This is the third volume of a three-volume work dedicated to exploring the influence of G.W.F. Hegelâs philosophical thinking in Golden Age Denmark. The work demonstrates that the largely overlooked tradition of Danish Hegelianism played a profound and indeed constitutive role in many spheres of the Golden Age culture.
This third tome covers the most exciting and dynamic time in the Danish Hegel reception from 1842 to 1855. This heterogeneous period saw the emergence of several new figures, many of whom were associated with the left-Hegelian school. This period is best known for the publication of the pseudonymous works of Søren Kierkegaard. The present tome places these famous works in the context of other contemporary Danish discussions about Hegelâs philosophy. It shows that many of Kierkegaardâs criticisms had been raised by other Danish thinkers before him and that a large part of his polemical campaign was aimed at the leading figures of the previous periods of the Danish Hegel reception, namely, Johan Ludvig Heiberg and Hans Martensen.
Jon Stewart is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Philosophy of the Slovak Academy of Sciences. He has worked for many years in the field of nineteenth-century Continental philosophy with a specialization in Hegel and Kierkegaard.
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
Introduction: The Left-Hegelian Period of the Danish Hegel Reception
âI The Shift to the New Period
âII Theses of the Present Tome
1 The Straussian Threat: 1842
âI Brøchnerâs Translation of Strauss and Its Review
âII Adlerâs Review of Nielsenâs Speculative Logic
âIII The Danish Translation of Werderâs Logic
âIV Stillingâs Philosophical Observations
âV Schiernâs âOn the Development and Present Standpoint of History Writingâ
âVI Martensenâs âThe Present Religious Crisisâ
âVII Mynsterâs Resumption of the Debate about Mediation
âVIII Hagenâs âHow Is Intelligence Displayed?â
âIX Hagenâs Review of Stillingâs Philosophical Considerations
âX The Parody, Johan Ludvig Heiberg after Death
âXI Beckâs Review of Kierkegaardâs The Concept of Irony
âXII Beckâs The Concept of Myth
âXIII Kierkegaardâs âPublic Confessionâ
âXIV Adlerâs Hegelian Logic
ââA Adlerâs Introduction
ââB Adlerâs Account of Being
ââC Adlerâs Account of Essence
âXV Heibergâs âThe People and the Publicâ and Thomsenâs Response
âXVI Scharlingâs âThe Struggle against Christianity in the Most Recent Timeâ
âXVII Nielsenâs âKing and Constitutionâ
âXVIII The Criticism of Nielsen in âThe Philosophical Politicianâ
âXIX Heibergâs âThe Starry Skyâ
âXX Another Criticism of Martensen
âXXI Heibergâs âReview of Dinaâ
âXXII Bornemannâs âLectures on the History of the More Recent Philosophy of Rightâ
âXXIII Parts Three and Four of Nielsenâs Speculative Logic
2 The Beginning of Kierkegaardâs Pseudonymous Authorship: 1843
âI Stillingâs Review of Martensenâs Outline to a System of Moral Philosophy
âII Beckâs Review of Nielsenâs Treatise on the Speculative Methodâs Treatment of Sacred History
âIII The Review of Møllerâs Posthumous Writings
âIV Ludvig Helwegâs Article âOn Faith and Knowledgeâ
âV Hagenâs Critical Response to Helweg
âVI Helwegâs Rejoinder to Hagenâs Criticisms
âVII Kierkegaardâs Either/Or
âA Hegelian Mediation
âB The Inner and the Outer
âC The Use of Hegelâs Criteria for Art
âD The Use of Hegelâs View of Antigone
âE The Use of Hegelâs Unhappy Consciousness
âVIII Heibergâs âLiterary Winter Cropsâ and Kierkegaardâs Response
âIX The Discussion in Fædrelandet and Dagen about the Prussian Censorship of Marheineke
âX Heibergâs âLyric Poetryâ
âXI Heibergâs âA Contribution to a Philosophy of the Visibleâ
âXII Hagenâs Review of Either/Or
âXIII Brøchnerâs Some Remarks on Baptism
âXIV P.L. Møllerâs Arena: A Polemical-Aesthetic Journal
âXV Friedrich Helwegâs Review of Adlerâs Logic
âXVI Adlerâs Anti-Hegelian Revelation
âXVII Heibergâs âOn the Principle of the Beginning of Historyâ
âXVIII Kierkegaardâs Johannes Climacus, or De omnibus dubitandum est
âXIX Kierkegaardâs Repetition
âXX Kierkegaardâs Fear and Trembling
âXXI Thomsenâs On Modern French Poetry
âXXII Sibbernâs On the Concept, Nature and Essence of Philosophy
âXXIII Nielsenâs Lecture Paragraphs on the Philosophy of Church History
âXXIV Wintherâs Article on the Doctrine of Justification in the New Testament
âXXV Beckâs Article on Hegelâs Concept of the Church
3 The Conflict Surrounding Stillingâs Criticism of the Left Hegelians: 1844
âI Mynsterâs âChurch Polemicâ
âII Clausenâs Development of the Main Christian Doctrines
âIII Heibergâs âThe Astronomical Yearâ
âIV Friedrich Helwegâs âThe Sign of Jonah and the Brazen Serpentâ
âV Hagenâs Review of Fear and Trembling
âVI The Article âThe German Press in Parisâ
âVII EirÃkssonâs On the Baptists and Child Baptism
âVIII Stillingâs Modern Atheism or the so-called Neo-Hegelianismâs Consequences of Hegelian Philosophy
ââA âModern Scienceâ in Relation to Hegelâs Philosophy
