The arrow and the trap. Figures of Human Finitude in a Funerary Discourse by Kierkegaard
Abstract
This paper describes Kierkegaard's position on death as it appears in an exhortative writing belonging to his collection of Edifyng Discourses. It is argued that the original position elaborated in this Discourse both (I) draws on Epicurus' famous argument against the fear of death and (II) refuses that argument by highlighting its phenomenological inadequacy, rather than invalidating its deductive structure. The central element of Kierkegaard's refutation consists in enabling a reference to death that forsakes its hypothetical character by turning extinction into a pervasive danger, that is coextensive with life as a whole. Such a reference is what the philosopher names "the serious thought of death", i.e., an international state which manages to subtract the limit of existence from its peripheral and anonymous condition. From an Epicurean standpoint, death is peripheral insofar as it circumscribes existence without ever being a part of it; and death is anonymous insofar as it befalls the species as such, or the individual insofar as it is a member of the species. Kierkegaard's antidote to Epicurus' argument personalizes death and turns into an impending menace to be felt at every moment.
Downloads
Article download
License
In order to support the global exchange of knowledge, the journal Anales del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofia is allowing unrestricted access to its content as from its publication in this electronic edition, and as such it is an open-access journal. The originals published in this journal are the property of the Complutense University of Madrid and any reproduction thereof in full or in part must cite the source. All content is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 use and distribution licence (CC BY 4.0). This circumstance must be expressly stated in these terms where necessary. You can view the summary and the complete legal text of the licence.