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Encyclopedia > Either Or

This article is about the book by Søren Kierkegaard. For the 1997 album by Elliott Smith, see Either/Or (album)


Either/Or is an influential book written by Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard in 1843, in which he explored the "phases" or "stages" of existence.



The book is the first of Kierkegaard's works written pseudonymously, a practice which he developed throughout his career. In this case, four pseudonyms are used: "Victor Eremita", "A", "Judge Vilhelm", and "Johannes". Victor Eremita is the fictional compiler and editor of the texts, which he claims to have found in an antique escritoire. "A" is the moniker given to the fictional authour of the first text ("Either") by Victor Eremita, whose real name he claims to have not known. "Judge Vilhelm" is the fictional authour of the second text ("Or"), while "Johannes" is the fictional author of a section of 'Either'; "The Diary of a Seducer".


Either

The first volume, the "Either", describes the "aesthetic" phase of existence. It takes the form of many tangential aphorisms and musings on the aesthetic mode of life, which are labelled 'Diapsalmata'. The word 'diapsalmata' is related to 'psalms', and means "refrains". In this section Kierkegaard's character evaluates the Mozart's Don Giovanni (in the essay "The Immediate Erotic Stages") and Goethe, and examines the concept of 'First Love' as a pinnacle for the aestheticist, using his idiosyncratic concepts of 'closedness' (indesluttedhed in Danish) and the 'demonic' (demoniske)


The aesthete illustrated in "The Diary of a Seducer" holds the interesting as his highest value, and in life attempts to manipulate his situation from a boring one to an interesting one, to satisfy his voyeuristic reflections. He uses irony, artifice, caprice, imagination and arbitrariness to engineer poetically satisfying possibilities; he is not so interested in the act of seduction, but in willfuly creating the interesting possibility of seduction.


The aesthete, accordingly to Kierkegaard's model, will eventually find him or herself in "despair," a psychological state (explored further in Kierkegaard's The Concept of Dread and The Sickness Unto Death) that results from a recognition of the limits of an aesthetic approach to life. Kierkegaard's "despair" is a somewhat analagous precursor of existential angst. The natural reaction is to make a "leap" to the second phase, the "ethical," which is characterized as a phase in which rational choice and committment replace the capricious and inconsistent longings of the aesthetic mode. Ultimately, for Kierkegaard, the aesthetic and the ethical are both superseded by the final phase, which he terms the "religious" mode.


Or

Second Volume, thus, represents the ethical stage. Two letters from Judge Wilhelm to author A try to incite A to make the leap to the ethical stage. First letter is about the aesthetic value of marriage, while the second is about the more explicit ethical subject of choosing the good, or one's self. The volume ends in a discourse on the Upbuilding in the Thought that for God we are Always in the Wrong. Undefined usage of the term freedom, "choosing one's self", etc. pervades the second volume. Introducing the ethical stage it is moreover unclear if Kierkegaard acknowleges an ethical stage without religion. Freedom seems to denote freedom to choose the will to do the right and to denounce the wrong in a secular, almost Kantian style. However, mourning (angeren) seems to be a religious category specifically related to the christian concept of deliverance. (Samlede Vaerker(2), II, p. 190)


Interpretation

The extremely nested pseudonymity of this work adds a problem of interpretation. A and B are the authors of the work, Eremita is the editor. Where however is Kierkegaard in all this? It appears that Kierkegaard deliberately sought to disconnect himself from the points of view expressed in his works, although the absurdity of his pseudonyms' bizarre latin names proves that he did not hope to thoroughly conceal his identity from the reader. Kierkegaard's Papers first edition VIII(2), B 81 - 89 explain this method in writing. On interpretation there is also much to be found in the On my Work as an Author and the Point of View.


  Results from FactBites:
 
§ 26. either. 1. Grammar. The American Heritage Book of English Usage. 1996 (489 words)
When using either as a conjunction, you can apply it to more than two elements in a series: She left her glove either at the convenience store, the library, or the playground.
But when either is followed by of and a plural noun, it is often used with a plural verb: Either of the parties have enough support to form a government.
When all the elements in an either … or construction (or a neither … nor construction) used as the subject of a sentence are singular, the verb is singular: Either Eve or Herb has been invited.
either (475 words)
We met either in some public place or at my hotel, where I entertained him as freely as I might without appearing to be prompted by charity.
They were covered from head to foot with mud, and their faces were bleeding either from having been kicked or from the stones; they looked like corpses, but the crowd was so dense that I got only a few momentary glimpses of the wretched creatures.
His eyes had the brightness of fever, there was a hectic flush upon either cheek, and dark crusts clung to his lips; the thin hands upon the coverlet twitched incessantly, his voice was croaking and spasmodic.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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