The Quotable Kierkegaard
By Søren Kierkegaard and Gordon Marino
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The most comprehensive and authoritative collection of Kierkegaard quotations ever published
"Why I so much prefer autumn to spring is that in the autumn one looks at heaven—in the spring at the earth."—Søren Kierkegaard
The father of existentialism, Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) was a philosopher who could write like an angel. With only a sentence or two, he could plumb the depths of the human spirit. In this collection of some 800 quotations, the reader will find dazzling bon mots next to words of life-changing power. Drawing from the authoritative Princeton editions of Kierkegaard's writings, this book presents a broad selection of his wit and wisdom, as well as a stimulating introduction to his life and work.
Organized by topic, this volume covers notable Kierkegaardian concerns such as anxiety, despair, existence, irony, and the absurd, but also erotic love, the press, busyness, and the comic. Here readers will encounter both well-known quotations ("Life must be understood backward. But then one forgets the other principle, that it must be lived forward") and obscure ones ("Beware false prophets who come to you in wolves' clothing but inwardly are sheep—i.e., the phrasemongers"). Those who spend time in these pages will discover the writer who said, "my grief is my castle," but who also taught that "the best defense against hypocrisy is love."
Illuminating and delightful, this engaging book also provides a substantial portrait of one of the most influential of modern thinkers.
- Gathers some 800 quotations
- Drawn from the authoritative Princeton editions of Kierkegaard's writings
- Includes an introduction, a brief account and timeline of Kierkegaard's life, a guide to further reading, and an index
Søren Kierkegaard
Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855), the Danish philosopher and theologian, is regarded as a father of modern existentialism. His works include Either/Or, Philosophical Fragments, and Works of Love.
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The Quotable Kierkegaard - Søren Kierkegaard
The Quotable Kierkegaard
THE QUOTABLE
KIERKEGAARD
Edited by Gordon Marino
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS
PRINCETON AND OXFORD
Copyright © 2014 by Gordon Marino
Requests for permission to reproduce material from this work should be sent to Permissions, Princeton University Press
Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540
In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1TW
press.princeton.edu
All Rights Reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kierkegaard, Søren, 1813–1855.
[Works. Selections. English. 2013]
The quotable Kierkegaard / edited by Gordon Marino.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary: Why I so much prefer autumn to spring is that in the autumn one looks at heaven—in the spring at the earth.
—Søren Kierkegaard. The father of existentialism, Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855) was a philosopher who could write like an angel. With only a sentence or two, he could plumb the depths of the human spirit. In this collection of some 800 quotations, the reader will find dazzling bon mots next to words of life-changing power. Drawing from the authoritative Princeton editions of Kierkegaard’s writings, this book presents a broad selection of his wit and wisdom, as well as a stimulating introduction to his life and work. Organized by topic, this volume covers notable Kierkegaardian concerns such as anxiety, despair, existence, irony, and the absurd, but also erotic love, the press, busyness, and the comic. Here readers will encounter both well-known quotations (Life must be understood backward. But then one forgets the other principle, that it must be lived forward
) and obscure ones (Beware false prophets who come to you in wolves’ clothing but inwardly are sheep—i.e., the phrasemongers
). Those who spend time in these pages will discover the writer who said, my grief is my castle,
but who also taught that the best defense against hypocrisy is love.
Illuminating and delightful, this engaging book also provides a substantial portrait of one of the most influential of modern thinkers. Gathers some 800 quotations Drawn from the authoritative Princeton editions of Kierkegaard’s writings Includes an introduction, a brief account and timeline of Kierkegaard’s life, a guide to further reading, and an index"—Provided by publisher.
ISBN 978-0-691-15530-2 (hardback)
1. Kierkegaard, Søren, 1813–1855—Quotations. I. Marino, Gordon Daniel, 1952– II. Title.
B4372.E5 2013
198′.9—dc23
2013034354p4
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available
This book has been composed in Minion Pro and Trade Gothic
Printed on acid-free paper. ∞
Printed in the United States of America
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
This book is dedicated to my beloved sons, Paul and Philip.
