as if this clerical error became conscious of being such. Perhaps this was no error but in a far higher sense was an essential part of the whole exposition. It is, then, as if this clerical error were to revolt against the author, out of hatred for him, were to forbid him to correct it, and were to say, "No, I will not be erased, I will stand as a witness against thee, that thou art a very poor writer." ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 482:And this is the simple truth - that to live is to feel oneself lost. He who accepts it has already begun to find himself, to be on firm ground. Instinctively, as do the shipwrecked, he will look around for something to which to cling, and that tragic, ruthless glance, absolutely sincere, because it is a question of his salvation, will cause him to bring order into the chaos of his life. These are the only genuine ideas; the ideas of the shipwrecked. All the rest is rhetoric, posturing, farce. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 483:To defend something is always to discredit it. Let a man have a warehouse full of gold, let him be willing to give away a ducat to every one of the poor - but let him also be stupid enough to begin this charitable undertaking of his with a defense in which he offers three good reasons in justification; and it will almost come to the point of people finding it doubtful whether indeed he is doing something good. But now for Christianity. Yes, the person who defends that has never believed in it. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 484:Every human being is tried this way in the active service of expectancy. Now comes the fulfillment and relieves him, but soon he is again placed on reconnaissance for expectancy; then he is again relieved, but as long as there is any future for him, he has not yet finished his service. And while human life goes on this way in very diverse expectancy, expecting very different things according to different times and occasions and in different frames of mind, all life is again one nightwatch of expectancy. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 485:Faith is precisely the paradox that the single individual as the single individual is higher than the universal, is justified before it, not as inferior to it but superior - yet in such a way, please note, that it is the single individual who, after being subordinate as the single individual to the universal, now by means of the universal becomes the single individual who as the single individual is superior, that the single individual as the single individual stands in an absolute relation to the absolute. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 486:The individual (no matter how well-meaning he might be, no matter how much strength he might have, if only he would use it) does not have the passion to rip himself away from either the coils of Reflection or the seductive ambiguities of Reflection; nor do the surroundings and times have any events or passions, but rather provide a negative setting of a habit of reflection, which plays with some illusory project only to betray him in the end with a way out: it shows him that the most clever thing to do is nothing at all. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 487:Christ was crucified because he would have nothing to do with the crowd (even though he addressed himself to all). He did not want to form a party, an interest group, a mass movement, but wanted to be what he was, the truth, which is related to the single individual. Therefore everyone who will genuinely serve the truth is by that very fact a martyr. To win a crowd is no art; for that only untruth is needed, nonsense, and a little knowledge of human passions. But no witness to the truth dares to get involved with the crowd. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 488:The ever increasing intensity of despair depends upon the degree of consciousness or is proportionate to this increase: the greater the degree of consciousness, the more intensive the despair. This is everywhere apparent, most clearly in despair at its maximum and minimum. The devil's despair is the most intensive despair, for the devil is sheer spirit and hence unqualified consciousness and transparency; there is no obscurity in the devil that could serve as a mitigating excuse. Therefore, his despair is the most absolute defiance. . . . ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 489:If someone who wanted to learn to dance were to say: For centuries, one generation after the other has learned the positions, and it is high time that I take advantage of this and promptly begin with the quadrille& 490:Compared with the person who is conscious of his despair, the despairing individual who is ignorant of his despair is simply a negativity further away from the truth and deliverance. . . Yet ignorance is so far from breaking the despair or changing despair to nondespairing that it can in fact be the most dangerous form of despair. . . . An individual is furthest from being conscious of himself as spirit when he is ignorant of being in despair. But precisely this-not to be conscious of oneself as spirit-is despair, which is spiritlessness. . . . ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 491:And then the spirit brings hope, hope in the strictest Christian sense, hope which is hoping against hope. For an immediate hope exists in every person; it may be more powerfully alive in one person than in another; but in death every hope of this kind dies and turns into hopelessness. Into this night of hopelessness (it is death that we are describing) comes the life-giving spirit and brings hope, the hope of eternity. It is against hope, for there was no longer any hope for that merely natural hope; this hope is therefore a hope contrary to hope. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 492:It is a wonderful thing to see a first-rate philosopher at prayer. Tough-minded thinking and tenderhearted reverence are friends, not enemies. We have for too long separated the head from the heart, and we are the lesser for it. We love God with the mind and we love God with the heart. In reality, we are descending with the mind into the heart and there standing before God in ceaseless wonder and endless praise. As the mind and the heart work in concert, a kind of loving rationality pervades all we say and do. This brings unity to us and glory to God. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 493:Do not interrupt the flight of your soul; do not distress what is best in you; do not enfeeble your spirit with half wishes and half thoughts. Ask yourself and keep on asking until you find the answer, for one may have known something many times, acknowledged it; one may have willed something many times, attempted it - and yet, only the deep inner motion, only the heart's indescribable emotion, only that will convince you that what you have acknowledged belongs to you, that no power can take it from you - for only the truth that builds up is truth for you. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 494:You love the accidental. A smile from a pretty girl in an interesting situation, a stolen glance, that is what you are hunting for, that is a motif for your aimless fantasy. You who always pride yourself on being an observateur must, in return, put up with becoming an object of observation. Ah, you are a strange fellow, one moment a child, the next an old man; one moment you are thinking most earnestly about the most important scholarly problems, how you will devote your life to them, and the next you are a lovesick fool. But you are a long way from marriage. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove 495:It is only all too easy to understand the requirements contained in God's Word (& *** NEWFULLDB 2.4M ***
1:—Soren Kierkegaard ~ Jim Harrison, #NFDB
2:My sorrow is my castle. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
3:... all comparisons injure. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
4:What labels me, negates me. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
5:Don't forget to love yourself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
6:Be that self which one truly is. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
7:Once you label me you negate me. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
8:Sleeping is the height of genius ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
9:My standpoint is armed neutrality. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
10:Hope is a passion for the possible. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
11:There can be no faith without risk. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
12:Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
13:The Bible is God's love letter to us ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
14:The door to happiness opens outward. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
15:Hope is passion for what is possible. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
16:May new sufferings torment your soul. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
17:Purity of heart is to will one thing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
18:The God that can be named is not God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
19:Faith is the highest passion in a man. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
20:Fate, then, is the nothing of anxiety. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
21:Humor (is) intrinsitc to Christianity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
22:The meaning lies in the appropriation. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
23:To be a saint is to will the one thing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
24:Confidence is the present tense of hope. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
25:I must find a truth that is true for me. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
26:Pleasure disappoints; possibility never. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
27:Take it and return it: the kiss of love. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
28:Without risk, faith is an impossibility. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
29:Genius never desires what does not exist. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
30:Irony is a qualification of subjectivity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
31:It is impossible to exist without passion ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
32:I would have perished had I not perished. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
33:If you think you understand, it isn't God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
34:Above all, do not lose your desire to walk. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
35:Men who not religious or artists are fools. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
36:Wherever there is a crowd there is untruth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
37:Do it or don't do it - you will regret both. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
38:Love is all, it gives all, and it takes all. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
39:Now, with God's help, I shall become myself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
40:One can advise comfortably from a safe port. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
41:Future is everything that past has forgotten. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
42:There is peace and rest and comfort in sorrow ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
43:Where there are two people, there is untruth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
44:Leap of faith – yes, but only after reflection ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
45:Nothing is as heady as the wine of possibility ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
46:The thing that cowardice fears most is decision ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
47:To love another person is to help them love God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
48:Life is lived forwards, but understood backwards. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
49:Only the noble of heart are called to difficulty. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
50:Love does not alter the beloved, it alters itself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
51:What our age lacks is not reflection, but passion. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
52:Happiness is the greatest hiding place for despair. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
53:I do not lack the courage to think a thought whole. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
54:A man who cannot seduce men cannot save them either. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
55:Love believes all things and yet is never deceived. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
56:A possibility is a hint from God. One must follow it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
57:If a man cannot forget, he will never amount to much. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
58:Prayer is a silent surrendering of everything to God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
59:Christianity demands the crucifixion of the intellect. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
60:Everyone looks the same to me in a photograph: stupid. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
61:Repetition is the reality and the seriousness of life. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
62:The conclusions of passion are the only reliable ones. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
63:Absolute passion cannot be understood by a third party. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
64:Genius, like a thunderstorm, comes up against the wind. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
65:It is so hard to believe because it is so hard to obey. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
66:The person who praises God is on the tracks of justice. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
67:It is very important in life to know when your cue comes. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
68:My melancholy is the most faithful sweetheart I have had. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
69:Once you are born in this world you’re old enough to die. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
70:Prayer does not change God, but it changes him who prays. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
71:The most common form of despair is not being who you are. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
72:I stick my finger into existence and it smells of nothing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
73:We live as if we were unaware of our impending destruction ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
74:If you want to be loathsome to God, just run with the herd. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
75:At the bottom of enmity between strangers lies indifference. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
76:Comparison is the most dangerous acquaintance love can make. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
77:I have only one confidant, and that is the silence of night. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
78:It is not where we breathe, but where we Love, that we live. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
79:Take away paradox from the thinker and you have a professor. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
80:The most common form of despair is not being who you are.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
81:The truly simple way of presenting Christianity is to do it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
82:Dread is a sympathetic antipathy and an antipathetic sympathy. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
83:Our life always expresses the result of our dominant thoughts. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
84:To venture causes anxiety. Not to venture is to lose oneself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
85:Faith is holding onto uncertainties with passionate conviction. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
86:In my great melancholy, I loved life, for I love my melancholy. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
87:It's better to get lost in the passion than to lose the passion ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
88:Personality is only ripe when a man has made the truth his own. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
89:To be lost in spiritlessness is the most terrible thing of all. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
90:to have faith is precisely to lose one's mind so as to win God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
91:It is so hard to believe because it is so hard to obey.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, [T5],#NFDB
92:to have faith is precisely to lose one's mind so as to win God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
93:Come, sleep and death; you promise nothing, you hold everything. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
94:God does not think; he creates. He does not exist; he is eternal. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
95:I go fishing for a thousand monsters in the depths of my own self ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
96:On the secretly blushing cheek is reflected the glow of the heart ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
97:Who am I? How did I come into the world? Why was I not consulted? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
98:Backwards understood be only can but, forwards lived be must life. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
99:Music finds its way where the rays of the sun cannot penetrate.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
100:The more a person limits himself, the more resourceful he becomes. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
101:Certainty... lurks at the door of faith and threatens to devour it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
102:Life is not a problem to be solved, but a reality to be experienced. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
103:The deepest form of despair is to choose to be another than himself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
104:The object of (Christian) faith is not the teaching but the Teacher. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
105:...why bother remembering a past that cannot be made into a present? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
106:You live life looking forward, you understand life looking backward. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
107:Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
108:Life has its own hidden forces which you can only discover by living. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
109:Most people rush after pleasure so fast that they rush right past it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
110:No one is so terribly deceived as he who does not himself suspect it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
111:Only one deception is possible in the infinite sense, self-deception. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
112:Boredom is the root of all evil - the despairing refusal to be oneself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
113:The highest of all is not to understand the highest but to act upon it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
114:Therefore do not deceive yourself! Of all deceivers fear most yourself! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
115:Trouble is the common denominator of living. It is the great equalizer. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
116:It is so hard to believe because it is so hard to obey.1 —Soren Kierkegaard ~ Barnabas Piper, #NFDB
117:Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
118:I have attacked no one as not being a Christian, I have condemned no one. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
119:Patience is necessary, and one cannot reap immediately where one has sown. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
120:There is no greater evil one can suffer than to hate reasonable discourse. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
121:The tyrant dies and his rule is over, the martyr dies and his rule begins. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
122:A 'no' does not hide anything, but a 'yes' very easily becomes a deception. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
123:I believe that there is a longing in my soul that searches the whole world. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
124:It takes moral courage to grieve; it requires religious courage to rejoice. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
125:This age will die not as a result of some evil, but from a lack of passion. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
126:Christendom has done away with Christianity without being quite aware of it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
127:Face the facts of being what you are, for that is what changes what you are. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
128:Most men pursue pleasure with such breathless haste that they hurry past it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
129:Philosophy is life's dry-nurse, who can take care of us - but not suckle us. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
130:Take a chance and you may lose. Take not a chance and you have lost already. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
131:Whoever has learned to be anxious in the right way has learned the ultimate. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
132:People settle for a level of despair they can tolerate and call it happiness. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
133:To dare is to lose one's footing momentarily. Not to dare is to lose oneself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
134:A poet is not an apostle; he drives out devils only by the power of the devil. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
135:Far from idleness being the root of all evil, it is rather the only true good. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
136:Language has time as its element; all other media have space as their element. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
137:That is the road we all have to take - over the Bridge of Sight into eternity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
138:The wisdom of the years is confusing. Only the wisdom of eternity is edifying. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
139:Are you not aware that there comes a midnight hour when everyone must unmask... ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
140:The best news the World has ever heard came from a graveyard - Christ is risen! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
141:To dare is to lose ones footing momentarily. Not to dare is to lose oneself.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
142:Every man has in himself the most dangerous traitor of all. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, Works of Love, [T5], #NFDB
143:Life can only be understood backward; but it must be lived forwards. —Soren Kierkegaard ~ Lee Gutkind, #NFDB
144:All moral elevation consists first and foremost of being weaned from the momentary. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
145:The question is not "To be or not to be," it is what we should be until we are not. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
146:The task must be made difficult, for only the difficult inspires the noble-hearted. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
147:During the first period of a man's life the greatest danger is not to take the risk. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
148:For without risk there is no faith, and the greater the risk, the greater the faith. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
149:Christ has not only spoken to us by his life but has also spoken for us by his death. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
150:Out of love, God becomes man. He says: 'See, here is what it is to be a human being'. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
151:The great trick with a woman is to get rid of her while she think's she's rid of you. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
152:The thinker without a paradox is like a lover without a feeling: a paltry mediocrity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
153:When you were called, did you answer or did you not? Perhaps softly and in a whisper? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
154:Where am I? Who am I? How did I come to be here? What is this thing called the world? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
155:Men are not on such intimate terms with the sublime that they really can believe in it ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
156:The only intelligent tactical response to life's horror is to laugh defiantly at it
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
157:All the shrewdness of 'man' seeks one thing: to be able to live without responsibility. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
158:Job endured everything - until his friends came to comfort him, then he grew impatient. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
159:The reign of the tyrant ends with his death, and the reign of the martyr starts with it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
160:A road well begun is the battle half won. The important thing is to make a beginning and ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
161:Geniuses are like thunderstorms: they go against the wind, terrify people, clear the air. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
162:I would rather be a swineherd, understood by the swine, than a poet misunderstood by men. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
163:Most people believe that the Christian commandments are intentionally a little too severe ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
164:I'm so misunderstood that people misunderstand me even when I tell them I'm misunderstood. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
165:There are men who are wanting in the comparative, they as a rule are the most interesting. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
166:Truth is not introduced into the individual from without, but was within him all the time. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
167:It is not the path which is the difficulty; rather, it is the difficulty which is the path. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
168:Adversity not only draws people together, but brings forth that beautiful inward friendship. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
169:Sin is in itself separation from the good, but despair over sin is separation a second time. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
170:Ulysses was not comely, but he was eloquent, Yet he fired two goddesses of the sea with love ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
171:What if everything in the world were a misunderstanding, what if laughter were really tears? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
172:To Dare is to risk losing your foothold for a moment, Not to Dare is to risk losing yourself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
173:It is not the path which is the difficulty; rather, it is the difficulty which is the path.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
174:Had I to carve an inscription on my tombstone I would ask for none other than "The Individual." ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
175:The self-assured believer is a greater sinner in the eyes of God than the troubled disbeliever. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
176:What if everything in the world were a misunderstanding, what if laughter were really tears?
