User talk:132.161.1.80

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I believe the above user is correct.

Another question: I'm not so sure about the knight of faith having faith "in himself" and in God? - perhaps the knight of infinite resignation has "faith" in himself, in the sense that becoming infinitely resigned is within his own power. But I'm not even sure he would say that. I do not think Kierkegaard, or de silentio, would agree that the knight of faith has faith in himself - his faith is entirely "in God." Crucial to Kierkegaard's discussions of the religious sphere is the self becoming "nothing" before God - this is the breakdown of the ethical sphere where the self becomes substantial through its choice to "choose itself" the religious self becomes nothing in order that God would be everything.