Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Sērena Kirkegora antropoloģija
View through CrossRef
In her article “Søren Kierkegaard’s Anthropology”, Velga Vēvere first focuses on Kierkegaard’s views on communication, which is the most essential part of human existence. The philosopher writes about the three distinctions between direct and indirect communication in relation to the four basic elements of communication: the object of communication, the communicator, the receiver of information and the communication process itself. Since objective knowledge does not depend on personal characteristics, ethical positions or religious beliefs of the people involved, it is significant that the relationship between the communicator and the receiver is only possible in an indirect form. So, Kierkegaard asks what it means to be human. What does it mean to be human in a certain existential situation? Is an authentic self at all possible? Can the existent individual be aware of their authenticity? His focus is on the subjectively existent individual, whose goal is self-understanding and the emergence of an authentic self. Kierkegaard speaks of the three stages of life: the aesthetic, the ethical and the religious. One of the basic postulates of Kierkegaard’s anthropology is that human identity is a synthesis of different elements: actuality, freedom and possibility. Category of existence is central to the discourse of Kierkegaard’s anthropology. The concept of existence and its variations appear in more than 20 of Kierkegaard’s works in different contexts and in different variations (in relation to being and its becoming, communication, stages of existence). Velga Vēvere points out that in Danish two terms are used, namely existence and actuality – a special kind of being in the world. This dual use of the term reflects Kirkegaard’s understanding of existence. An individual’s existence is their existential status, which does not depend on their desire or activity. However, for Kierkegaard, it is the understanding of existence as an actuality that presupposes participation (activity) of an individual that is more significant. Passivity or activity, indulgence or action, static state or becoming are indicators that allow us to distinguish between the two understandings of existence. To exist usually means only that by entering into existence the individual is in it and simultaneously is in the process of becoming. The Danish thinker takes up a special place in the anthropological discourse of the 19th century with his distinction between philosophical and theological anthropology; his philosophical approach is concerned with human experience and conscious action, while the theological view is based on the idea of revelation. Kierkegaard formulates his ethically religious imperative by saying that love of the other presupposes that society is a collection of independent individuals as opposed to a crowd or impersonal public. / Velga Vēvere rakstā “Sērena Kirkegora antropoloģija” vispirms pievēršas Kirkegora uzskatiem par komunikāciju, kas ir cilvēka eksistences būtiskākā sastāvdaļa. Ko nozīmē būt cilvēkam? Ko nozīmē būt cilvēkam noteiktā eksistenciālā situācijā? Vai iespējama autentiska patība? Vai eksistējošais indivīds var apzināties savu autentiskumu? Viens no Kirkegora antropoloģijas pamatpostulātiem ir tas, ka cilvēka patība ir dažādu elementu sintēze: aktualitātes, brīvības un iespējamības. Atslēgvārdi: Eksistence; antropoloģiskā sintēze; komunikācija; radikālais individuālisms; S. Kirkegors.
Title: Sērena Kirkegora antropoloģija
Description:
In her article “Søren Kierkegaard’s Anthropology”, Velga Vēvere first focuses on Kierkegaard’s views on communication, which is the most essential part of human existence.
The philosopher writes about the three distinctions between direct and indirect communication in relation to the four basic elements of communication: the object of communication, the communicator, the receiver of information and the communication process itself.
Since objective knowledge does not depend on personal characteristics, ethical positions or religious beliefs of the people involved, it is significant that the relationship between the communicator and the receiver is only possible in an indirect form.
So, Kierkegaard asks what it means to be human.
What does it mean to be human in a certain existential situation? Is an authentic self at all possible? Can the existent individual be aware of their authenticity? His focus is on the subjectively existent individual, whose goal is self-understanding and the emergence of an authentic self.
Kierkegaard speaks of the three stages of life: the aesthetic, the ethical and the religious.
One of the basic postulates of Kierkegaard’s anthropology is that human identity is a synthesis of different elements: actuality, freedom and possibility.
Category of existence is central to the discourse of Kierkegaard’s anthropology.
The concept of existence and its variations appear in more than 20 of Kierkegaard’s works in different contexts and in different variations (in relation to being and its becoming, communication, stages of existence).
Velga Vēvere points out that in Danish two terms are used, namely existence and actuality – a special kind of being in the world.
This dual use of the term reflects Kirkegaard’s understanding of existence.
An individual’s existence is their existential status, which does not depend on their desire or activity.
However, for Kierkegaard, it is the understanding of existence as an actuality that presupposes participation (activity) of an individual that is more significant.
