Kierkegaard y la cuestión del lenguaje

Authors

  • Laura Llevadot
Keywords: Kierkegaard, language, existence, actuality [Virkelighed], writing

Abstract

This paper tries to understand the kierkegaardian thought focusing more on the linguistic aspect than on an anthropologic or existentialist one. In this sense, this study is far from the classical way of thinking that turned Kierkegaard into father of existentialism and the consequent humanism. The first part of the article develops Kierkegaardʼs conception of language against the hegelianʼs one. The second analyses Kierkegaardʼs exigency to elaborate a «language of interesse» in opposition to the «language of being» used by classical metaphysics. Finally, the last part analyses the Kierkegaardʼs strategy, close to the Wittgensteinʼs claim that consist on «speaking without saying», which determines the construction of the style in Kierkegaardʼs work.

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How to Cite
Llevadot, L. (2008). Kierkegaard y la cuestión del lenguaje. Daimon Revista Internacional de Filosofia, (43), 93–101. Retrieved from https://revistas.um.es/daimon/article/view/96071
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