An examination of the subtleties of Kierkegaard's understanding of philosophical truth by one of the twentieth century's leading Kierkegaard scholars.Paul L. Holmer (1916-2004) was one of the most significant American students of Kierkegaard of his generation. Although written in the 1950s and 1960s, Holmer's theological and philosophical engagement with Kierkegaard challenges much contemporary scholarly discussion. Unlike many, Holmer refuses reductionist readings that tie Kierkegaard to any particular "school." He likewise criticizes biographical readings of Kierkegaard, much in vogue recently, seeing Kierkegaard rather as an indirect communicator aiming at his reader's own ethical and religious capacities. Holmer also rejects popular existentialist readings of Kierkegaard, seeing him as an analyzer of concepts, while at the same time denying that he is a "crypto-analyst." In his important reading of Kierkegaard on "truth," Holmer pits Kierkegaard against those who see "truth" empirically, idealistically, or relativistically. His carefully textured account of Kierkegaard's conceptual grammar of "truth" in ethical and religious contexts addresses immediately current discussions of truth, meaning, reference, and realism versus antirealism, relativism, and hermeneutics. It will be of great interest to all interested in Kierkegaard and his importance for contemporary theology and philosophy.
The Editors: David J. Gouwens is Professor of Theology at Brite Divinity School. He is the author of Kierkegaard's Dialectic of the Imagination (1989) and Kierkegaard as Religious Thinker (1996).Lee C. Barrett III is Stager Professor of Theology at Lancaster Theological Seminary. He is the author of The Heidelberg Catechism (2007), Foundations of Modern Theology: Kierkegaard (2009), and co-editor of Kierkegaard and the Bible (2010).
Foreword by Stanley HauerwasEditors' PrefaceAcknowledgmentsAbbreviationsAuthor's Preface1 An Introduction to the Problem2 A Glance at a Contemporary Effort in Danish Philosophy3 A New Way of Philosophizing4 The Bible and Christianity5 History and the Sciences6 Truth Is Subjectivity: Some Radical Criticisms7 Truth Is Subjectivity: Some Logical Considerations8 Some Epistemological Questions9 Kierkegaard and Metaphysics10 Kierkegaard and the Nature of Philosophy11 Indirect Communication12 Kierkegaard and the Sermon13 Faith and ChristianityAfterword: Paul L. Holmer: Self-Effacing, Swaggering, Nonpareil / David CainAppendix - Paul L. Holmer: A Select Bibliography BibliographyIndex of Names Index of Subjects
Professor Paul L. Holmer was the doyen of Kierkegaard studies for much of the later part of the twentieth century. His jargon-free writings are crisp, clear, epiphanic, and always in earnest.