May tenderness and conviction continue to steer your lives.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction xiii
Kierkegaard’s Biography xlv
Sources and Abbreviations lvii
Chronology lxi
Autobiographical 1
Observations 18
Anxiety 65
Depression/Melancholy 69
Self/Spirit 73
Despair 83
Freedom 89
Possibility 92
Choice/Decision 94
The Ethical 97
Deception/Self-Deception 101
Guilt 104
Envy 106
The Poet 109
Erotic Love 111
Silence 113
Authority 117
Genius 119
Writing/Communication 121
The Press 124
Science 126
Philosophy 128
Existence 133
The Absurd 135
Paradox 137
The Understanding/Reason/Knowledge 139
Truth 143
Time 147
Eternal 149
Death 151
Immortality 155
Repetition 156
Busyness 157
The Individual 159
Laughter/Humor/The Comic 161
The Tragic 163
Irony 164
God 167
Faith 176
Passion 183
Prayer 184
Earnestness/Seriousness 186
Sin 190
Demonic 192
Repentance/Forgiveness 194
Christ 197
Love 199
Suffering 207
Neighbor 208
Christianity 210
Bibliography 219
Index 221
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Kierkegaard scholars from around the globe and at all different stages of their careers have been so generous in passing along their favorite quotes that this collection could almost be reckoned a group project. I am grateful to these scholars not only for the lines that they have sent me, but even more so for their willingness to reveal where the heart of their interest in the master lies. After all, such revelations are self-revelations.
I am also eager to express my gratitude to the two anonymous reviewers of the text. As a result of their sparkling erudition, I was safeguarded from a number of pitfalls and my introductory essay is stronger than it would have been without their generous advice.
Paul Muench and Peder Garnass-Halvorson, former student workers in the Hong Kierkegaard Library, were very helpful in tracking down obscure quotes. Sonja Gleason-Wermager deserves special thanks for the many hours she devoted to the exacting work of checking texts. Thanks are also due to Seth Thomas for his careful reading of the text. Finally, I have profited and am grateful for the wisdom of Willis Regier, author of Quotology.
This humble offering would not have been possible were it not for the steady and insightful guidance of my editor, Rob Tempio. I am also obliged to Ryan Mulligan for his many and noble efforts in shaping this volume.
Finally, my eternal gratitude goes out to my wife, Dr. Susan Marino. Night after night, she gracefully put aside her own research as a neuroscientist to ponder and compare lines from the Danish writer who could make thoughts dance. If Kierkegaard had not taught me otherwise, I would have to think that Susan’s love was proof of grace divine.
INTRODUCTION
Though he very rarely characterized himself as a philosopher, that is how world history remembers Søren Aabye Kierkegaard. And yet, while Socrates was his sage and he profoundly respected Kant, Kierkegaard ultimately became a virulent critic of philosophy, especially of the academic ilk. G.W.F Hegel was the regnant philosopher king of early to mid-nineteenth-century European philosophy. While Kierkegaard, in his early career, admired the speculative German thinker, he ultimately concluded that Hegel and other intellectual system builders are like a man who has built a vast palace while he himself lives next door.
Writing in his journal, Kierkegaard insists, Spiritually, a man’s thoughts must be the building in which he lives—otherwise it is wrong
(JN, vol. 2, Journal JJ: 490, p. 279). In addition to being unable to bring their scholarly studies to quotidian life, Kierkegaard complained that philosophers neglected the question of how to communicate the wisdom that philosophers (lovers of wisdom) are supposed to care about and ultimately possess.
Plato wrestled with the question of whether or not the written word was an aid or an impediment to the good and just life, but for the most part the focus in philosophy has always been on the what, on the content of thought, as though wisdom in life were a mere matter of information capable of being directly disseminated en masse. With their emphasis on reason, Hegel and other virtuosi of abstractions spent little time pondering how it would be best to communicate their conclusions. Indeed, philosophers can seem almost narcissistic in their indifference to the subjective coordinates of their readers. They reason through an issue, such as What is love?
and then publish the argument, usually in a treatise form accessible only to the likes of philosophy professors.
Unlike other members of the Socrates guild, Kierkegaard grappled with the question of the how, as opposed to the what, of communication. Someone with an epistemological interest might conclude that while most philosophers probe the question of knowledge, Kierkegaard made a study of belief; Kierkegaard, however, was concerned with more than nodding intellectual assent.
