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- Stages_on_Lifes_Way abstract "Stages on Life's Way (Danish: Stadier på Livets Vej; historical orthography: Stadier paa Livets Vej) is a philosophical work by Søren Kierkegaard written in 1845. The book was written as a continuation of Kierkegaard's masterpiece Either/Or. While Either/Or is about the aesthetic and ethical realms, Stages continues onward to the consideration of the religious realms. Kierkegaard's \"concern was to present the various stages of existence in one work if possible.\"But he wasn't satisfied until the completion of Concluding Unscientific Postscript in 1846. Here he wrote: \"When my Philosophical Fragments had come out and I was considering a postscript to “clothe the issue in its historical costume,” yet another pseudonymous book appeared: Stages on Life’s Way, a book that has attracted the attention of only a few (as it itself predicts) perhaps also because it did not, like Either/Or, have The Seducer’s Diary, for quite certainly that was read most and of course contributed especially to the sensation. That Stages has a relation to Either/Or is clear enough and is definitely indicated by the use in the first two sections of familiar names.\" Later in the same book he said, In Either/Or, I am just as little, precisely just as little, the editor Victor Eremita as I am the Seducer or the Judge. He is a poetically actual subjective thinker who is found again in “In Vino Veritas”. In Fear and Trembling, I am just as little, precisely just as little, Johannes de Silentio as the knight of faith he depicts, and in turn just as little the author of the preface to the book, which is the individuality-lines of a poetically actual subjective thinker. In the story of suffering (Guilty?/’Not Guilty), I am just as remote from being Quidam of the imaginary construction as from being the imaginative constructor, just as remote, since the imaginative constructor is a poetically actual subjective thinker and what is imaginatively constructed is his psychologically consistent production. Concluding Unscientific Postscript 1846, Hong p. 625-626David F. Swenson cited this book when discussing Kierkegaard's melancholy which was corroborated by Kierkegaard's older brother Peter Christian Kierkegaard. However, Kierkegaard could have been writing about Jonathan Swift. The background is the giving of a banquet yet it seems so difficult; Constantine, from Repetition says he would never risk putting one on. Kierkegaard says, \"repetition that involved good luck and inspiration is always a daring venture because of the ensuing comparison, an absolute requirement of richness of expression is made, since it is not difficult to repeat one's own words or to repeat a felicitously chosen phrase word for word. Consequently, to repeat the same also means to change under conditions made difficult by the precedent. By taking the risk, the pseudonymous author (Hilarius Bookbinder) has won an indirect victory over the inquisitive public. That is, when this reading public peers into the book and sees the familiar names Victor Eremita and Constantin Constantius, etc., it tosses the book aside and says wearily: It is just the same as Either/Or.\" But Kierkegaard maintains it is the author's job to make it \"the same, and yet changed, and yet the same\". He continued writing for 494 pages in Hong's translation and in his \"Concluding Word\" says, \"My dear reader-but to whom am I speaking? Perhaps no one at all is left.\"".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way author Søren_Kierkegaard.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way isbn "0691020493".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way numberOfPages "465".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way previousWork Three_Discourses_on_Imagined_Occasions.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way releaseDate "1845-04-30".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way subsequentWork Concluding_Unscientific_Postscript_to_Philosophical_Fragments.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way translator Walter_Lowrie_(author).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageExternalLink Stages-on-lifes-way.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageExternalLink veritas.htm.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageExternalLink txt.xml.
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- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageExternalLink wilhelmmeistersa01goet.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageExternalLink anomaly.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageExternalLink intrigue.
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- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Aesthetics.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Aladdin.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Alcibiades.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Analogy.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Appropriation_(education).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Axel_and_Valborg.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Bjørnstjerne_Bjørnson.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Brand_(play).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Caricature.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Category:1845_books.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Category:Books_by_Søren_Kierkegaard.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Christ.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Clavigo_(play).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Comparison_(grammar).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Concluding_Unscientific_Postscript_to_Philosophical_Fragments.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Depression_(mood).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Dialectic.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Dichtung_und_Wahrheit.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Edifying_Discourses_in_Diverse_Spirits.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Eighteen_Upbuilding_Discourses.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Or.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopædia_Britannica.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Ethics.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Experience.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Fear_and_Trembling.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Georg_Brandes.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Guilt_(emotion).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Hamlet.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Henrik_Ibsen.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Hero.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Héloïse_(abbess).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Wolfgang_von_Goethe.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Jonathan_Swift.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Knight_of_faith.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Lee_M._Hollander.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Leprosy.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Letters_from_Hell.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Loves_Comedy.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Mary_Elizabeth_Moore.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Melancholia.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Memory.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Meïr_Aron_Goldschmidt.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Miracle.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Natural_history.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Night-Thoughts.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Pathos.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Peder_Ludvig_Møller.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Abelard.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Kierkegaard.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Petrarch.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Philosophical_Fragments.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Plato.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Plutarch.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Poet.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Pseudonym.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Psychology.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Recall_(memory).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Regine_Olsen.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Religion.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Repetition_(Kierkegaard_book).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Romeo_and_Juliet.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Socrates.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Sorrow_(emotion).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Symposium.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Symposium_(Plato).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Søren_Kierkegaard.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Three_Discourses_on_Imagined_Occasions.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Valdemar_Adolph_Thisted.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Walter_Lowrie_(author).
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Wilhelm_Meisters_Apprenticeship.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLink Works_of_Love.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLinkText "Section".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLinkText "Stages on Life's Way".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way wikiPageWikiLinkText "Stages".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way author Søren_Kierkegaard.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way caption "First edition, titlepage.".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way country "Denmark".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way englishReleaseDate "1940".
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way followedBy Concluding_Unscientific_Postscript_to_Philosophical_Fragments.
- Stages_on_Lifes_Way genre "Christianity, philosophy".