Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chronology
- Further reading
- Note on the translation
- CONCLUDING UNSCIENTIFIC POSTSCRIPT TO THE PHILOSOPHICAL CRUMBS
- Preface
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part One The objective problem of Christianity's truth
- Part Two The subjective problem. The subject's relation to the truth of Christianity, or what it is to become a Christian
- 1 An expression of gratitude to Lessing
- 2 Possible and actual theses of Lessing
- 1 Becoming subjective
- 2 The subjective truth, inwardness; truth is subjectivity
- 3 Actual, ethical subjectivity; the subjective thinker
- 4 The problem of the Crumbs: how can an eternal happiness be built on historical knowledge?
- 5 Conclusion
- Appendix: Understanding with the reader
- A first and last declaration by S. Kierkegaard
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy
4 - The problem of the Crumbs: how can an eternal happiness be built on historical knowledge?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Chronology
- Further reading
- Note on the translation
- CONCLUDING UNSCIENTIFIC POSTSCRIPT TO THE PHILOSOPHICAL CRUMBS
- Preface
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part One The objective problem of Christianity's truth
- Part Two The subjective problem. The subject's relation to the truth of Christianity, or what it is to become a Christian
- 1 An expression of gratitude to Lessing
- 2 Possible and actual theses of Lessing
- 1 Becoming subjective
- 2 The subjective truth, inwardness; truth is subjectivity
- 3 Actual, ethical subjectivity; the subjective thinker
- 4 The problem of the Crumbs: how can an eternal happiness be built on historical knowledge?
- 5 Conclusion
- Appendix: Understanding with the reader
- A first and last declaration by S. Kierkegaard
- Index
- Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy
Summary
For orientation in the plan of the Crumbs
That the point of departure was taken in paganism, and why
The reader of the Crumbs' crumb of philosophy will recall that the piece was not didactic but experimental. It took its point of departure in paganism in order, experimentally, to arrive at an interpretation of existence which could truly be said to go further than paganism. Modern speculation seems almost to have pulled off the trick of going further than Christianity on the other side, or of coming so far in understanding Christianity as practically to return to paganism. That someone prefers paganism to Christianity is not at all perplexing, but to make paganism out to be the highest within Christianity is an injustice both to Christianity, which becomes something it is not, and to paganism, which becomes nothing at all, as indeed it was not. Speculation, which has completely understood Christianity, and at the same time declares itself to be the highest development within Christianity, has thus, remarkably enough, discovered that there is no beyond, that ‘beyond’, ‘hereafter’ and the like are the dialectical parochialism of a finite understanding. The beyond has become a joke, a claim so doubtful that nobody makes it, let alone honours it, so that one simply amuses oneself with the reflection that there was once a time when this idea transformed the whole of life.
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- Kierkegaard: Concluding Unscientific Postscript , pp. 303 - 493Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009