As he wrote in the first few pages of his writing life, Kierkegaard sought a truth that he could live and die by—one to which he could mold his everyday existence. Ordinarily, we think of truth in terms of ideas expressing or reflecting reality. Kierkegaard’s thinking, at least on matters moral and religious, moved along a different vector; he prodded himself and his reader to represent ideas in the medium of actions. On his analysis (hoping the reader will forgive the colloquialism) when we fail to walk our talk we literally fail to grasp what we are talking about.
Kierkegaard maintained that a good deal of what goes for communication is chatter, lines we have memorized, ideas that have not been appropriated, as in The women come and go. Talking of Michael Angelo.
It was not just spouting clichés that Kierkegaard railed against, it was the spiritlessness that was given voice in palaver without inwardness. He observed, Spiritlessness can say exactly the same thing that the richest spirit has said, but it does not say it by virtue of spirit. Man qualified as spiritless has become a talking machine, and there is nothing to prevent him from repeating by rote a philosophical rigmarole, a confession of faith, or a political recitative
(CA, p. 95).
The inwardness that renders our talk something more than talk was the exotic bull’s-eye of Kierkegaard’s thinking. Like the efforts of a strange meditation teacher, it was as though all of Kierkegaard’s writings were directed toward cultivating a certain sort of subjectivity. Sometimes Kierkegaard’s prized inner state was described as inwardness, subjectivity, or faith, but more often than not, it was called earnestness.
Of course, there are no direct outward manifestations of this mind/soul set. Earnestness can take a multiplicity of forms depending on the situation and circumstances. In our own present age
it is an alien concept; mention earnestness and students will often cock their heads puppylike in puzzlement. Perhaps it is closest to character,
but there is more to earnestness than being strong willed, upright, and master of your desires.
Though we delight in his psychological epiphanies, Kierkegaard could be considered an anathema to our happiness/self-fulfillment-obsessed age. He urges us to understand that to a large extent happiness is a matter of fortune. It is something that Kierkegaard believed could happen more or less as a matter of course,
and Kierkegaard was firm that, regarding the development of the spirit, nothing happens as a matter of course.
Twisted as it might seem, Kierkegaard thanked his almost perversely difficult father for ruining his prospects for happiness and yet preparing him for faith. In his lapidary The Sickness Unto Death, Kierkegaard wagged his finger, referring to the hiddenness of despair. He writes,
[H]appiness is not a qualification of spirit, and deep, deep within the most secret hiding place of happiness there dwells also anxiety, which is despair; it very much wishes to be allowed to remain there, because for despair the most cherished and desirable place to live is in the heart of happiness. (SUD, p. 25)
Like Luther, with whom he was always grappling, the Lutheran Kierkegaard thought in terms of the two worlds, this one and the world of the spirit. In this realm, the one who does the work may not get the bread. In this realm, it helps to have chiseled features, an inheritance, friends in high places, and higher education, but these gifts are not left under everyman’s tree. Far from it. Walking beneath this sun, we rattle around in a cage of constant comparisons. As one of Kierkegaard’s pseudonyms expressed it, The secular view always clings tightly to the difference between man and man and naturally does not have any understanding of the one thing needful …
(SUD, p. 33).
But that odd duck of an excogitator, the fragments of whose thoughts are strewn before us, believed that the truths about essential matters in life, about how to live, were more than less universally distributed. If this were not so, rich folks and scholars would have a better shot at salvation than the grizzled man who plows snow in the winter and runs that lawn service with his children in the summer. And if there was one thing that the very wealthy and preternaturally talented Kierkegaard was convinced of, it was this: in the realm of the spirit, all worldly differences, talents, and bank accounts will have no purchase.
Pascal famously said that if we could just learn to sit still for ten minutes and do without distractions, there would be no more wars. A similar insight seemed to percolate in the mind of our Pascal of the north. Rather than pass on knowledge, Kierkegaard hoped to direct us to the study of ourselves. He once confessed, I want to make people aware so that they do not squander and waste their lives
(JN, vol. 4, Journal NB: 137, p. 94). And by squandering and spilling our lives he meant, among other things, half purposefully losing the understanding that we are fundamentally eternal beings, with an aspect of ourselves existing outside the flow of time. The insistence that we are more than our brains and bodies might offend Enlightenment sensibilities, but that was what Kierkegaard felt commanded to try to believe. Judging from the words that streamed from his stylus, I suspect that his efforts were not entirely in vain.