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
177:I have never fought in such a way as to say: I am the true Christian, others are not Christians. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
178:Irony is a disciplinarian feared only by those who do not know it, but cherished by those who do ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
179:Only when it is a duty to love, only then is love eternally and happily secured against despair. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
180:To be a teacher in the right sense is to be a learner. I am not a teacher, only a fellow student. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
181:Any truth is only true up to a certain point. When one oversteps the mark, it becomes a non-truth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
182:The most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one you'll never have. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
183:The question is asked in ignorance, by one who does not even know what can have led him to ask it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
184:Only one human being recognized as one's neighbour is necessary in order to cure a man of self-love ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
185:People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
186:The most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one you'll never have. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
187:The unhappy person is never present to themself because they always live in the past or the future. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
188:It is the normal state of the human heart to try to build its identity around something besides God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
189:Theology sits rouged at the window and courts philosophy's favor, offering to sell her charms to it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
190:If anyone on the verge of action should judge himself according to the outcome, he would never begin. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
191:If I could prescribe only one remedy for all the ills of the modern world, I would prescribe silence. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
192:The function of prayer is not to influence God, but rather to change the nature of the one who prays. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
193:To be a teacher does not mean simply to affirm that such a thing is so, or to deliver a lecture, etc. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
194:What is existence for but to be laughed at if men in their twenties have already attained the utmost? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
195:God creates everything out of nothing. And everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
196:There's nothing more fragrant, more sparkling, more intoxicating than the infinity of possibilities
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
197:Freedom's possibility is not the ability to choose the good or the evil. The possibility is to be able. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
198:God creates everything out of nothing. And everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
199:Which is more difficult, to awaken one who sleeps or to awaken one who, awake, dreams that he is awake? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
200:I feel as if I were a piece in a game of chess, when my opponent says of it: That piece cannot be moved. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
201:The function of prayer is not to influence God, but rather to change the nature of the one who prays.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
202:It is the duty of the human understanding to understand that there are things which it cannot understand. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
203:Spirit is the third, yet in such a way that one can speak of a synthesis only when the spirit is posited. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
204:When you read God's Word, you must constantly be saying to yourself, "It is talking to me, and about me". ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
205:The tyrant dies and his rule is over, the martyr dies and his rule begins.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Journals of Kierkegaard,#NFDB
206:Human relations are like the irregular verbs in a number of languages where nearly all verbs are irregular. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
207:In the Christianity of Christendom the Cross has become something like the child’s hobby-horse and trumpet. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
208:The extreme rarity of transitional forms in the fossil record persists as the trade secret of paleontology. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
209:Most people live dejectedly in worldly joys or sorrows. They sit on the sidelines and do not join the dance. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
210:People understand me so poorly that they don't even understand my complaint about them not understanding me. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
211:What a misfortune to be a woman! And yet, the worst misfortune is not to understand what a misfortune it is. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
212:Why I so much prefer autumn to spring is that in the autumn one looks at heaven--in the spring at the earth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
213:Shows itself in the notion that what may be objectively true may in the mouth of certain people become false. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
214:To the frivolous Christianity is certainly not glad tidings, for it wishes first of all to make them serious. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
215:My scholarly expectation is then that I may succeed in becoming clever in philosophy in spite of my stupidity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
216:To be a woman is something so strange, so confusing and so complicated that only a woman could put up with it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
217:As the Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard noted, life can only be understood backwards—but it must be lived forwards. ~ Anonymous, #NFDB
218:This, then, is the ultimate paradox of thought: to want to discover something that thought itself cannot think. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
219:For he who loves God without faith reflects on himself, while the person who loves God in faith reflects on God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
220:To grumble about the world and its unhappiness is always easier than to beat one's breast and groan over oneself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
221:To pace about, looking to obtain status, looking to attain 'importance' - I can think of nothing more ridiculous. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
222:Whoever has the world's treasures has them no matter how he got them. In the world of the spirit it is otherwise. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
223:If you name me, you negate me. By giving me a name, a label, you negate all the other things I could possibly be. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
224:Soren Kierkegaard, the famed Danish theologian, once put it, “Prayer does not change God, but it changes him who prays. ~ Wayne W Dyer, #NFDB
225:the Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard noted, life can only be understood backwards—but it must be lived forwards. ~ Benjamin Graham, #NFDB
226:What looks like politics, and imagines itself to be political, will one day unmask itself as a religious movement. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
227:Affliction is able to drown out every earthly voice. . . but the voice of eternity within a person it cannot drown. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
228:There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn't true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
229:To stand on one leg and prove God's existence is a very different thing from going on one's knees and thanking him. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
230:For love is exultant when it unites equals, but it is triumphant when it makes that which was unequal equal in love. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
231:My tactics were, by God's aid, to employ every means to make it clear what the requirement of Christianity truly is. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
232:The crucial thing is to find a truth which is truth for me, to find the idea for which I am willing to live and die. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
233:As the Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard noted, life can only be understood backwards—but it must be lived forwards. ~ Benjamin Graham, #NFDB
234:If I am capable of grasping God objectively, I do not believe, but precisely because I cannot do this I must believe. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
235:With respect to physical existence, one needs little, and to the degree that one needs less, the more perfect one is. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
236:Death cannot explain itself. The earnestness consists precisely in this, that the observer must explain it to himself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
237:Faith is the highest passion in a human being. Many in every generation may not come that far, but none comes further. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
238:No one may pride himself at being more than an individual, and no one despondently think that he is not an individual. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
239:There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn't true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
240:It belongs to the imperfection of everything human that man can only attain his desire by passing through its opposite. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
241:It seems essential, in relationships and all tasks, that we concentrate only on what is most significant and important. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
242:The more people who believe something, the more apt it is to be wrong. The person who's right often has to stand alone. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
243:Busyness, keeping up with others, hustling hither and yon, makes it almost impossible for an individual to form a heart. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
244:The presence of irony does not necessarily mean that the earnestness is excluded. Only assistant professors assume that. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
245:In a mathematical proposition, for example, the objectivity is given, but therefore its truth is also an indifferent truth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
246:It is more blessed to give than to receive, but then it is also more blessed to be able to do without than to have to have. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
247:...there is one thing that all Satan's cunning and all the snares of temptation cannot take by surprise - an undivided will. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
248:Pleasure disappoints, possibility never. And what wine is so sparkling, who so fragrant, what so intoxicating, as possibility. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
249:There is nothing with which every man is so afraid as getting to know how enormously much he is capable of doing and becoming. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
250:And this is one of the most crucial definitions for the whole of Christianity; that the opposite of sin is not virtue but faith. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
251:Every day I walk myself into a state of well-being and walk away from every illness; I have walked myself into my best thoughts. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
252:I begin with the principle that all men are bores. Surely no one will prove himself so great a bore as to contradict me in this. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
253:The minority is always stronger than the majority, because the minority is generally formed by those who really have an opinion. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
254:On the whole, the longing for solitude is a sign that there still is spirit in a person and is a measure of what spirit there is. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
255:This is the miracle of life: that each person who heeds him or herself knows what no scientist can ever know: who he or she is. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
256:What I really need is to get clear out about what I must do, not what I must know, except insofar as knowledge precedes every act. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
257:Man is spirit. But what is spirit? Spirit is the self. But what is the self? The self is a relation which relates itself to itself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
258:Preparation for becoming attentive to Christianity does not consist in reading many books ... but in fuller immersion in existence. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
259:The truth is a trap: you cannot get it without it getting you; you cannot get the truth by capturing it, only by its capturing you. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
260:Intelligence has got the upper hand to such an extent that it transforms the real task into an unreal trick and reality into a play. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
261:The highest and most beautiful things in life are not to be heard about, nor read about, nor seen but, if one will, are to be lived. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
262:I found I had less and less to say, until finally, I became silent, and began to listen. I discovered in the silence, the voice of God ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
263:The more men believe an idea to be true the greater the likelihood that the idea is mistaken. Those who are right usually stand alone. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
264:Since my earliest childhood a barb of sorrow has lodged in my heart. As long as it stays I am ironic - if it is pulled out I shall die. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
265:In the eyes of God, the infinite spirit, all the millions that have lived and now live do not make a crowd. He only sees each individual ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
266:Jurists say that a capital crime submerges all lesser crimes; and so it is with faith. Its absurdity makes all petty difficultiesvanish. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
267:This is all that I've known for certain, that God is love. Even if I have been mistaken on this or that point: God is nevertheless love. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
268:God creates out of nothing. Wonderful you say. Yes, to be sure, but he does what is still more wonderful: he makes saints out of sinners. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
269:Seek first God's Kingdom, that is, become like the lilies and the birds, become perfectly silent - then shall the rest be added unto you. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
270:All essential knowledge relates to existence, or only such knowledge as has an essential relationship to existence is essential knowledge. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
271:If the ethical - that is, social morality- is the highest ... then no categories are needed other than the Greek philosophical categories. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
272:There is nothing with which every man is so afraid as getting to know how enormously much he is capable of doing and becoming. Soren Kierkegaard ~ Kate Racculia, #NFDB
273:Faith is a marvel, and yet no human being is excluded from it; for that in which all human life is united is passion, and faith is a passion. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
274:I stick my finger into existence.. it smells of nothing. Where am I? Who am I? What is this thing called the world? What does this word mean? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
275:It is a frightful satire and an epigram on the modern age that the only use it knows for solitude is to make it a punishment, a jail sentence. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
276:Christians remind me of schoolboys who want to look up the answers to their math problems in the back of the book rather than work them through. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
277:When all combine in every way to make everything easier, people will want difficulty. I conceived it as my task to make difficulties everywhere. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
278:No time of life is so beautiful as the early days of love, when with every meeting, every glance, one fetches something new home to rejoice over. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
279:The most common despair is...not choosing, or willing, to be oneself...[but] the deepest form of despair is to choose to be another than oneself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
280:To venture causes anxiety, but not to venture is to lose one's self.... And to venture in the highest is precisely to be conscious of one's self. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
281:A man prayed, and at first he thought that prayer was talking. But he became more and more quiet until in the end he realized prayer is listening. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
282:It seems to be my destiny to discourse on truth, insofar as I discover it, in such a way that all possible authority is simultaneously demolished. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
283:Old age realizes the dreams of youth: look at Dean Swift; in his youth he built an asylum for the insane, in his old age he was himself an inmate. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
284:To cheat oneself out of love is the most terrible deception; it is an eternal loss for which there is no reparation, either in time or in eternity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
285:The present state of the world and the whole of life is diseased. If I were a doctor and were asked for my advice, I should reply, 'Create silence'. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
286:Choose to be who you are. . . The individual who would become a person must at some point take over his entire being - must, that is, choose herself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
287:Our age is essentially one of understanding and reflection, without passion, momentarily bursting into enthusiasm and shrewdly relapsing into repose. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
288:Who is also aware of the tremendous risk involved in faith - when he nevertheless makes the leap of faith - this [is] subjectivity ... at its height. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
289:A man's personality is matured only when he appropriates the truth, whether it is spoken by Balaam's ass or a sniggering wag or an apostle or an angel. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
290:Marriage brings one into fatal connection with custom and tradition, and traditions and customs are like the wind and weather, altogether incalculable. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
291:Teach me, 0 God, not to torture myself, not to make a martyr out of myself through stifling reflection, but rather teach me to breathe deeply in faith. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
292:When you open the door which you shut in order to pray to God, the first person you meet as you go out is your neighbour whom you shall love. Wonderful! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
293:Every mental act is composed of doubt and belief, but it is belief that is the positive, it is belief that sustains thought and holds the world together. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
294:It is perfectly true, as philosophers say, that life must be understood backwards. But they forget the other proposition, that it must be lived forwards. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
295:One could construe the life of man as a great discourse in which the various people represent different parts of speech (the same might apply to states). ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
296:Philosophy always requires something more, requires the eternal, the true, in contrast to which even the fullest existence as such is but a happy moment. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
297:Irony is the cultivation of the spirit and therefore follows next after immediacy; then comes the ethicist, then the humourist, then the religious person. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
298:The more a man can forget, the greater the number of metamorphoses which his life can undergo; the more he can remember, the more divine his life becomes. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
299:There are two ways to be fooled.
