Clifford Williams

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The Wisdom of Kierkegaard

With All We Have

The Wisdom of Kierkegaard:
A Collection of Quotations on Faith and Life
Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2009
112 pages




Tucked away in the complicated prose that fills many of Soren Kierkegaard's books are numerous insightful
declarations. They arrest the reader with their depth of understanding. They often are expressed in a lilting and lyrical manner. Encountering them makes working through the intricate prose eminently worthwhile.

The Wisdom of Kierkegaard contains two hundred fifty such passages, chosen partly because of their ability to
be understood apart from their context and partly because of their ability to provoke an "Ah! That's true" response. Many of them contain a "twist" that imparts an incisive jab. Some are on themes for which Kierkegaard is well known, but many are on a variety of other significant themes. The passages are organized in alphabetical sections
, which are introduced by a brief essay.

“Here Clifford Williams, who is himself a fine philosopher, has judiciously selected a host of insightful, provocative, and sometimes humorous quotations from Kierkegaard. A fine introduction to Kierkegaard's thought and a wonderful resource even for those who know Kierkegaard's writing well. Williams reminds those of us who love Kierkegaard why we continue to do so."

—C. Stephen Evans
University Professor of Philosophy and Humanities
Baylor University


Also by Clifford Williams:

Singleness of Heart: Restoring the Divided Soul

The Divided Soul: A Kierkegaardian Exploration



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FEAR AND TREMBLING:
Every human being is to live in fear and trembling, and likewise no established order is to be exempted from fear and trembling. Fear and trembling signify that we are in the process of becoming; and every single individual, likewise the generation, is and should be aware of being in the process of becoming. (Practice in Christianity, 88)

GREATNESS:
True greatness is equally accessible to all. (Fear and Trembling, 81)


LOVING THE WEAK:
The sagacious person thinks, foolishly, that one wastes one's love by loving imperfect, weak people; I should think that this is applying one's love, making use of it. (Works of Love, 163)


From the translations by Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong, published by Princeton University Press.
© Princeton University Press.