With the aim of awakening himself and others, Kierkegaard developed a theory and practice of what he termed indirect communication.
The basic tenet was that you should know where you are calling from and to whom you are speaking, and adjust your communiqué accordingly. Write merrily for the merry and abstractedly for the abstracted.
For example, Kierkegaard believed that he lived in a world of nominal Christians who had forgotten—perhaps it would be better to say, who made a point of forgetting—what it meant to be a Christian. To remind himself and others of the nature of Christianity took some indirection on Kierkegaard’s part. It was not a matter of providing a theological tome. Something more subtle, more subversive was necessary. For Kierkegaard, that something extra came in the form of his pseudonymous authorship.
Kierkegaard wrote many books under his own name, but almost all of his classic works, Either/Or, Fear and Trembling, Philosophical Fragments, The Sickness Unto Death, The Concept of Anxiety, had a nom de plume on the title page. Scholars have endlessly debated the question of how to interpret the pen names, but in his eponymous The Point of View of My Work as an Author, Kierkegaard bids us to treat the pseudonyms as though they were distinct authors. After all, they refer to and even critique one another. Hewing to Kierkegaard’s instructions, I would argue that the different authors are as characters in a novel. They each glimpse life from a different window, and yet many of their observations seem to come full throated from the voice behind the voices. Accordingly, more than a few of the quotes captured in this compendium derive from one of Kierkegaard’s alter egos.
In virtually every one of his works Kierkegaard moans about his fellow human beings being in a rush, as though life were a matter of getting through a calculus course or something. Kierkegaard devotee Ludwig Wittgenstein once described philosophy as the art of thinking slowly.
And yet, many if not most students will press a professor to cut to the chase and get to the point about Kierkegaard or whomever! One only knows how he would have groaned about the Twitter epoch, but Kierkegaard complained of his countrymen craving books that they could peruse during their naps, of wanting to acquire the bread of life wisdom without kneading the flour. And how might he have reacted to a book of Kierkegaard quotations?
I doubt that Kierkegaard would have had a problem with the absence of context. After all, he wrote an entire book of nothing but prefaces. Kierkegaard well understood that like a Zen koan, the truth expressed in a line or three can glister as a legitimate object of reflection and appropriation. Make no mistake about it, Kierkegaard played the scribe, copying hundreds of lines from the likes of Seneca, Cicero, Plato, Luther, and of course the Bible. Sometimes he used these apothegms to help him sharpen a point, but at other times he drew on them as a source of spiritual sustenance. In the cauldron of the break with Regine and writing Repetition, Kierkegaard put these words into the pen of Constantine Constantius, who in turn scribbles a letter to his Silent Confidant
: … Have you really read Job? Read him, read him again and again. I do not even have the heart to write one single outcry from him in a letter to you, even though I find my joy in transcribing over and over everything he has said, sometimes in Danish script and sometimes in Latin script, sometimes in one format and sometimes in another
(R, p. 204).
As I hope this text reveals, there are many sentences from Kierkegaard that, even standing alone, both open a vista onto Kierkegaard’s mind and nurture the centrifugal thought he so artfully and passionately encouraged.
When it came to the pulsating question of how best to live, Kierkegaard and his pseudonyms preached that we should think of life from a first-person perspective. There are many who enjoy deliberating on theories of love, ethics, and whether or not the soul is immortal, but Kierkegaard held that these are problems the answers to which fundamentally define who you are. To contemplate them from a third-person point of view is for him a contradiction in terms. Take for, example, the issue of whether or not the soul is immortal. Kierkegaard’s lyrical but philosophical persona, Johannes Climacus, writes,
Honor be to learning! Honor be to the one who can learnedly treat the learned question of immortality! But essentially the question of immortality is not a learned question; it is a question belonging to inwardness, which the subject by becoming himself must ask himself. (CUP, p. 173)
Climacus continues, Objectively the question cannot be answered at all, because objectively the question of immortality cannot be asked, since immortality is precisely the intensification and highest development of the developed subjectivity
(CUP, p. 173).
Later, in the same text, the author jabs that people who have been in