One is to believe what isn’t true;
the other is to refuse to believe what is true.
Soren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) ~ S ren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
300:For the sadness in legitimate humour consists in the fact that honestly and without deceit it reflects in a purely human way upon what it is to be a child. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
301:How absurd men are! They never use the liberties they have, they demand those they do not have. They have freedom of thought, they demand freedom of speech. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
302:In the deepest sense, the being in a state of sin is the sin, the particular sins are not the continuation of sin, they are expressions of its continuation. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
303:It was completely fruitless to quarrel with the world, whereas the quarrel with oneself was occasionally fruitful and always, she had to admit, interesting. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
304:Deep within every man there lies the dread of being alone in the world, forgotten by God, overlooked among the tremendous household of millions and millions. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
305:A good decision is our will to do everything we can within our power. It means to serve God with all we've got, be it little or much. Every person can do that. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
306:Because of its tremendous solemnity death is the light in which great passions, both good and bad, become transparent, no longer limited by outward appearances. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
307:God has given each of us our "marching order." Our purpose here on Earth is to find those orders and carry them out. Those orders acknowledge our special gifts. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
308:Irony limits, finitizes, and circumscribes and thereby yields truth, actuality, content; it disciplines and punishes and thereby yields balance and consistency. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
309:It is modest of the nightingale not to require anyone to listen to it; but it is also proud of the nightingale not to care whether any one listens to it or not. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
310:Boredom rests upon the nothingness that winds its way through existence; its giddiness, like that which comes from gazing down into an infinite abyss, is infinite. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
311:Even though it be true that the conception of God is absolute help, it is also the only help which is absolutely capable of revealing to man his own helplessness. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
312:The proud person always wants to do the right thing, the great thing. But because he wants to do it in his own strength, he is fighting not with man, but with God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
313:With the daguerreotype, everyone will be able to have their portrait taken . . . and at the same time everything is being done to make us all look exactly the same. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
314:There is something almost cruel about the Christian's being placed in a world which in every way wants to pressure him to do the opposite of what God bids him to do. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
315:The truth is a snare: you cannot have it, without being caught. You cannot have the truth in such a way that you catch it, but only in such a way that it catches you. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
316:But the life of freedom requires a beginning, and here a beginning is a resolution, and the resolution has its work and its pain-thus the beginning has its difficulty. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
317:God creates out of nothing. Wonderful you say. Yes, to be sure, but he does what is still more wonderful: he makes saints out of sinners.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Journals of Kierkegaard,#NFDB
318:It is better to try something and fail than to try nothing and succeed. The result may be the same, but you won't be. We always grow more through defeats than victories. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
319:Instruction begins when you, the teacher, learn from the learner; put yourself in his place so that you may understand . . . what he learns and the way he understands it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
320:It is intelligent to ask two questions: (1) Is it possible? (2) Can I do it?. But it is unintelligent to ask these questions: (1) Is it real? (2) Has my neighbor done it? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
321:It is very dangerous to go into eternity with possibilities which one has oneself prevented from becoming realities. A possibility is a hint from God. One must follow it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
322:...the person who surrenders absolutely to God, with no reservations, is absolutely safe. From this safe hiding-place he can see the devil , but the devil cannot see him. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
323:There are, as is known, insects that die in the moment of fertilization. So it is with all joy: life's highest, most splendid moment of enjoyment is accompanied by death. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
324:Silence is the demon's trap, and the more one is silenced, the more terrible the demon; but silence is also the divinity's mutual understanding with the single individual. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
325:How ironical that it is by means of speech that man can degrade himself below the level of dumb creation -- for a chatterbox is truly of a lower category than a dumb creature. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
326:The truth must essentially be regarded as in conflict with this world; the world has never been so good, and will never become so good that the majority will desire the truth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
327:I am so fed up and joyless that not only have I nothing to fill my soul, I cannot even conceive of anything that could possibly satisfy it - alas, not even the bliss of heaven. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
328:The truth is lived before it is understood. It must be fought for, tested, and appropriated. Truth is the way... Anyone will easily understand it if he just gives himself to it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
329:What a difference! Under the esthetic sky, everything is buoyant, beautiful, transient! when ethics arrives on the scene, everything becomes harsh, angular and infinitely boring ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
330:What is a poet? An unhappy person who conceals profound anguish in his heart but whose lips are so formed that as sighs and cries pass over them they sound like beautiful music. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
331:A man who as a physical being is always turned toward the outside, thinking that his happiness lies outside him, finally turns inward and discovers that the source is within him. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
332:Worldly wisdom thinks that love is a relationship between man and man. Christianity teaches that love is a relationship between man-God-man, that is, that God is the middle term. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
333:...he who always hopes for the best becomes old, deceived by life, and he who is always prepared for the worst becomes old prematurely; but he who has faith, retains eternal youth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
334:Dread is a womanish debility in which freedom swoons. Psychologically speaking, the fall into sin always occurs in impotence. But dread is at the same time the most egotistic thing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
335:But doubt is wily and cunning and never, as it is sometimes said to be, loud or defiant. It is unassuming and sly, not bold or assertive - and the more unassuming, the more dangerous. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
336:I divide my time as follows: half the time I sleep, the other half I dream. I never dream when I sleep, for that would be a pity, for sleeping is the highest accomplishment of genius. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
337:The proud person always wants to do the right thing, the great thing. But because he wants to do it in his own strength, he is fighting not with man, but with God. — Soren Kierkegaard ~ S ren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
338:Adversity draws men together and produces beauty and harmony in life's relationships, just as the cold of winter produces ice-flowers on the window-panes, which vanish with the warmth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
339:. . .the larger the crowd, the more probable that that which it praises is folly, and the more improbable that it is truth; and the most improbable of all that it is any eternal truth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
340:You train yourself in the art of being mysterious to everyone. My dear friend! What if there were no one, who cared about guessing your riddle, what pleasure would you then take in it? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
341:A genius may perhaps be a century ahead of his age and hence stands there as a paradox, but in the end, the race will assimilate what was once a paradox, so it is no longer paradoxical. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
342:It occurs to me that artists go forward by going backward, something which I have nothing against intrinsically when it is a reproduced retreat - as is the case with the better artists. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
343:O Luther, you had 95 theses . . . The matter is far more terrible-there is only one thesis. The Christianity of the New Testament does not exist at all. Here there is nothing to reform. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
344:You should therefore say: alone in one's boat, alone with one's care, alone with one's despair, which one is craven enough to want rather to keep than submit to the pain of being healed. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
345:In addition to my other numerous acquaintances, I have one more intimate confidant. ... My depression is the most faithful mistress I have known - no wonder, then, that I return the love. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
346:I see it all perfectly; there are two possible situations - one can either do this or that. My honest opinion and my friendly advice is this: do it or do not do it - you will regret both. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
347:Oh, can I really believe the poet's tales, that when one first sees the object of one's love, one imagines one has seen her long ago, that all love like all knowledge is remembrance, that ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
348:There are many people who reach their conclusions about life like schoolboys: they cheat their master by copying the answer out of a book without having worked the sum out for themselves. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
349:The question of immortality is of its nature not a scholarly question. It is a question welling up from the interior which the subject must put to itself as it becomes conscious of itself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
350:It is perhaps the misfortune of my life that I am interested in far too much but not decisively in any one thing; all my interests are not subordinated in one but stand on an equal footing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
351:The thing is to understand myself: the thing is to find a truth which is true for me, to find the idea for which I can live and die. That is what I now recognize as the most important thing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
352:Just as in the great moment of resignation one does not mediate but chooses, now the task is to gain proficiency in repeating the impassioned choice and, existing, to express it in existence. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
353:In actuality, no one ever sank so deep that he could not sink deeper, and there may be one or many who sank deeper. So it is always possible to be happy and grateful that things are not worse! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
354:Father in Heaven! When the thought of thee wakes in our hearts let it not awaken like a frightened bird that flies about in dismay, but like a child waking from its sleep with a heavenly smile. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
355:One must not think slightingly of the paradoxical…for the paradox is the source of the thinker’s passion, and the thinker without a paradox is like a lover without feeling: a paltry mediocrity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
356:Where unclarity resides, there is temptation, and there it proves only too easily the stronger. Wherever there is ambiguity, wherever there is wavering, there is disobedience down at the bottom. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
357:For like a poisonous breath over the fields, like a mass of locusts over Egypt, so the swarm of excuses is a general plaque, a ruinous infection among men, that eats off the sprouts of the Eternal. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
358:The human race in the course of time has taken the liberty of softening and softening Christianity until at last we have contrived to make it exactly the opposite of what it is in the New Testament. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
359:Those who dream must be awakened, and the deeper the people are who slumber, or the deeper they slumber, the more important it is that they be awakened, and the more powerfully must they be awakened. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
360:The melancholy have the best sense of the comic, the opulent often the best sense of the rustic, the dissolute often the best sense of the moral, and the doubter often the best sense of the religious. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
361:A human being is a spirit. But what is spirit? Spirit is the self. But what is self? The self is a relation that relates itself to itself or is the relation's relating itself to itself in the relation. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
362:Most people are subjective toward themselves and objective toward all others, frightfully objective sometimes--but the task is precisely to be objective toward oneself and subjective toward all others. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
363:With every increase in the degree of consciousness, and in proportion to that increase, the intensity of despair increases: the more consciousness the more intense the despair. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Sickness Unto Death, #NFDB
364:About as genuine as tea made from a bit of paper which once lay in a drawer beside another piece of paper which had been used to wrap up a few tea leaves from which tea had already been made three times. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
365:If a man wants to set up as an innkeeper and he does not succeed, it is not comic. If, on the contrary, a girl asks to be allowed to set up as a prostitute and she fails, as sometimes happens, it is comic. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
366:The paradox in Christian truth is invariably due to the fact that it is the truth that exists for God. The standard of measure and the end is superhuman; and there is only one relationship possible: faith. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
367:Your own tactic is to train yourself in the art of becoming enigmatic to everybody. My young friend, suppose there was no one who troubld himself to guess your riddle--what joy, then, would you have in it? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
368:It is not a gain that guilt should be wholly forgotten. On the contrary, it is loss and perdition. But it is a gain to win an inner intensity of heart through a deeper and deeper inner sorrowing over guilt. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