ââB âThe Criticism of the Left Hegelians
ââC âThe Dissolution of Atheism in the Future
âIX The Critical Responses to Stillingâs Modern Atheism
ââA âThe Beginning of the Debate: Gammeltoftâs On Academic Affairs
ââB âChristensâ âAnother Word about the Masterâs Defenseâ
ââC âSchiødteâs âMr. Christensâ Word about the Masterâs Defenseâ
ââD âHagenâs Defense of Stilling
ââE âChristensâ Responses to Schiødte and Hagen
ââF âFrederik Wilhelm Andersenâs Review of Stillingâs Modern Atheism
âX Kierkegaardâs Philosophical Fragments
ââA âThe Absolute Paradox as a Response to Meditation
ââB âChristianity and History
âXI Kierkegaardâs The Concept of Anxiety
ââA âThe Confusion of Logic and Actuality
ââB âMovement in Logic and the Leap
âXII Kierkegaardâs Prefaces
ââA âPreface VII: A Satirical Account of Mediation
ââB âPreface VIII: A Demand for an Explanation of Hegelâs Philosophy
4 The Debates about Feuerbach: 1845
âI Stillingâs Stay in Berlin
âII Christensâ âA Parallel between Two of the Recent Ageâs Philosophersâ
âIII Nielsenâs Propaedeutic Logic
âIV Weisâ On the State and Its Individual: Introduction to Jurisprudence
âV Thomsenâs On Lord Byron
âVI Kierkegaardâs Stages on Lifeâs Way
âVII Beckâs Review of Kierkegaardâs Philosophical Fragments
âVIII Hagenâs Marriage Regarded from an Ethical-Historical Point of View
âIX Brøchnerâs On the Condition of the Jewish People in the Persian Period
âX The Satirical Article, âThe Psychological Condition of the Potatoes during the Sick Periodâ
5 The Culmination of Kierkegaardâs Campaign against the Hegelians: 1846
âI Kierkegaardâs Concluding Unscientific Postscript
ââA âSubjective Faith and Speculative Philosophy
ââB âChristianity as a Form of Knowing
ââC âThe System and Existence
ââD âSpeculative Philosophyâs Presuppositionless Beginning
ââE âThe Unity of Being and Thought
ââF âThe Sublation of the Law of Excluded Middle
ââG âThe Lack of Ethics in Hegelâs System
âII Kierkegaardâs A Literary Review and Hegelian Mediation
âIII Brøchnerâs Stay in Berlin
âIV Sibbernâs Speculative Cosmology
âV Zeuthenâs Humanity Regarded from the Christian Standpoint
âVI Kierkegaardâs The Book on Adler
ââA âAdlerâs Hegelianism and Christianity
ââB âAdlerâs Dramatic Break with Hegelianism
ââC âAdler and the Lack of Ethics in Hegel
âVII EirÃkssonâs Faith, Superstition and Unbelief
âVIII The Critical Review of EirÃkssonâs Faith, Superstition, and Unbelief
âIX EirÃkssonâs Dr. Martensenâs Published Moral Paragraphs
6 The Rejection of Beckâs Application for the Priesthood: 1847â48
âI Beckâs Conflict with the Danish State Church
âII Hegel in Kierkegaardâs NB Journals
âIII Varbergâs Assessment of the State of Philosophy in Denmark
âIV Steenstrupâs The Study of Theology
7 The Beginning of the Debate about Faith and Knowledge: 1849
âI Mynsterâs On Memory
âII Nielsenâs Gospel Faith and the Modern Consciousness
âIII Martensenâs Christian Dogmatics
âIV Kierkegaardâs The Sickness unto Death
âA âAnti-Climacusâ Dialectical Methodology
âB âThe Attempt of Speculative Dogmatics to Comprehend Sin and Socratic Ignorance
âC âThe Individual and the Race
âV Nielsenâs Comparison of Johannes Climacus with Martensen
âVI Magnús EirÃkssonâs Speculative Orthodoxy
âVII Bornemannâs On the Significance of Protestant Theology
âVIII P.C. Kierkegaardâs Speech at the Clerical Conference of Roskilde
âIX Stillingâs On the Imagined Reconciliation of Faith and Knowledge
8 The Continuation of the Debate about Faith and Knowledge: 1850
âI Paludan-Müllerâs Work on Martensenâs Christian Dogmatics
âII Scharlingâs Review of Martensenâs Christian Dogmatics
âIII Ludvig Helwegâs âProf. Martensenâs Dogmatics and Its âCriticsâ
âIV EirÃkssonâs Is Faith a Paradox?
âV Nielsenâs The Faith of the Gospels and Theology
âVI Nielsenâs and Stillingâs Responses to Scharlingâs Review
âVII Martensenâs Dogmatic Elucidations
âVIII Kierkegaardâs Practice in Christianity
âIX The Debate between Dampe and Varberg on Religion
âX Nielsenâs Renewed Criticism of Martensenâs Dogmatic Elucidations
9 Hegel at the End of the Golden Age: 1851â55
âI Varbergâs Conflict between Ãrsted and Mynster
âII Hagenâs âStudies in the History of Religionâ
âIII Bojesenâs Translation of Aristotleâs Politics
âIV Stillingâs Account of Research in Religion and Science
âV Steenstrupâs Philosophy of History
âVI Sibbernâs Book Review and the Question of Actuality in Hegel
âVII Friedrich Helwegâs Comparison of Adler and Kierkegaard
âVIII Friedrich Helwegâs Article on Danish Hegelianism
âIX The End of the Golden Age
Bibliography
âI Secondary Sources on the Danish Hegel Reception
âII Primary Texts and Sources Used
III Secondary Literature and Material Used
Index
This work will be of relevance to students and scholars interested in Continental philosophy, Hegel Studies, Kierkegaard Studies, Scandinavian Studies, Danish History, and Religion in the 19th century. It is suitable for classroom use in courses on philosophy in the nineteenth century.