Reflection Of Soren Kierkegaard

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Soren Kierkegaard was a very wise philosopher of the early and mid 1800s. He had a lot of different views especially when it came to aesthetics, ethics, and religious stage. Kierkegaard believed that the Aesthetic stage came from the desire from human beings to be able to escape what they considered to be boring. Boredom is something that everyone struggles with; Kierkegaard believed that “everything is evaluated as either interesting or boring.”1 If everyone truly views everything in life as only having an end result of two separate things this can cause a large dilemma. That’s is almost like telling everyone that they have a choice between one life or another, not everyone wants to be put on the same life plan. As a free person everyone wants to have a choice. If “One cannot discover one’s own true self here, as life is reduced to a series of feelings.”2 No one wants life to be solo feelings; everyone needs to be …show more content…

In this case the parable of the prodigal son can relate very well to the three stages of Kierkegaard. The first comes Aesthetic; it must have been very emotional for the father to loose his youngest son. He didn’t know where he was going or when he would come back. When the son finally returned the father could have viewed the situation as a beautiful or ugly. He decided that the fact that his son was home and well was more important the material things he lost. The prodigal son did not make the most ethical decisions with his money. He took half of the families belongings and spent it selfishly. The religious stage is pretty obvious with it being a parable; the religious aspect is that the father loved his son no matter what. He even let his son make the decision to leave the house which I am sure was very difficult to do. It took this journey alone for his son to find and realize who he truly

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