369:Don't you know that a midnight hour comes when everyone has to take off his mask? Do you think life always lets itself be trifled with? Do you think you can sneak off a little before midnight to escape this? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
370:If philosophy among other vagaries were also to have the notion that it could occur to a man to act in accordance with its teaching, one might make out of that a queer comedy. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, Fear and Trembling (Chapter 5), #NFDB
371:I have, I believe, the courage to doubt everything; I have, I believe, the courage to fight against everything; but I do not have the courage to acknowledge anything, the courage to possess, to own anything. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
372:Men think that it is impossible for a human being to love his enemies, for enemies are hardly able to endure the sight of one another. Well, then, shut your eyes--and your enemy looks just like your neighbor. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
373:Maturity consists in the discovery that there comes a critical moment where everything is reversed, after which the point becomes to understand more and more that there is something which cannot be understood. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
374:Worship isn't God's show. God is the audience. God's watching. The congregation, they are the actors in this drama. Worship is their show. And the minister is just reminding the people of their forgotten lines. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
375:Not just in commerce but in the world of ideas too our age is putting on a veritable clearance sale. Everything can be had so dirt cheap that one begins to wonder whether in the end anyone will want to make a bid. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
376:Love is the expression of the one who loves, not of the one who is loved. Those who think they can love only the people they prefer do not love at all. Love discovers truths about individuals that others cannot see ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
377:People generally think that it is the world, the environment, external relationships, which stand in one's way, in the way of ones' good fortune... and at bottom it is always man himself that stands in his own way. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
378:The stone that was rolled before Christ's tomb might appropriately be called the philosopher's stone because its removal gave not only the pharisees but, now for 1800 years, the philosophers so much to think about. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
379:It is tragic-comic to see that all this knowledge and understanding exercises no power at all over men's lives, that their lives do not express in the remotest way what they have understood, but rather the opposite. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
380:Listen to the cry of a woman in labor at the hour of giving birth - look at the dying man's struggle at his last extremity, and then tell me whether something that begins and ends thus could be intended for enjoyment. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
381:Idleness, we are accustomed to say, is the root of all evil. To prevent this evil, work is recommended.... Idleness as such is by no means a root of evil; on the contrary, it is truly a divine life, if one is not bored. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
382:Most people believe that the Christian commandments, e.g. to love one's neighbor as oneself, are intentionally a little too severe - like setting a clock half an hour ahead to make sure of not being late in the morning. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
383:I am so stupid that I cannot understand philosophy; the antithesis of this is that philosophy is so clever that it cannot comprehend my stupidity. These antitheses are mediated in a higher unity; in our common stupidity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
384:Talent warms-up the given (as they say in cookery) and makes it apparent; genius brings something new. But our time lets talent pass for genius. They want to abolish the genius, deify the genius, and let talent forge ahead. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
385:The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very well that the minute we understand, we are obliged to act accordingly. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
386:The most terrible fight is not when there is one opinion against another, the most terrible is when two men say the same thing -- and fight about the interpretation, and this interpretation involves a difference of quality. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
387:The self is a relation which relates itself to its own self, or it is that in the relation that the relation relates itself to its own self; the self is not the relation but that the relation relates itself to its own self. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
388:Truth always rests with the minority … because the minority is generally formed by those who really have an opinion, while the strength of a majority is illusory, formed by the gangs who have no opinion” – Soren Kierkegaard ~ S ren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
389:I am convinced that God is love, this thought has for me a primitive lyrical validity. When it is present to me, I am unspeakably blissful, when it is absent, I long for it more vehemently than does the lover for his object. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
390:Where am I? Who am I? How did I come to be here? What is this thing called the world? How did I come into the world? Why was I not consulted? And If I am compelled to take part in it, where is the director? I want to see him. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
391:People commonly travel the world over to see rivers and mountains, new stars, garish birds, freak fish, grotesque breeds of human; they fall into an animal stupor that gapes at existence and they think they have seen something. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
392:... the more one needs God the more perfect he is. To need God is nothing to be ashamed of but is perfection itself. It is the saddest thing in the world if a human being goes through life without discovering that he needs God! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
393:Concepts, like individuals, have their histories and are just as incapable of withstanding the ravages of time as are individuals. But in and through all this they retain a kind of homesickness for the scenes of their childhood. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
394:... the more one needs God the more perfect he is. To need God is nothing to be ashamed of but is perfection itself. It is the saddest thing in the world if a human being goes through life without discovering that he needs God! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
395:Let us eat and drink, because tomorrow we shall die - but this is sensuality's cowardly lust for life, that contemptible order of things where one lives in order to eat and drink, instead of eating and drinking in order to live. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
396:The greatest hazard of all, losing one’s self, can occur very quietly in the world, as if it were nothing at all. No other loss can occur so quietly; any other loss - an arm, a leg, five dollars, a wife, etc. - is sure to be noticed. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
397:One should be an enigma not just to others but to oneself too. I study myself. When I'm tired of that I light a cigar to pass the time, and think: God only knows what the good Lord really meant with me, or what He meant to make of me. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
398:The idea of demonstrating that this unknown something [God] exists, could scarcely suggest itself to Reason. For if God does not exist it would of course be impossible to prove it, and if he does exist it would be folly to attempt it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
399:The paradox is really the pathos of intellectual life and just as only great souls are exposed to passions it is only the great thinker who is exposed to what I call paradoxes, which are nothing else than grandiose thoughts in embryo. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
400:As Soren Kierkegaard says in the opening pages of The Sickness unto Death (the sickness in question is despair): “Everything essentially Christian must have in its presentation a resemblance to the way a physician speaks at the sickbed. ~ Kevin J Vanhoozer, #NFDB
401:A man may perform astonishing feats and comprehend a vast amount of knowledge, and yet have no understanding of himself. But suffering directs a man to look within. If it succeeds, then there, within him, is the beginning of his learning. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
402:Destroy your primitivity, and you will most probably get along well in the world, maybe achieve great success--but Eternity will reject you. Follow up your primitivity, and you will be shipwrecked in temporality, but accepted by Eternity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
403:What the philosophers have to say about reality is often as disappointing as a sign you see in a shop window, which reads Pressing Done Here. If you brought your clothes in to be pressed, you would be fooled: for the sign is only for sale. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
404:I have only one friend, and that is echo. Why is it my friend? Because I love my sorrow, and echo does not take it away from me. I have only one confidant, and that is the silence of night. Why is it my confidant? Because it remains silent. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
405:Just as in earthly life lovers long for the moment when they are able to breathe forth their love for each other, to let their souls blend in a soft whisper, so the mystic longs for the moment when in prayer he can, as it were, creep into God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
406:Reflection is not the evil; but a reflective condition and the deadlock which it involves, by transforming the capacity for action into a means of escape from action, is both corrupt and dangerous, and leads in the end to a retrograde movement. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
407:Since boredom advances and boredom is the root of all evil, no wonder, then, that the world goes backwards, that evil spreads. This can be traced back to the very beginning of the world. The gods were bored; therefore they created human beings. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
408:That which is truly human no generation learns from the one before it. No generation learns from another how to love. No generation has a shorter task assigned to it except insofar as the previous generation shirked its task and deluded itself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
409:As the arrow, loosed from the bow by the hand of the practiced archer, does not rest till it has reached the mark, so men pass from God to God. He is the mark for which they have been created, and they do not rest till they find their rest in him. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
410:In order to swim one takes off all one's clothes--in order to aspire to the truth one must undress in a far more inward sense, divest oneself of all one's inward clothes, of thoughts, conceptions, selfishness etc., before one is sufficiently naked. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
411:The absurd . . . the fact that with God all things are possible. The absurd is not one of the factors which can be discriminated within the proper compass of the understanding: it is not identical with the improbable, the unexpected, the unforeseen. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
412:The commandment is that you shall love, but when you understand life and yourself, then it is as if you should not need to be commanded, because to love human beings is still the only thing worth living for; without this life you really do not live. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
413:...my soul always reverts to the Old Testament and to Shakespeare. There at least one feels that it's human beings talking. There people hate, people love, people murder their enemy and curse his descendants through all generations, there people sin. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
414:Never cease loving a person, and never give up hope for him, for even the prodigal son who had fallen most low, could still be saved; the bitterest enemy and also he who was your friend could again be your friend; love that has grown cold can kindle. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
415:In the life of the individual when love awakens it is older than everything else, because when it exists it seems as if it has existed for a long time; it presupposes itself back into the distant past until all searching ends in the inexplicable origin. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
416:Knowledge is an attitude, a passion, actually an illicit attitude. For the compulsion to know is like dipsomania, erotomania, and homicidal mania, in producing a character that is out of balance. It is not at all that the scientist goes after the truth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
417:Learning to know anxiety is an adventure which every man has to affront if he would not go to perdition either by not having known anxiety or by sinking under it. He therefore who has leaned rightly to be in anxiety has learned the most important thing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
418:Doubt is thought's despair; despair is personality's doubt. . . . Doubt and despair . . . belong to completely different spheres; different sides of the soul are set in motion. . . . Despair is an expression of the total personality, doubt only of thought. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
419: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. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
420:He who does not know how to encircle a girl so that she loses sight of everything he does not want her to see, he who does not know how to poetize himself into a girl so that it is from her that everything proceeds as he wants it-he is and remains a bungler ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
421:If I had a humble spirit in my service who, when I asked for a glass of water, brought me the world's costliest wines blended in a chalice, I should dismiss him, in order to teach him that my pleasure consists, not in what I enjoy, but in having my own way. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
422:It will be easy for us the first time we receive that ball of yarn from Ariadne (love) and then go through all the mazes of the labyrinth (life) and kill the monster. But how many there are who plunge into life (the labyrinth) without taking that precaution? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
423:...the greatest thing each person can do is to give himself to God utterly and unconditionally - weaknesses, fears, and all. For God loves obedience more than good intentions or second-best offerings, which are all too often made under the guise of weakness. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
424:It goes against the grain for me to do what so often happens, to speak inhumanly about the great as if a few millennia were an immense distance. I prefer to speak humanly about it, as if it happened yesterday, and let only the greatness itself be the distance. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
425:The greatest hazard of all, losing one's self, can occur very quietly in the world, as if it were nothing at all. No other loss can occur so quietly; any other loss - an arm, a leg, five dollars, a wife, etc. - is sure to be noticed.
~ Soren Kierkegaard, The Sickness Unto Death,#NFDB
426:Tenía una confidente íntima -mi melancolía-, y en medio de mi alegría, en medio de mi trabajo, ella me atrae, me llama a un lado aunque físicamente yo permanezca en el lugar. Es la más fiel amante que haya conocido....
