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Kierkegaard himself hardly requires introduction, but his thought
con tinues to require explication due to its inherent complexity
and its unusual method of presentation. Kierkegaard is deliberately
un-systematic, anti-systematic, in the very age of the System. He
made his point then, and it is not lost upon us today. But that
must not deter us from assembling the fragments and viewing the
whole. Kierkegaard's religious psychology in particular may finally
have its impact and generate the discussion it deserves when its
outlines and inter-locking elements are viewed together. Many
approaches to his thought are possible, as a survey of the
literature about him will readily reveal. ! The present study
proceeds with the simple ambition of looking at Kierkegaard on his
own terms, of thus putting aside biographical fascination or one's
own personal religi ous situation. I understand the temptation of
both, and have seen the dangers realized in Kierkegaard
scholarship. In English-language Kier kegaard scholarship, we are
now in a new phase, in which the entire corpus of Kierkegaard's
authorship is at last viewed as a whole. We have passed the stages
of "fad" and of under-formed. Almost all the corpus is available in
English, or soon will be. Perhaps now Kierkegaard can be viewed,
understood, and criticized dispassionately and objectively, not
withstanding author Kierkegaard's personal horror of those adverbs.
The present study hopes to make its contribution toward this goal.
Kierkegaard's psychological thought has always been acknowledged as
very rich-Reinhold Niebuhr hailed him as the greatest psychologist
of the soul since Augustine-and has had a major influence on
Heidegger, Sartre, and existential psychoanalysis. Nevertheless,
his accomplishment has not always been fully appreciated, in part
because it is so scattered across his works. As Vincent McCarthy
demonstrates in Kierkegaard as Psychologist, Kierkegaard was
pursuing "psychology" before there was a formally recognized
academic field bearing that name, and a coherent thread runs
through the so-called pseudonymous works. McCarthy elucidates
often-difficult texts, highlights the rich psychological dimension
of Kierkegaard's thought, and provides an introduction for the
nonspecialist and a commentary on Kierkegaard's psychology that
will interest both specialists and nonspecialists, while engaging
in rich comparisons with such figures as Freud and Heidegger.
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