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| Fear and Trembling (Penguin Great Ideas) | 
enlarge | Author: Soren Kierkegaard Publisher: Penguin Category: Book
List Price: £4.99 Buy New: £1.14 You Save: £3.85 (77%)
New (24) from £1.14
Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 27258
Media: Paperback Edition: New title Pages: 160 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.1 x 0.4
ISBN: 0141023937 EAN: 9780141023939 ASIN: 0141023937
Publication Date: August 25, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW - ***Delivery usually * 2 - 3 * working days - From Aphrohead of SOUTHPORT, Lancs, UK *** . Priority Airmail used Worldwide on International orders. Thanks from all at Aphrohead.
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Awe-inspiring November 20, 2006 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Somewhat ironically, given that it is ostensibly a work of philosophy and not literature, Fear and Trembling is truly a book to instil awe in the power of language. The reader is swept along in a sea of powerful words, with phrases repeating and overlapping, washing through the mind with waves of energy. Kierkegaard, unlike the majority of major philosophers, can really write.
Or maybe it is the subject matter that allows the flowing style. For this is surely one of THE books of the individual, an examination of the inexplicability of certain actions and the failure of systematic thinking in dealing with real faith. It was brand new in European philosophy at the time, and remains relevant and challenging today. If you want to reassess what God might be, and if you want to understand (without fully understanding) what true belief might mean, open these pages.
Excellent book, but buy the full version April 24, 2006 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
Search for "Fear and Trembling (Classics S.)". It's the same translation (by Alistair Hannay) but actually has notes + an introduction (although the introduction is a little long and over interpretive).
The Great Ideas version will probably look better on your shelf and is more portable, but it's worth spending the extra pound or so on the full version. This is especially true if you aren't familiar with Kierkegaard.
It's probably also worth mentioning that the Cambridge Companion to Kierkegaard has a nice (intoductory) essay on F&T
A central, important psychological work March 6, 2002 30 out of 33 found this review helpful
Soren Kierkegaard is regarded by many as the founder of the existentialist movement that rose to prominence in twentieth century literature in the form of the novels of Franz Kafaka, Albert Camus, Jean-Paul Sartre, and the philosophical works of Martin Heidigger, to name but a few figures. Written after the seminal 'Either/Or', this psychological exposition is nevertheless central to the Kierkegaard cannon. In Kierkegaard's 'dialetical' style, the book explores the biblical account of Abraham, passionately exploring the tremulous psychology of the moments leading up to, and, most importantly, at the point of, Abraham's sacrifice of Isaac. Alertly conscious of the futility of his age, almost prophetic in his anticipation of much of the soul-searching of the twentieth century, the book never becomes a boring theological treatise; rather, Kierkegaard seeks to involve the reader in an understanding of Abraham, who he terms a "knight of faith". In stressing the importance of the individual himself acting with the honesty that his freedom demands, Kierkegaard challenges the reader to place himself on a parallel with Abrham who "transcends the finite to the infinite, before assuming incidentally the finite". The book is well written, unlike many philosophical works; one does not has to pause and dwell upon each paragraph, searching for comprehension, for Kierkegaard employs a technique known as "repetition", re-phrasing his argument from a slightly different angle at several points, often repeating an exact phrase several times, on each occasion arguing logically to a further point. Paradox is pivotal to Kierkegaard's psychological examinations, and is brilliantly reflected by the pulsating tempo of his writing; the depth of the text is greatly increased by regular darting references to other works, Shakespeare's tragedies, and the work of classical dramatists particularly strongly emphasised. The strength of the book lies principally, as in much of Kierkegaard's work, in the fact that it is heavily autobiographical, even if that element is metaphorically disguised - there is always a marked sincerity to his observations. Kierkegaard can digress slightly, and this is the main critiscism of the novel - nevertheless, this flaw often becomes a strength, as the aphorisms that express the profundity of his philosophical refelctions, are merely heightened in emphasis amongst the psychological reasoning that surrounds them. Any understanding of existentialism must include Kierkegaard, and this book is certainly a core text for such an undertaking.
Do you find Abraham Guilty or Not Guilty? April 13, 2001 5 out of 11 found this review helpful
Kierkegaard tries to defend Abraham against the charge that he was contemplating murdering his son because he thought God told him to. Will have you either going to church every Sunday (be it because you think you now have an excuse to kill your kids or be it because you now believe God's had cardiac surgery and is no longer dead) or throwing it across the room screaming and swearing at Kiekegaard for being WRONG WRONG WRONG I TELL YOU!!! Oh, and check out The World as Will and Representation (both volumes) by Schopenhauer if you have either teenage intellectuals who like to dress in black and claim you don't understand them ,or if you just want things to quote when you're feeling down and unappreciated and really want to scare people who haven't read it.
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