Soren Kierkegaard's Journals and Papers ~ S ren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
427:As my prayer became more attentive and inward, I had less and less to say. I finally became completely silent... This is how it is. To pray does not mean to listen to oneself speaking. Prayer involves becoming silent, and being silent, and waiting until God is heard. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
428:God is present in the moment of choice, not in order to watch but in order to be chosen. Therefore, each person must choose. Terrible is the battle, in a person's innermost being, between God and the world. The crowning risk involved lies in the possession of choice. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
429:And if something should be found, particularly in the first part of the dissertation, that one is generally not accustomed to come across in scholarly writings, the reader must forgive my jocundity, just as I, in order to lighten the burden, sometimes sing at my work. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
430:Death induces the sensual person to say: Let us eat and drink, because tomorrow we shall die - but this is sensuality's cowardly lust for life, that contemptible order of things where one lives in order to eat and drink instead of eating and drinking in order to live. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
431:Human justice is very prolix, and yet at times quite mediocre; divine justice is more concise and needs no information from the prosecution, no legal papers, no interrogation of witnesses, but makes the guilty one his own informer and helps him with eternity's memory. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
432:If I were a physician, and if I were allowed to prescribe just one remedy for all the ills of the modern world, I would prescribe silence. For even if the Word of God were proclaimed in the modern world, how could one hear it with so much noise? Therefore, create silence. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
433:It doesn't occur to me at this moment to say more; another time, perhaps tomorrow, I may have more to say, but always the same thing and about the same, for only gypsies, robber gangs and swindlers follow the adage that where a person has once been he is never to go again. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
434:However much one generation learns from another, it can never learn from its predecessor the genuinely human factor. In this respect every generation begins afresh. Thus no generation has learned from another how to love, no generation can begin other than at the beginning. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
435:Pain reconciles one to existence. Infinite resignation is that shirt in the old fable. The thread is spun with tears, bleached by tears, the shirt sewn in tears, but then it also gives better protection than iron. The secret in life is that everyone must sew it for himself. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
436:People have an idea that the preacher is an actor on a stage and they are the critics, blaming or praising him. What they don't know is that they are the actors on the stage; he (the preacher) is merely the prompter standing in the wings, reminding them of their lost lines. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
437:...Christ did not appoint professors, but followers. If Christianity ... is not reduplicated in the life of the person expounding it, then he does not expound Christianity, for Christianity is a message about living and can only be expounded by being realized in men's lives. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
438:...knowing God is the condition for the sanctification of a human being by God's assistance and according to His intention. Wherever God is, there He is always creating... He wants to create a new human being. To need God is to become new. And to know God is the crucial thing. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
439:The greatest hazard of all, losing one’s self, can occur very quietly in the world, as if it were nothing at all. No other loss can occur so quietly; any other loss—an arm, a leg, five dollars, a wife, etc.—is sure to be noticed. —Soren Kierkegaard The Sickness Unto Death ~ Michael Marshall Smith, #NFDB
440:Take a book, the poorest one written, but read it with the passion that it is the only book you will read. Ultimately, you will read everything out of it, that is, as much as there was in yourself, and you could never get more out of reading, even if you read the best of books. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
441:The more one suffers, the more, I believe, has one a sense for the comic. It is only by the deepest suffering that one acquires true authority in the use of the comic, an authority which by one word transforms as by magic the reasonable creature one calls man into a caricature. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
442:You wanted God's ideas about what was best for you to coincide with your ideas, but you also wanted him to be the almighty Creator of heaven and earth so that he could properly fulfill your wish. And yet, if he were to share your ideas, he would cease to be the almighty Father. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
443:A fire broke out backstage in a theatre. The clown came out to warn the public; they thought it was a joke and applauded. He repeated it; the acclaim was even greater. I think that's just how the world will come to an end: to the general applause of wits who believe it's a joke. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
444:The greatest danger to Christianity is, I contend, not heresies, not heterodoxies, not atheists, not profane secularism - no, but the kind of orthodoxy which is cordial drivel, mediocrity served up sweet. There is nothing that so insidiously displaces the majestic as cordiality. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
445:This fact, that the opposite of sin is by no means virtue, has been overlooked. The latter is partly a pagan view, which is content with a merely human standard, and which for that very reason does not know what sin is, that all sin is before God. No, the opposite of sin is faith. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
446:The only analogy I have before me is Socrates. My task is a Socratic task, to revise the definition of what it is to be a Christian. For my part I do not call myself a "Christian" (thus keeping the ideal free), but I am able to make it evident that the others are still less than I. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
447:Truth has always had many loud proclaimers, but the question is whether a person will in the deepest sense acknowledge the truth, allow it to permeate his whole being, accept all its consequences, and not have an emergency hiding place for himself and a Judas kiss for the consequence. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
448:The present generation, wearied by its chimerical efforts, relapses into complete indolence. Its condition is that of a man who has only fallen asleep towards morning: first of all come great dreams, then a feeling of laziness, and finally a witty or clever excuse for remaining in bed. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
449:Irony is the birth-pangs of the objective mind (based upon the misrelationship, discovered by the I , between existence and the idea of existence). Humor is the birth -pangs of the absolute mind (based upon the misrelationship, discovered by the I , between the I and the idea of the I . ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
450:In order to help another effectively, I must understand what he understands. If I do not know that, my greater understanding will be of no help to him... instruction begins when you put yourself in his place so that you may understand what he understands and in the way he understands it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
451:It is a very curious thing about superstition. One would expect that the man who had once seen his morbid dreams were not fulfilled would abandon them for the future; but on the contrary they grow even stronger just as the love of gambling increases in a man who has once lost in a lottery. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
452:...even the richest personality is nothing before he has chosen himself, and on the other hand even what one might call the poorest personality is everything when he has chosen himself; for the great thing is not to be this or that but to be oneself, and this everyone can be if he wills it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
453:Thus our own age is essentially one of understanding, and on the average, perhaps, more knowledgeable than any former generation, but it is without passion. Every one knows a great deal, we all know which way we ought to go and all the different ways we can go, but nobody is willing to move. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
454:If there were no eternal consciousness in a man, if at the bottom of everything there were only a wild ferment, a power that twisting in dark passions produced everything great or inconsequential; if an unfathomable, insatiable emptiness lay hid beneath everything, what would life be but despair? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
455:If I were to wish for anything, I should not wish for wealth and power, but for the passionate sense of the potential, for the eye which, ever young and ardent, sees the possible. Pleasure disappoints, possibility never. And what wine is so sparkling, what so fragrant, what so intoxicating, as possibility! ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
456:It was not to save a nation that Abraham went to sacrifice Isaac, nor to appease angry gods... Then why does Abraham do it? For God's sake... He does it for the sake of God because God demands proof of his faith... He was not justified by being virtuous, but by being an individual submitted to God in faith. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
457:If I were to wish for anything, I should not wish for wealth and power, but for the passionate sense of the potential, for the eye which, ever young and ardent, sees the possible. Pleasure disappoints, possibility never. And what wine is so sparkling, what so fragrant, what so intoxicating, as possibility!
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
458:Out of love for mankind, and out of despair at my embarrassing situation, seeing that I had accomplished nothing and was unable to make anything easier than it had already been made, and moved by a genuine interest in those who make everything easy, I conceived it as my task to create difficulties everywhere. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
459:The resolving of the ethical, is freedom; the negative resolution also has this, but the freedom, blank and bare, is as if tongue-tied, hard to express, and generally has something hard in its nature. Falling in love, however, promptly sets it to music, even if this composition contains a very difficult passage. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
460:If anyone on the verge of action should judge himself according to the outcome, he would never begin. Even though the result may gladden the whole world, that cannot help the hero; for he knows the result only when the whole thing is over, and that is not how he became a hero, but by virtue of the fact that he began. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
461:During the first period of our lives the greatest danger is not to take the risk. When once the risk has been taken, then the greatest danger is to risk too much. By not risking at first one turns aside and serves trivialities; in the second case, by risking too much, one turns aside to the fantastic and perhaps to presumption. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
462:If I am capable of grasping God objectively, I do not believe, but precisely because I cannot do this I must believe. If I wish to preserve myself in faith I must constantly be intent upon holding fast the objective uncertainty so as to remain out upon the deep, over seventy thousand fathoms of water, still preserving my faith. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
463:It requires courage not to surrender oneself to the ingenious or compassionate counsels of despair that would induce a man to eliminate himself from the ranks of the living; but it does not follow from this that every huckster who is fattened and nourished in self-confidence has more courage than the man who yielded to despair. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
464:In a theatre it happened that a fire started off stage. The clown came out to tell the audience. They thought it was a joke and applauded. He told them again, and they became still more hilarious. This is the way, I suppose, that the world will be destroyed-amid the universal hilarity of wits and wags who think it is all a joke. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
465:Nowadays not even a suicide kills himself in desperation. Before taking the step he deliberates so long and so carefully that he literally chokes with thought. It is even questionable whether he ought to be called a suicide, since it is really thought which takes his life. He does not die with deliberation but from deliberation. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
466:...the reason for [this age's] anxiety and unrest is because in one direction, 'truth' increases in scope and quantity - via science and technology - while in the other, certainty and confidence steadily decline. Our age is a master in developing truths while being wholly indifferent to certitude. It lacks confidence in the good. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
467:It is the duty of the human understanding to understand that there are things which it cannot understand, and what those things are. Human understanding has vulgarly occupied itself with nothing but understanding, but if it would only take the trouble to understand itself at the same time it would simply have to posit the paradox. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
468:My life is absolutely meaningless. When I consider the different periods into which it falls, it seems like the word Schnur in the dictionary, which means in the first place a string, in the second, a daughter-in-law. The only thing lacking is that the word Schnur should mean in the third place a camel, in the fourth, a dust-brush. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
469:This is what is sad when one contemplates human life, that so many live out their lives in quiet lostness...they live, as it were, away from themselves and vanish like shadows. Their immortal souls are blown away, and they are not disquieted by the question of its immortality, because they are already disintegrated before they die. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
470:An individual in despair despairs over something. . . . In despairing over something, he really despair[s] over himself, and now he wants to get rid of himself. Consequently, to despair over something is still not despair proper. . . . To despair over oneself, in despair to will to be rid of oneself-this is the formula for all despair. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
471:In his book Sickness Unto Death, Soren Kierkegaard says, it is the normal state of the human heart to try to build its identity around something besides God.2 Spiritual pride is the illusion that we are competent to run our own lives, achieve our own sense of self-worth and find a purpose big enough to give us meaning in life without God. ~ Timothy J Keller, #NFDB
472:No, I won't leave the world--I'll enter a lunatic asylum and see if the profundity of insanity reveals to me the riddles of life. Idiot, why didn't I do that long ago, why has it taken me so long to understand what it means when the Indians honour the insane, step aside for them? Yes, a lunatic asylum--don't you think I may end up there? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
473:What I really need is to get clear about what I must do, not what I must know, except insofar as knowledge must precede every act. What matters is to find a purpose, to see what it really is that God wills that I shall do; the crucial thing is to find a truth which is truth for me, to find the idea for which I am willing to live and die. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
474:A curiously interested observer sees a great deal, a scientifically interested observer is worthy of all honor, and anxiously interested observer sees what others do not see, but a crazy observer sees perhaps the most, his observation is more intense and more persistent, just as the senses of certain animals are sharper than those of man. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
475:I do not care for anything. I do not care to ride, for the exercise is too violent. I do not care to walk, walking is too strenuous. I do not care to lie down, for I should either have to remain lying, and I do not care to do that, or I should have to get up again, and I do not care to do that either. Summa summarum: I do not care at all. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
476:The difference between a man who faces death for the sake of an idea and an imitator who goes in search of martyrdom is that whilst the former expresses his idea most fully in death it is the strange feeling of bitterness which comes from failure that the latter really enjoys; the former rejoices in his victory, the latter in his suffering. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
477:What I really need is to get clear about what I must do, not what I must know, except insofar as knowledge must precede every act. What matters is to find a purpose, to see what it really is that God wills that I shall do; the crucial thing is to find a truth which is truth for me, to find the idea for which I am willing to live and die.
~ Soren Kierkegaard,#NFDB
478:The English term “martyr” comes from the Greek martys, “witness.” Soren Kierkegaard defines witness as “someone who directly demonstrates the truth of the doctrine he proclaims—directly, yes, partly by its being the truth within him, … partly by his volunteering his personal self and saying: See, now, if you can force me to deny this doctrine. ~ Kevin J Vanhoozer, #NFDB
479:Dan Murphy's diagnosis added Lia Lee to a distibguished line of epileptics that has inlcuded Soren Kierkegaard, Vincent van Gogh, Gustave Flaubert, Lewis Carroll, and Fyodor Dostoyevsky, all of whom, like many Hmong shamans, experienced powerful senses of grandeur and spiritiual passion during their seizures, and powerful creative urges in their wake. ~ Anne Fadiman, #NFDB
480:With respect to love we speak continually about perfection and the perfect person. With respect to love Christianity also speaks continually about perfection and the perfect person. Alas, but we men talk about finding the perfect person in order to love him. Christianity speaks about being the perfect person who limitlessly loves the person he sees. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
481:At one time my only wish was to be a police official. It seemed to me to be an occupation for my sleepless intriguing mind. I had the idea that there, among criminals, were people to fight: clever, vigorous, crafty fellows. Later I realized that it was good that I did not become one, for most police cases involve misery and wretchedness-not crimes and scandals. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
482:There are two kinds of geniuses. The characteristic of the one is roaring, but the lightning is meagre and rarely strikes; the other kind is characterized by reflection by which it constrains itself or restrains the roaring. But the lightning is all the more intense; with the speed and sureness of lightning it hits the selected particular points - and is fatal. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
