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Kierkegaard and the Romantic Soul, Then and Now


Article # : 10242 

Section : MODERN THOUGHT
Issue Date : 8 / 1986  5,786 Words
Author : Vincent A. McCarthy
Vincent A. McCarthy is chairman of the department of philosophy at Central Connecticut State University.

       In the early 1940s, at the time when Soren Kierkegaard’s writings were becoming available in English, the American theologian Reinhold Niebuhr connected that Kierkegaard (1813-1855) had emerged as the most profound psychologist of the soul since St. Augustine (354-430). In an age that increasingly seeks to break free of cultural narrowness, Niebuhr”s remark should be reformulated to say that Kierkegaard is the most profound psychologist of the Western, or Western Christian, soul since Augustine. Kierkegaard would have no difficulty with this qualification, for he was neither culturally nor religiously naïve. His is a self-conscious analysis of the Western soul and the problems that arise Lutheran culture. His presuppositions may be culturally conditioned, and this may ultimately affect his diagnosis of spiritual malady. But, if conditioned by culture, they are not limited by time. Thus even if it is the romantic nineteenth century that Kierkegaard addresses, I suspect that Bishop Augustine, author of the Confessions, would recognize in Kierkegaard’s young aesthetes elements of the young Augustine himself, an intellectual romantic if there ever was one. Moreover, Kierkegaard’s nineteenth-century poets and spiritual patients have their counterparts today in the fashionable culture of sensitivity and self-actualization that constitute the new romanticism of California and, by extension, contemporary American culture. Kierkegaard knew nothing, of course, of sensitivity groups, self-fulfillment groups, and the like. But nineteenth-century Denmark and Germany had their cultural equivalents. Kierkegaard fully granted the alienations that such groups pointed to and agreed about the self-alienating quality of modern society. But, having himself experimented with the alternative life-views celebrated by such groups, he came up against their limits and came to regard proposed novel cures as worse than the disease - worse, since ... (1997 of 35722 Characters)
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