Available Formats
Kierkegaard's Concept of Despair
By (Author) Michael Theunissen
Translated by Barbara Harshav
Translated by Helmut Illbruck
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
21st November 2016
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Theology
Religious ethics
Philosophical traditions and schools of thought
Philosophy of mind
241.3
Paperback
176
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
227g
The literature on Kierkegaard is often content to paraphrase. By contrast, Michael Theunissen articulates one of Kierkegaard's central ideas, his theory of despair, in a detailed and comprehensible manner and confronts it with alternatives. Understanding what Kierkegaard wrote on despair is vital not only because it illuminates his thought as a who
"This is the first book to undertake a sustained, straightforward, analytically rigorous reconstruction of a central pillar of Kierkegaard's thought, his understanding of despair. It provides an extremely useful framework for future analytic work on Kierkegaard. What Theunissen seeks to do is precisely the kind of project Kierkegaard scholars ought to be undertaking. The book will be of great interest to philosophers, theologians, and intellectual historians who are interested in existentialism, Christian thought, and ethical theory more generally."Frederick Neuhouser, Barnard College, Columbia University, author of Actualizing Freedom: Foundations of Hegel's Social Theory
Michael Theunissen is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Freie Universitat Berlin. He is the author of many books, including Vorentwurfe von Moderne: Antike Melancholie und die Acedia des Mitterlalter and Negative Theologie der Zeit.