483:Truth is not something you can appropriate easily and quickly. You certainly cannot sleep or dream yourself to the truth. No, you must be tried, do battle, and suffer if you are to acquire the truth for yourself. It is a sheer illusion to think that in relation to the truth there is an abridgement, a short cut that dispenses with the necessity for struggling for it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
484:Philosophy is perfectly right in saying that life must be understood backward. But then one forgets the other clause - that it must be lived forward. The more one thinks through this clause, the more one concludes that life in temporality never becomes properly understandable, simply because never at any time does one get perfect repose to take the stance - backward. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
485:And when the hourglass has run out, the hourglass of temporality, when the noise of secular life has grown silent and its restless or ineffectual activism has come to an end, when everything around you is still, as it is in eternity, then eternity asks you and every individual in these millions and millions about only one thing: whether you have lived in despair or not. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
486:Spiritual superiority only sees the individual. But alas, ordinarily we human beings are sensual and, therefore, as soon as it is a gathering, the impression changes - we see something abstract, the crowd, and we become different. But in the eyes of God, the infinite spirit, all the millions that have lived and now live do not make a crowd, He only sees each individual. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
487:It is quite true what Philosophy says: that Life must be understood backwards. But that makes one forget the other saying: that it must be lived—forwards. The more one ponders this, the more it comes to mean that life in the temporal existence never becomes quite intelligible, precisely because at no moment can I find complete quiet to take the backward- looking position. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
488:If anyone proposes to believe, i.e., imagines himself to believe, because many good and upright people living here on the hill have believed, i.e., have said that they believedthen he is a fool, and it is essentially indifferent whether he believes on account of his own and perhaps a widely held opinion about what good and upright people believe, or believes a Münchhausen. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
489:The daily press is the evil principle of the modern world, and time will only serve to disclose this fact with greater and greater clearness. The capacity of the newspaper for degeneration is sophistically without limit, since it can always sink lower and lower in its choice of readers. At last it will stir up all those dregs of humanity which no state or government can control. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
490:A poet is an unhappy creature whose heart is tortured by deepest suffering but whose lips are so formed that when his sighs and cries stream out over them, their sound beomes like the sound of beautiful music . . . . And men flock about the poet saying, Sing for us soon again; that is to say, may new sufferings torture your soul, and may your lips continue to be formed as before. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
491:The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very well that the minute we understand, we are obliged to act accordingly. — Soren Kierkegaard * * * Quotation 10 — The greatest hazard of all, losing one’s self, can occur very quietly in the world, as if it were nothing at all. No ~ S ren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
492:When you say 'Yes' or promise something, you can very easily deceive yourself and others also, as if you had already done what you promised. It is easy to think that by making a promise you have at least done part of what you promised to do, as if the promise itself were something of value. Not at all! In fact, when you do not do what you promise, it is a long way back to the truth. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
493:No grand inquisitor has in readiness such terrible tortures as has anxiety and no spy knows how to attack more artfully the man he suspects, choosing the instant when he is weakest; nor knows how to lay traps where he will be caught and ensnared as anxiety knows how, and no sharp-witted judge knows how to interrogate, to examine the accused, as anxiety does, which never lets him escape. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
494:To the Christian, love is the works of love. To say that love is a feeling or anything of the kind is an unchristian conception of love. That is the aesthetic definition and therefore fits the erotic and everything of that nature. But to the Christian love is the works of love. Christ's love was not an inner feeling, a full heart and what not, it was the work of love which was his life. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
495:What is a poet? An unhappy man who hides deep anguish in his heart, but whose lips are so formed that when the sigh and cry pass through them, it sounds like lovely music.... And people flock around the poet and say: 'Sing again soon' - that is, 'May new sufferings torment your soul but your lips be fashioned as before, for the cry would only frighten us, but the music, that is blissful. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
496:It is easy to see, though it scarcely needs to be pointed out, since it is involved in the fact that Reason is set aside, that faith is not a form of knowledge; for all knowledge is either a knowledge of the eternal, excluding the temporal and historical as indifferent, or it is pure historical knowledge. No knowledge can have for its object the absurdity that the eternal is the historical. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
497:The gods were bored and so they created man. Adam was bored because he was alone, so Eve was created. Thus boredom entered the world, and increased in proportion to the increase in population. Adam was bored alone, then Adam and Eve were bored together; them Adam and Eve and Cain and Abel were bored en famille; then the population of the world increased, and the people were bored en masse. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
498:Above all, do not lose your desire to walk. Everyday, I walk myself into a state of well-being & walk away from every illness. I have walked myself into my best thoughts, and I know of no thought so burdensome that one cannot walk away from it. But by sitting still, & the more one sits still, the closer one comes to feeling ill. Thus if one just keeps on walking, everything will be all right. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
499:Sin is: before God, or with the conception of God, in despair not to will to be oneself, or in despair to will to be oneself. Thus sin is intensified weakness or intensified defiance: sin is the intensification of despair. The emphasis is on before God, or with a conception of God; it is the conception of God that makes sin dialectically, ethically, and religiously what lawyers call 'aggravated' despair. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
500:...a human being not only can choose but... he must choose... for in this way God retains His honor while at the same time has a fatherly concern for humankind. Though God has lowered Himself to being that which can be chosen, yet each person must on his part choose. God is not mocked. Therefore the matter stands thus: If a person avoids choosing, this is the same as the presumption of choosing the world. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
501:As I stood alone and forsaken, and the power of the sea and the battle of the elements reminded me of my own nothingness, and on the other hand, the sure flight of the birds recalled the words spoken by Christ: Not a sparrow shall fall on the ground without your Father: then, all at once, I felt how great and how small I was; then did those two mighty forces, pride and humility, happily unite in friendship. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
502:Christianity does not oppose debauchery and uncontrollable passions and the like as much as it opposes... flat mediocrity, this nauseating atmosphere, this homey, civil togetherness, where admittedly great crimes, wild excesses, and powerful aberrations cannot easily occur - but where God's unconditional demand has even greater difficulty in accomplishing what it requires: the majestic obedience of submission. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
503:The difference between an admirer and a follower still remains, no matter where you are. The admirer never makes any true sacrifices. He always plays it safe. Though in words, phrases, songs, he is inexhaustible about how highly he prizes Christ, he renounces nothing, gives up nothing, will not reconstruct his life, will not be what he admires, and will not let his life express what it is he supposedly admires. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
504:The prideful, rational mind, comfortable with its certainty, enamoured of its own brilliance, is easily tempted to ignore error, and to sweep dirt under the rug. Literary, existential philosophers, beginning with Soren Kierkegaard, conceived of this mode of Being as “inauthentic.” An inauthentic person continues to perceive and act in ways his own experience has demonstrated false. He does not speak with his own voice. ~ Jordan Peterson, #NFDB
505:Truth always rests with the minority, and the minority is always stronger than the majority, because the minority is generally formed by those who really have an opinion, while the strength of a majority is illusory, formed by the gangs who have no opinion - and who, therefore, in the next instant (when it is evident that the minority is the stronger) assume its opinion ... while Truth again reverts to a new minority. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
506:The prideful, rational mind, comfortable with its certainty, enamoured of its own brilliance, is easily tempted to ignore error, and to sweep dirt under the rug. Literary, existential philosophers, beginning with Soren Kierkegaard, conceived of this mode of Being as “inauthentic.” An inauthentic person continues to perceive and act in ways his own experience has demonstrated false. He does not speak with his own voice. ~ Jordan B Peterson, #NFDB
507:Of all ridiculous things the most ridiculous seems to me, to be busy — to be a man who is brisk about his food and his work. Therefore, whenever I see a fly settling, in the decisive moment, on the nose of such a person of affairs; or if he is spattered with mud from a carriage which drives past him in still greater haste; or the drawbridge opens up before him; or a tile falls down and knocks him dead, then I laugh heartily. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
508:...it is presumptuous ridicule of God if someone thinks that only the person who desires great wealth chooses mammon. Alas, the person who insists on having a penny without God, wants to have a penny all for himself. He thereby chooses mammon. A penny is enough, the choice is made, he has chosen mammon; that it is little makes not the slightest difference. The love of God is hatred of the world and love of the world hatred of God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
509:People try to persuade us that the objections against Christianity spring from doubt. That is a complete misunderstanding. The objections against Christianity spring from insubordination, the dislike of obedience, rebellion against all authority. As a result, people have hitherto been beating the air in their struggle against objections, because they have fought intellectually with doubt instead of fighting morally with rebellion. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
510:Deep within every human being there still lives the anxiety over the possibility of being alone in the world, forgotten by God, overlooked among the millions and millions in this enormous household. One keeps this anxiety at a distance by looking at the many round about who are related to him as kin and friends, but the anxiety is still there, nevertheless, and one hardly dares think of how he would feel if all this were taken away. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
511:...it is not the obscure passages in Scripture that bind you but the ones you understand. With these you are to comply at once. If you understood only one passage in all of Scripture, well, then you must do that first of all. It will be this passage God asks you about. Do not first sit down and ponder the obscure passages. God's Word is given in order that you shall act according to it, not that you gain expertise in interpreting it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
512:So to be sick unto death is, not to be able to die-yet not as though there were hope of life; no, the hopelessness in this case is that even the last hope, death, is not available. When death is the greatest danger, one hopes for life; but when one becomes acquainted with an even more dreadful danger, one hopes for death. So when the danger is so great that death has become one's hope, despair is the disconsolateness of not being able to die. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
513:In order to learn true humility (I use this expression to describe the state of mind under discussion), it is good for a person to withdraw from the turmoil of the world (we see that Christ withdrew when the people wanted to proclaim him king as well as when he had to walk the thorny path), for in life either the depressing or the elevating impression is too dominant for a true balance to come about. Here, of course, individuality is very decisive. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
514:Whoever thou art, whatever in other respects thy life may be, my friend, by ceasing to take part (if ordinarily thou doest) in the public worship of God, as it now is (with the claim that it is the Christianity of the New Testament), thou hast constantly one guilt the less, and that a great one: thou dost not take part in treating God as a fool by calling that the Christianity of the New Testament which is not the Christianity of the New Testament. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
515:To despair over one's sins indicates that sin has become or wants to be internally consistent. It wants nothing to do with the good, does not want to be so weak as to listen occasionally to other talk. No, it insists on listening only to itself, on having dealings only with itself; it closes itself up within itself, indeed, locks itself inside one more inclosure, and protects itself against every attack or pursuit by the good by despairing over sin. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
516:Let others mock at you, oppose you, when you are under the influence of any passion; do not be in the least offended with those who mock at or oppose you, for they do you good; crucify your self-love and acknowledge the wrong, the error of your heart. But have the deepest pity for those who mock at words and works of faith and piety, of righteousness; for those who oppose the good which you are doing... God preserve you - getting exasperated at them. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
517:Death is not earnest in the same way the eternal is. To the earnestness of death belongs precisely that remarkable capacity for awakening, that resonance of a profound mockery which, detached from the thought of the eternal, is an empty and often brash jest, but together with the thought of the eternal is just what it should be, utterly different from the insipid solemness which least of all captures and holds a thought with tension like that of death. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
518:The emerging church movement has come to believe that the ultimate context of the spiritual aspirations of a follower of Jesus Christ is not Christianity but rather the kingdom of God. ... to believe that God is limited to it would be an attempt to manage God. If one holds that Christ is confined to Christianity, one has chosen a god that is not sovereign. Soren Kierkegaard argued that the moment one decides to become a Christian, one is liable to idolatry. ~ Samir Selmanovic, #NFDB
519:It is human self-renunciation when a man denies himself and the world opens up to him. But it is Christian self-renunciation when he denies himself and, because the world precisely for this shuts itself up to him, he must as one thrust out by the world seek God's confidence. The double-danger lies precisely in meeting opposition there where he had expected to find support, and he has to turn about twice; whereas the merely human self-resignation turns once. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
520:Knowledge of the truth I may perhaps have attained to; happiness certainly not. What shall I do? Accomplish something in the world, men tell me. Shall I then publish my grief to the world, contribute one more proof for the wretchedness and misery of existence, perhaps discover a new flaw in human life, hitherto unnoticed? I might then reap the rare reward of becoming famous, like the man who discovered the spots on Jupiter. I prefer, however, to keep silent. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
521:One is not unpopular because he uses peculiar expressions; that just so happens; such terms become a fad, and by and by everybody, down to the last simpleton, uses them. But a person who follows through an idea in his mind is, and always will be, essentially unpopular. That is why Socrates was unpopular, though he did not use any special terms, for to grasp and hold his 'ignorance' requires greater vital effort than understanding the whole of Hegel's philosophy. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
522:There is nothing everyone is so afraid of as being told how vastly much he is capable of. You are capable of - do you want to know? - you are capable of living in poverty; you are capable of standing almost any kind of maltreatment, abuse, etc. But you do not wish to know about it, isn't that so? You would be furious with him who told you so, and only call that person your friend who bolsters you in saying: 'No, this I cannot bear, this is beyond my strength, etc. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
523:Imagine hidden in a simpler exterior a secret receptacle wherein the most precious treasure is deposited - there is a spring which has to be pressed, but the spring is hidden, and the pressure must have a certain strength, so that an accidental pressure would not be sufficient. So likewise is the hope of eternity hidden in man's inmost parts, and affliction is the pressure. When it presses the hidden spring, and strongly enough, then the contents appear in all their glory. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
524:How did I get into the world? Why was I not asked about it and why was I not informed of the rules and regulations but just thrust into the ranks as if I had been bought by a peddling shanghaier of human beings? How did I get involved in this big enterprise called actuality? Why should I be involved? Isn't it a matter of choice? And if I am compelled to be involved, where is the manager—I have something to say about this. Is there no manager? To whom shall I make my complaint? ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
525:The spiritual differs from the religious in being able to endure isolation. The rank of a spiritual person is proportionate to his strength for enduring isolation, whereas we religious people are constantly in need of 'the others,' the herd. We religious folks die, or despair, if we are not reassured by being in the assembly, of the same opinion as the congregation, and so on. But the Christianity of the New Testament is precisely related to the isolation of the spiritual man. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
526:Irony is a disciplinarian feared only by those who do not know it, but cherished by those who do. He who does not understand irony and has no ear for its whispering lacks of what might called the absolute beginning of the personal life. He lacks what at moments is indispensable for the personal life, lacks both the regeneration and rejuvenation, the cleaning baptism of irony that redeems the soul from having its life in finitude though living boldly and energetically in finitude. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