Passivity or activity, indulgence or action, static state or becoming are indicators that allow us to distinguish between the two understandings of existence.
To exist usually means only that by entering into existence the individual is in it and simultaneously is in the process of becoming.
The Danish thinker takes up a special place in the anthropological discourse of the 19th century with his distinction between philosophical and theological anthropology; his philosophical approach is concerned with human experience and conscious action, while the theological view is based on the idea of revelation.
Kierkegaard formulates his ethically religious imperative by saying that love of the other presupposes that society is a collection of independent individuals as opposed to a crowd or impersonal public.
/ Velga Vēvere rakstā “Sērena Kirkegora antropoloģija” vispirms pievēršas Kirkegora uzskatiem par komunikāciju, kas ir cilvēka eksistences būtiskākā sastāvdaļa.
Ko nozīmē būt cilvēkam? Ko nozīmē būt cilvēkam noteiktā eksistenciālā situācijā? Vai iespējama autentiska patība? Vai eksistējošais indivīds var apzināties savu autentiskumu? Viens no Kirkegora antropoloģijas pamatpostulātiem ir tas, ka cilvēka patība ir dažādu elementu sintēze: aktualitātes, brīvības un iespējamības.
Atslēgvārdi: Eksistence; antropoloģiskā sintēze; komunikācija; radikālais individuālisms; S.
Kirkegors.
Related Results
Cilvēks un franču filosofiskā antropoloģija starp Polu Rikēru un Mišelu Fuko
Cilvēks un franču filosofiskā antropoloģija starp Polu Rikēru un Mišelu Fuko
In her article “The Human Being and French Philosophical Anthropology between Paul Ricoeur and Michel Foucault”, Māra Rubene not only focuses on the ideas of the best-known philoso...
PERCEPCIÓN DEL SERVICIO DE TRANSPORTE PÚBLICO EN LOS ESTUDIANTES DE LA UNIVERSIDAD DE LA SERENA. CONURBACIÓN LA SERENA-COQUIMBO
PERCEPCIÓN DEL SERVICIO DE TRANSPORTE PÚBLICO EN LOS ESTUDIANTES DE LA UNIVERSIDAD DE LA SERENA. CONURBACIÓN LA SERENA-COQUIMBO
El transporte público en Chile ha enfrentado desafíos como la congestión, tarifas elevadas y problemas de accesibilidad en algunas áreas. A pesar de los esfuerzos para mejorarlo aú...
PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT OF CROSSES BETWEEN GADAM AND HARDCORE TANNIN SORGHUM IN HYBRID LINES PRODUCTION
PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT OF CROSSES BETWEEN GADAM AND HARDCORE TANNIN SORGHUM IN HYBRID LINES PRODUCTION
Gadam cultivar of sorghum has been characterized by low yields compared to the international yield levels of sorghum. In this research, Gadam was crossed with Serena, Seredo, and K...
Susanne Bier’s Hollywood Experiments: Things We Lost in the Fire and Serena
Susanne Bier’s Hollywood Experiments: Things We Lost in the Fire and Serena
“Susanne Bier’s Hollywood Experiments: Things We Lost in the Fire and Serena” explores the lackluster responses to Bier’s first English-language productions, often referred to as h...
Conformación metropolitana desde la fragmentación. El proceso de conurbación del Gran La Serena / Metropolitan formation from fragmentation. The conurbation process of Greater La Serena
Conformación metropolitana desde la fragmentación. El proceso de conurbación del Gran La Serena / Metropolitan formation from fragmentation. The conurbation process of Greater La Serena
La metropolización se puede entender como un fenómeno en que una unidad urbana funcional estructura, controla y especializa un territorio. En las grandes ciudades de Sudamérica las...
Internal Colonialism and the Wasteland Theme in Ron Rash's Serena
Internal Colonialism and the Wasteland Theme in Ron Rash's Serena
Ron Rash’s Serena (2008) is about the clash between northern industrialists who cut timber in southern Appalachia and conservationists who want the area converted into a national p...
Presentazione
Presentazione
Carlota Cattermole Ordóñez, Maddalena Moretti e Serena Vandi presentano il numero 22 di Tenzone, che accoglie i contributi del progetto "L'ombra sua torna": Dante il Novecento e ol...
Comparing efficiency, timing and costs of different walking paths in HMLS LIDAR survey
Comparing efficiency, timing and costs of different walking paths in HMLS LIDAR survey
The technological innovation of terrestrial LIDAR systems has recently given forest planners greater access to key features on forest structure. The Hand Held Mobile Laser Scanner ...


