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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aChevallier, Philippe
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aThe Kirkegaardian “Doctrine” of Love
260 _c2001.
500 _a5
520 _aBeginning with Adorno’s critic on the Kierkegaardian idea of love, based on Les œuvres de l’amour (1847), the reflection of a “bourgeois idealism, indifferent to concrete realities,” this article investigates the “doctrine” of the Danish master. Indeed, there are other voices here than that of a solitary subjectivity. There is the voice of a virulent critic of the society of that time, which lost all notions of gratuity, where the individual was abandoned to the masses, and where relation was no more than information. If Kierkegaard was an unrelenting judge of the revolutionary movements that agitated Denmark at that time, it was not only as a more or less sour witness of his epoch, but was in the name of a lucidity of which Adorno saw the pertinence of a positive modernity.
786 0 _nRecherches de Science Religieuse | Volume 89 | 1 | 2001-03-01 | p. 87-112 | 0034-1258
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-recherches-de-science-religieuse-2001-1-page-87?lang=en
999 _c226645
_d226645