527:In the end, therefore, money will be the one thing people will desire, which is moreover only representative, an abstraction. Nowadays a young man hardly envies anyone his gifts, his art, the love of a beautiful girl, or his fame; he only envies him his money. Give me money, he will say, and I am saved...He would die with nothing to reproach himself with, and under the impression that if only he had had the money he might really have lived and might even have achieved something great. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
528:Do you know of any more overwhelming and humbling expression for God's condescension and extravagance towards us human beings than that He places Himself, so to say, on the same level of choice with the world, just so that we may be able to choose; that God, if language dare speak thus, woos humankind - that He, the eternally strong one, woos sapless humanity? Yet, how insignificant is the young lover's choice between her pursuers by comparison with this choice between God and the world. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
529:There are three stages in life: the Aesthetic, the Ethical, the Religious….The Aesthetic is the stage of unmediatedness, the Ethical is responsibility…[and] the Religious is fulfillment, but note well, not the sort of ‘fulfillment’ as when one fills up an offering plate or a sack with gold coins, for repentance has instead created an unlimited space, and with it the religious contradiction: to float upon 70,000 fathoms of water and yet feel happy.” --Soren Kierkegaard, Stages on Life’s Way ~ Thom Satterlee, #NFDB
530:It is (to describe it figuratively) as if an author were to make a slip of the pen, and as if this clerical error became conscious of being such. Perhaps this was no error but in a far higher sense was an essential part of the whole exposition. It is, then, as if this clerical error were to revolt against the author, out of hatred for him, were to forbid him to correct it, and were to say, "No, I will not be erased, I will stand as a witness against thee, that thou art a very poor writer." ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
531:And this is the simple truth - that to live is to feel oneself lost. He who accepts it has already begun to find himself, to be on firm ground. Instinctively, as do the shipwrecked, he will look around for something to which to cling, and that tragic, ruthless glance, absolutely sincere, because it is a question of his salvation, will cause him to bring order into the chaos of his life. These are the only genuine ideas; the ideas of the shipwrecked. All the rest is rhetoric, posturing, farce. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
532:To defend something is always to discredit it. Let a man have a warehouse full of gold, let him be willing to give away a ducat to every one of the poor - but let him also be stupid enough to begin this charitable undertaking of his with a defense in which he offers three good reasons in justification; and it will almost come to the point of people finding it doubtful whether indeed he is doing something good. But now for Christianity. Yes, the person who defends that has never believed in it. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
533:Every human being is tried this way in the active service of expectancy. Now comes the fulfillment and relieves him, but soon he is again placed on reconnaissance for expectancy; then he is again relieved, but as long as there is any future for him, he has not yet finished his service. And while human life goes on this way in very diverse expectancy, expecting very different things according to different times and occasions and in different frames of mind, all life is again one nightwatch of expectancy. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
534:Faith is precisely the paradox that the single individual as the single individual is higher than the universal, is justified before it, not as inferior to it but superior - yet in such a way, please note, that it is the single individual who, after being subordinate as the single individual to the universal, now by means of the universal becomes the single individual who as the single individual is superior, that the single individual as the single individual stands in an absolute relation to the absolute. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
535:The individual (no matter how well-meaning he might be, no matter how much strength he might have, if only he would use it) does not have the passion to rip himself away from either the coils of Reflection or the seductive ambiguities of Reflection; nor do the surroundings and times have any events or passions, but rather provide a negative setting of a habit of reflection, which plays with some illusory project only to betray him in the end with a way out: it shows him that the most clever thing to do is nothing at all. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
536:Christ was crucified because he would have nothing to do with the crowd (even though he addressed himself to all). He did not want to form a party, an interest group, a mass movement, but wanted to be what he was, the truth, which is related to the single individual. Therefore everyone who will genuinely serve the truth is by that very fact a martyr. To win a crowd is no art; for that only untruth is needed, nonsense, and a little knowledge of human passions. But no witness to the truth dares to get involved with the crowd. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
537:If someone who wanted to learn to dance were to say: For centuries, one generation after the other has learned the positions, and it is high time that I take advantage of this and promptly begin with the quadrille--people would presumably laugh a little at him, but in the world of spirit this is very plausible. What, then, is education? I believed it is the course the individual goes through in order to catch up with himself, and the person who will not go through this course is not much helped by being born in the most enlightened age. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
538:It is only all too easy to understand the requirements contained in God's Word ('Give all your goods to the poor.' 'If anyone strikes you on the right cheek, turn the left.' 'If anyone takes your coat, let him have your cloak also. Rejoice always.' 'Count it sheer joy when you meet various temptations' etc.). The most ignorant, poor creature cannot honestly deny being able to understand God's requirements. But it is tough on the flesh to will to understand it and to then act accordingly. It is not a question of interpretation, but action. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
539:The ever increasing intensity of despair depends upon the degree of consciousness or is proportionate to this increase: the greater the degree of consciousness, the more intensive the despair. This is everywhere apparent, most clearly in despair at its maximum and minimum. The devil's despair is the most intensive despair, for the devil is sheer spirit and hence unqualified consciousness and transparency; there is no obscurity in the devil that could serve as a mitigating excuse. Therefore, his despair is the most absolute defiance. . . . ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
540:Compared with the person who is conscious of his despair, the despairing individual who is ignorant of his despair is simply a negativity further away from the truth and deliverance. . . . Yet ignorance is so far from breaking the despair or changing despair to nondespairing that it can in fact be the most dangerous form of despair. . . . An individual is furthest from being conscious of himself as spirit when he is ignorant of being in despair. But precisely this-not to be conscious of oneself as spirit-is despair, which is spiritlessness. . . . ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
541:And then the spirit brings hope, hope in the strictest Christian sense, hope which is hoping against hope. For an immediate hope exists in every person; it may be more powerfully alive in one person than in another; but in death every hope of this kind dies and turns into hopelessness. Into this night of hopelessness (it is death that we are describing) comes the life-giving spirit and brings hope, the hope of eternity. It is against hope, for there was no longer any hope for that merely natural hope; this hope is therefore a hope contrary to hope. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
542:Soren Kierkegaard wrote that “only when the sense of association in society is no longer strong enough to give life to concrete realities is the Press able to create that abstraction ‘the Public,’ consisting of unreal individuals who never are and never can be united in an actual situation …”9 Under the influence of this notion, each of us begins to view himself as a representative of something more general. We bring this “representativeness” to our encounters with others. This flattens out relationships and makes them more abstract. Kierkegaard’s ~ Matthew B Crawford, #NFDB
543:It is a wonderful thing to see a first-rate philosopher at prayer. Tough-minded thinking and tenderhearted reverence are friends, not enemies. We have for too long separated the head from the heart, and we are the lesser for it. We love God with the mind and we love God with the heart. In reality, we are descending with the mind into the heart and there standing before God in ceaseless wonder and endless praise. As the mind and the heart work in concert, a kind of loving rationality pervades all we say and do. This brings unity to us and glory to God. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
544:Do not interrupt the flight of your soul; do not distress what is best in you; do not enfeeble your spirit with half wishes and half thoughts. Ask yourself and keep on asking until you find the answer, for one may have known something many times, acknowledged it; one may have willed something many times, attempted it - and yet, only the deep inner motion, only the heart's indescribable emotion, only that will convince you that what you have acknowledged belongs to you, that no power can take it from you - for only the truth that builds up is truth for you. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
545:You love the accidental. A smile from a pretty girl in an interesting situation, a stolen glance, that is what you are hunting for, that is a motif for your aimless fantasy. You who always pride yourself on being an observateur must, in return, put up with becoming an object of observation. Ah, you are a strange fellow, one moment a child, the next an old man; one moment you are thinking most earnestly about the most important scholarly problems, how you will devote your life to them, and the next you are a lovesick fool. But you are a long way from marriage. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
546:How could it occur to anyone to demonstrate that God exists unless one has already allowed Himself to ignore Him? A king's existence is demonstrated by way of subjection and submissiveness. Do you want to try and demonstrate that the king exists? Will you do so by offering a string of proofs, a series of arguments? No. If you are serious, you will demonstrate the king's existence by your submission, by the way you live. And so it is with demonstrating God's existence. It is accomplished not by proofs but by worship. Any other way is but a thinker's pious bungling. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, #NFDB
547:He made the arrangements, the summer passed, and he went to Berlin to study. When he returned at the end of his year, he brought back a new blend: the methods of German phenomenology, mixed with ideas from the earlier Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard and others, set off with the distinctively French seasoning of his own literary sensibility. He applied phenomenology to people’s lives in a more exciting, personal way than its inventors had ever thought to do, and thus made himself the founding father of a philosophy that became international in impact, but remained Parisian in flavour: modern existentialism. The ~ Sarah Bakewell, #NFDB
548:To live only in the unconditional, to breathe only the unconditional – the human being cannot do this; he perishes like a fish that must live in the air. But on the other hand a human being cannot in the deeper sense live without relating himself to the unconditional; he expires, that is, perhaps goes on living, but spiritlessly. Thus the single individual must personally relate himself to the unconditional. I believed, and do believe, that this is Christianity and love for “the neighbor.” ~ The Point of View On My Work As An Author by Soren Kierkegaard (finished 1848) published by Peter Christian Kierkegaard 1859 translated by Howard and Edna Hong 1998 Princeton University Press P. 19-20, #NFDB
549:The Christian God is spirit and Christianity is spirit, and there is discord between the flesh and the spirit but the flesh is not the sensuous-it is the selfish. In this sense, even the spiritual can become sensuous-for example, if a person took his spiritual gifts in vain, he would then be carnal. And of course I know that it is not necessary for the Christian that Christ must have been physically beautiful; and it would be grievous-for a reason different from the one you give-because if beauty were some essential, how the believer would long to see him; but from all this it by no means follows that the sensuous is annihilated in Christianity. ~ Soren Kierkegaard Either/Or Part II (1843) as translated by Hong, p. 50, #NFDB
550:Hume’s purported fideism had serious impact on some religious thinkers. One of these, the German philosopher J. G. Hamann, decided that Hume, intentionally or not, was the greatest voice of religious orthodoxy—for insisting that there was no rational basis for religious belief, and that there was no rational evidence for Christianity. When the Dialogues appeared, Hamann became quite excited; he translated the first and last dialogues into German so that Immanuel Kant might read them and become a serious Christian. Hamann’s use of Hume as the voice of orthodoxy led the great Danish theologian Soren Kierkegaard to become the most important advocate of fideistic Christianity in the nineteenth century. So, although most of Hume’s influence has been in creating doubts and leading thinkers to question accepted religious views, he also played an important role in the development of fideistic orthodoxy, culminating in Kierkegaard’s views. ~ David Hume, #NFDB
551:Nevertheless, the idea is deeply embedded in American Protestantism that the clergy go to seminary in order to become theologians. I recall, for example, giving a lecture at a seminary a while ago in which I made a remark which particularly agitated the Dean of the seminary, and he said to me, 'No responsible theologian would say what you just said!' That seemed to me reassuring news. A few days later I received a letter from someone who had been present at this exchange. The letter declared that the Dean had been mistaken and that in fact Soren Kierkegaard had written in his journals somewhere the substance of what I had said. I reported this comforting and distinguished citation to the Dean, who without hesitation announced: 'Oh, Kierkegaard is not a responsible theologian.' How could he be? He was no seminary professor. How could he know much about the mystery of God's presence in the world? Kierkegaard, after all, was only in the world - where God is - not in the seminary - where the theologians are! ~ William Stringfellow, #NFDB
552:There are any number of reasons to want novels to survive. The way [Jonathan] Franzen thinks about it is that books can do things, socially useful things, that other media can't. He cites -- as one does -- the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard and his idea of busyness: that state of constant distraction that allows people to avoid difficult realities and maintain self-deceptions. With the help of cell phones, e-mail and handheld games, it's easier to stay busy, in the Kierkegaardian sense, than it's ever been.
Reading, in its quietness and sustained concentration, is the opposite of busyness. "We are so distracted by and engulfed by the technologies we've created, and by the constant barrage of so-called information that comes our way, that more than ever to immerse yourself in an involving book seems socially useful," Franzen says. "The place of stillness that you have to go to to write, but also to read seriously, is the point where you can actually make responsible decisions, where you can actually engage productively with an otherwise scary and unmanageable world. ~ Lev Grossman,#NFDB
553:If everything is assumed to be in order with regard to the Holy Scriptures-what then? Has the person who did not believe come a single step closer to faith? No, not a single step. Faith does not result from straightforward scholarly deliberation, nor does it come directly; on the contrary, in this objectivity one loses that infinite, personal, impassioned interestedness, which is the condition of faith, the everywhere and nowhere in which faith can come into existence. Has the person who did believe gained anything with regard to the power and strength of faith? No, not in the least; in this prolix knowledge, in this certainty that lurks at faith’s door and craves for it, he is rather in such a precarious position that much effort, much fear and trembling will be needed lest he fall into temptation and confuse knowledge with faith. Whereas up to now faith has been a beneficial taskmaster in uncertainty, but it would be its worst enemy in this certainty. If passion is taken away, faith no longer exists, and certainty and passion do not hitch up as a team. ~ Soren Kierkegaard, Concluding Unscientific Postscript to Philosophical Fragments (1846) as translated by Hong, p. 29, #NFDB
554:Some of us, understandably, do not wish to hear even this message of hope and personal growth. We wish to have our old world, our former assumptions and stratagems, reinstituted as quickly as possible. We are desperate to hear: “Yes, your marriage can be restored to its pristine assumptions; yes, your depression can be magically removed without understanding why it has come; yes, your old values and preferences still work.” This understandable desire for what is called “the regressive restoration of the persona” merely papers over the growing crevice within, and off we go in search of another palliative treatment, or another less demanding view of our difficulties. It is quite natural to cling to the known world and fear the unknown. We all do—even as that crevice between the false self and the natural self grows ever greater within, and the old attitudes more and more ineffectual. Most of us live our lives backing into our future, making the choices of each new moment from the data and agenda of the old—and then we wonder why repetitive patterns turn up in our lives. Our dilemma was best described in the nineteenth century by the Danish theologian Soren Kierkegaard when he noted in his journal the paradox that life must be remembered backward but lived forward. Is it not self-deluding, then, to keep doing the same thing but expecting different results? For those willing to stand in the heat of this transformational fire, the second half of life provides a shot at getting themselves back again. They might still fondly gaze at the old world, but they risk engaging a larger world, one more complex, less safe, more challenging, the one that is already irresistibly hurtling toward them. ~ James Hollis, #NFDB
555:Yet it is the Outsider’s belief that life aims at more life, at higher forms of life, something for which the Superman is an inexact poetic symbol (as Dante’s description of the beatific vision is expressed in terms of a poetic symbol); so that, in a sense, Urizen is the most important of the three functions. The fall was necessary, as Hesse realized. Urizen must go forward alone.
The other two must follow him. And as soon as Urizen has gone forward, the Fall has taken place. Evolution towards God is impossible without a Fall. And it is only by this recognition that the poet can ever come to ‘praise in spite of; for if evil is ultimately discord, unresolvable, then the idea of dennoch preisen is a self-contradiction. And yet it must be clearly recognized and underlined that this is not the Hegelian ‘God’s in his heaven, all’s right with the world’. Even if the evil is necessary, it remains evil, discord, pain. It remains an Existential fact, not something that proves to be
something else when you hold it in the right light. It is as if there were two opposing armies:
the Hegelian view holds that peace can be secured by proving that there is really no ground for
opposition; in short, they are really friends. The Blakeian view says that the discord is necessary,
but it can never be resolved until one army has. completely exterminated the other. This is the
Existential view, first expressed by Soren Kierkegaard, the Outsider’s view and, incidentally,
the religious view. The whole difference between the Existentialist and the Hegelian viewpoint
is implicit in the comparison between the title of Hegel’s book, The Philosophy of History, and James Joyce’s phrase, ‘History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake’ Blake provided the Existentialist view with a symbolism and mythology. In Blake’s view, harmony is an ultimate aim, but not the primary aim, of life; the primary aim is to live more abundantly at any cost. Harmony can come later. ~ Colin Wilson,#NFDB
556:reading :::
50 Philosophy Classics: List of Books Covered:
1. Hannah Arendt - The Human Condition (1958)
2. Aristotle - Nicomachean Ethics (4th century BC)
3. AJ Ayer - Language, Truth and Logic (1936)
4. Julian Baggini - The Ego Trick (2011)
5. Jean Baudrillard - Simulacra and Simulation (1981)
6. Simone de Beauvoir - The Second Sex (1952)
7. Jeremy Bentham - Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789)
8. Henri Bergson - Creative Evolution (1911)
9. David Bohm - Wholeness and the Implicate Order (1980)
10. Noam Chomsky - Understanding Power (2002)
11. Cicero - On Duties (44 BC)
12. Confucius - Analects (5th century BC)
13. Rene Descartes - Meditations (1641)
14. Ralph Waldo Emerson - Fate (1860)
15. Epicurus - Letters (3rd century BC)
16. Michel Foucault - The Order of Things (1966)
17. Harry Frankfurt - On Bullshit (2005)
18. Sam Harris - Free Will (2012)
19. GWF Hegel - Phenomenology of Spirit (1803)
20. Martin Heidegger - Being and Time (1927)
21. Heraclitus - Fragments (6th century)
22. David Hume - An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (1748)
23. William James - Pragmatism (1904)
24. Daniel Kahneman - Thinking: Fast and Slow (2011)
25. Immanuel Kant - Critique of Pure Reason (1781)
26. Soren Kierkegaard - Fear and Trembling (1843)
27. Saul Kripke - Naming and Necessity (1972)
28. Thomas Kuhn - The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962)
29. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - Theodicy (1710)
30. John Locke - An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)
31. Marshall McLuhan - The Medium is the Massage (1967)
32. Niccolo Machiavelli - The Prince (1532)
33. John Stuart Mill - On Liberty (1859)
34. Michel de Montaigne - Essays (1580)
35. Iris Murdoch - The Sovereignty of Good (1970)
36. Friedrich Nietzsche - Beyond Good and Evil (1886)
37. Blaise Pascal - Pensees (1670)
38. Plato - The Republic (4th century BC)
39. Karl Popper - The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1934)
40. John Rawls - A Theory of Justice (1971)
41. Jean-Jacques Rousseau - The Social Contract (1762)
42. Bertrand Russell - The Conquest of Happiness (1920)
43. Michael Sandel - Justice (2009)
44. Jean Paul Sartre - Being and Nothingness (1943)
45. Arthur Schopenhauer - The World as Will and Representation (1818)
46. Peter Singer - The Life You Can Save (2009)
47. Baruch Spinoza - Ethics (1677)
48. Nassim Nicholas - Taleb The Black Swan (2007)
49. Ludwig Wittgenstein - Philosophical Investigations (1953)
50. Slavoj Zizek - Living In The End Times (2010)
~ Tom Butler-Bowdon, 50 Philosophy Classics,#NFDB
--- Overview of noun soren_kierkegaard
The noun soren kierkegaard has 1 sense (no senses from tagged texts)
1. Kierkegaard, Soren Kierkegaard, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard ::: (Danish philosopher who is generally considered. along with Nietzsche, to be a founder of existentialism (1813-1855))
--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun soren_kierkegaard
1 sense of soren kierkegaard
Sense 1
Kierkegaard, Soren Kierkegaard, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
INSTANCE OF=> philosopher
=> scholar, scholarly person, bookman, student
=> intellectual, intellect
=> person, individual, someone, somebody, mortal, soul
=> organism, being
=> living thing, animate thing
=> whole, unit
=> object, physical object
=> physical entity
=> entity
=> causal agent, cause, causal agency
=> physical entity
=> entity
--- Hyponyms of noun soren_kierkegaard
--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun soren_kierkegaard
1 sense of soren kierkegaard
Sense 1
Kierkegaard, Soren Kierkegaard, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
INSTANCE OF=> philosopher
--- Coordinate Terms (sisters) of noun soren_kierkegaard
1 sense of soren kierkegaard
Sense 1
Kierkegaard, Soren Kierkegaard, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
-> philosopher
=> nativist
=> Cynic
=> eclectic, eclecticist
=> empiricist
=> epistemologist
=> esthetician, aesthetician
=> ethicist, ethician
=> existentialist, existentialist philosopher, existential philosopher
=> gymnosophist
=> libertarian
=> mechanist
=> moralist
=> naturalist
=> necessitarian
=> nominalist
=> pluralist
=> pre-Socratic
=> realist
=> Scholastic
=> Sophist
=> Stoic
=> transcendentalist
=> yogi
HAS INSTANCE=> Abelard, Peter Abelard, Pierre Abelard
HAS INSTANCE=> Anaxagoras
HAS INSTANCE=> Anaximander
HAS INSTANCE=> Anaximenes
HAS INSTANCE=> Arendt, Hannah Arendt
HAS INSTANCE=> Aristotle
HAS INSTANCE=> Averroes, ibn-Roshd, Abul-Walid Mohammed ibn-Ahmad Ibn-Mohammed ibn-Roshd
HAS INSTANCE=> Avicenna, ibn-Sina, Abu Ali al-Husain ibn Abdallah ibn Sina
HAS INSTANCE=> Bacon, Francis Bacon, Sir Francis Bacon, Baron Verulam, 1st Baron Verulam, Viscount St. Albans
HAS INSTANCE=> Bentham, Jeremy Bentham
HAS INSTANCE=> Bergson, Henri Bergson, Henri Louis Bergson
HAS INSTANCE=> Berkeley, Bishop Berkeley, George Berkeley
HAS INSTANCE=> Boethius, Anicius Manlius Severinus Boethius
HAS INSTANCE=> Bruno, Giordano Bruno
HAS INSTANCE=> Buber, Martin Buber
HAS INSTANCE=> Cassirer, Ernst Cassirer
HAS INSTANCE=> Cleanthes
HAS INSTANCE=> Comte, Auguste Comte, Isidore Auguste Marie Francois Comte
HAS INSTANCE=> Condorcet, Marquis de Condorcet, Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas Caritat
HAS INSTANCE=> Confucius, Kongfuze, K'ung Futzu, Kong the Master
HAS INSTANCE=> Democritus
HAS INSTANCE=> Derrida, Jacques Derrida
HAS INSTANCE=> Descartes, Rene Descartes
HAS INSTANCE=> Dewey, John Dewey
HAS INSTANCE=> Diderot, Denis Diderot
HAS INSTANCE=> Diogenes
HAS INSTANCE=> Empedocles
HAS INSTANCE=> Epictetus
HAS INSTANCE=> Epicurus
HAS INSTANCE=> Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Haeckel
HAS INSTANCE=> Hartley, David Hartley
HAS INSTANCE=> Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
HAS INSTANCE=> Heraclitus
HAS INSTANCE=> Herbart, Johann Friedrich Herbart
HAS INSTANCE=> Herder, Johann Gottfried von Herder
HAS INSTANCE=> Hobbes, Thomas Hobbes
HAS INSTANCE=> Hume, David Hume
HAS INSTANCE=> Husserl, Edmund Husserl
HAS INSTANCE=> Hypatia
HAS INSTANCE=> James, William James
HAS INSTANCE=> Kant, Immanuel Kant
HAS INSTANCE=> Kierkegaard, Soren Kierkegaard, Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
HAS INSTANCE=> Lao-tzu, Lao-tse, Lao-zi
HAS INSTANCE=> Leibniz, Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz
HAS INSTANCE=> Locke, John Locke
HAS INSTANCE=> Lucretius, Titus Lucretius Carus
HAS INSTANCE=> Lully, Raymond Lully, Ramon Lully
HAS INSTANCE=> Mach, Ernst Mach
HAS INSTANCE=> Machiavelli, Niccolo Machiavelli
HAS INSTANCE=> Maimonides, Moses Maimonides, Rabbi Moses Ben Maimon
HAS INSTANCE=> Malebranche, Nicolas de Malebranche
HAS INSTANCE=> Marcuse, Herbert Marcuse
HAS INSTANCE=> Marx, Karl Marx
HAS INSTANCE=> Mead, George Herbert Mead
HAS INSTANCE=> Mill, John Mill, John Stuart Mill
HAS INSTANCE=> Mill, James Mill
HAS INSTANCE=> Montesquieu, Baron de la Brede et de Montesquieu, Charles Louis de Secondat
HAS INSTANCE=> Moore, G. E. Moore, George Edward Moore
HAS INSTANCE=> Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
HAS INSTANCE=> Occam, William of Occam, Ockham, William of Ockham
HAS INSTANCE=> Origen
HAS INSTANCE=> Ortega y Gasset, Jose Ortega y Gasset
HAS INSTANCE=> Parmenides
HAS INSTANCE=> Pascal, Blaise Pascal
HAS INSTANCE=> Peirce, Charles Peirce, Charles Sanders Peirce
HAS INSTANCE=> Perry, Ralph Barton Perry
HAS INSTANCE=> Plato
HAS INSTANCE=> Plotinus
=> Popper, Karl Popper, Sir Karl Raimund Popper
HAS INSTANCE=> Pythagoras
HAS INSTANCE=> Quine, W. V. Quine, Willard Van Orman Quine
HAS INSTANCE=> Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Sir Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan
HAS INSTANCE=> Reid, Thomas Reid
HAS INSTANCE=> Rousseau, Jean-Jacques Rousseau
HAS INSTANCE=> Russell, Bertrand Russell, Bertrand Arthur William Russell, Earl Russell
HAS INSTANCE=> Schopenhauer, Arthur Schopenhauer
HAS INSTANCE=> Schweitzer, Albert Schweitzer
HAS INSTANCE=> Seneca, Lucius Annaeus Seneca
HAS INSTANCE=> Socrates
HAS INSTANCE=> Spencer, Herbert Spencer
HAS INSTANCE=> Spengler, Oswald Spengler
HAS INSTANCE=> Spinoza, de Spinoza, Baruch de Spinoza, Benedict de Spinoza
HAS INSTANCE=> Steiner, Rudolf Steiner
HAS INSTANCE=> Stewart, Dugald Stewart
HAS INSTANCE=> Tagore, Rabindranath Tagore, Sir Rabindranath Tagore
HAS INSTANCE=> Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
HAS INSTANCE=> Thales, Thales of Miletus
HAS INSTANCE=> Theophrastus
HAS INSTANCE=> Weil, Simone Weil
HAS INSTANCE=> Whitehead, Alfred North Whitehead
HAS INSTANCE=> Williams, Sir Bernard Williams, Bernard Arthur Owen Williams
HAS INSTANCE=> Wittgenstein, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johan Wittgenstein
HAS INSTANCE=> Xenophanes
HAS INSTANCE=> Zeno, Zeno of Citium
HAS INSTANCE=> Zeno, Zeno of Elea
--- Grep of noun soren_kierkegaard
soren kierkegaard
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