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Agape and Personhood. David L. GoicoecheaЧитать онлайн книгу.

Agape and Personhood - David L. Goicoechea


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the way.

      Mediation has to do with the medium or middle premise by which

      a conclusion comes out of previous premises such that we can say

      that if an acorn is properly nourished and cultivated it will become

      an oak tree, but this acorn has been duly nourished and

      cultivated, therefore, it has reached its goal and is now this oak tree.

      Plato explains things by relating them through recollection to their

      archeological formal causes and Hegel explains them by relating

      them through mediation to their teleological or final cause.

      The moment of truth for Hegel is that moment of mediation

      when the thesis is negated by the mediating anti-thesis so that

      the new synthesis or new whole comes forth into a new future.

      Just as Plato does not have a true freedom or a true future because

      his recollection reduces things to the past so Hegel does not have

      a true and living past because his mediation negates the past

      in not keeping the actual acorn as it only becomes the oak.

      Plato’s formal recollection and Hegel’s Aristotelian final or

      teleological mediation are both mechanical or natural and

      quantitative whereas Kierkegaard’s qualitative leap of repetition

      provides a metaphysics that preserves the freedom of a new future

      and the freedom of a renewing past so that in the present

      there is a reconciliation that keeps the past and allows the future.

      II.3.4 Repetition as the Ethical Task of Freedom

      The book, Repetition, has its small, powerful, metaphysical section

      at the beginning and then it is the story of the young man who falls

      in love and his mentor, Constantine Constantius, who helps him

      to think about his love affair and to explore repetitions’ meanings.

      What the young man discovers is that the repetition can reconcile

      four different attitudes that make up the four stages on life’s way.

      The young man learns that a lover can be a poet, a husband,

      a mystic and a person of faith who can repeat all four at once.

      Ordinarily and for the most part good husbands love their wives

      ethically and with reflective decisions that promote their welfare.

      Job was a good ethical man and husband and father and according

      to the Deuteronomic morality and religious vision he should have

      been blessed, but instead he was cursed for he lost his flocks,

      and his land and his children which proved that ethics can fail.

      And this often does happen to good people for ethical love need

      not be rewarded since the good can suffer more than the wicked.

      The relation between the Kierkegaard-Regina story and the Job

      and his children story and the Abraham Isaac story is that they

      each want to get back again what they have had taken away.

      That would be repetition and a happy beginning reconciliation.

      If Job lived happily with his family and they were taken away

      life would be renewed in repetition if they were united again.

      In the epilogue Job does get his children back but that

      seems like a fairy tale for no one has experienced such a thing.

      However, eternity is the true repetition and when it begins

      in faith in the incarnation, the death and the resurrection

      the followers of Jesus believe that each individual lives in eternity.

      Kierkegaard writes this book under the pseudonym of the Constant

      Constant one and by remaining in love’s debt to Regina he

      knows that he will always love her come what may and

      he believes that in some ways she will always love him too.

      II.3.5 Metaphysic’s Interest on Which Metaphysics Founders

      Both Plato and Hegel base their ethics on their metaphysics but

      Kierkegaard makes clear that neither of them can account for

      the genuine new and thus neither can account for freedom and

      without the qualitative leap of freedom decisions are impossible.

      Metaphysics seeks to account for becoming but if becoming is

      a process of necessity which can be logically accounted for

      then it lacks the really new and the contingency and possibility

      that are the opposite of necessity and which make freedom possible.

      The interest of metaphysics is to give a logical account of freedom

      but since metaphysics must be truly logical and based on

      necessity it falls into self-contradiction in accounting for freedom.

      If there is to be a truly free decision then one must make a

      qualitative leap into that decision that is not based upon

      a merely quantitative build up of necessary antecedents.

      If freedom is a lifting up of oneself by one’s boot straps then

      the potency for such a leap must be a real potency in oneself

      like the potency in the acorn out of which the oak comes forth

      but again that potency only works with a quantitative

      build up and this model cannot be one of freedom’s qualitative leap.

      So what Kierkegaard shows by contrasting repetition’s

      qualitative leap of freedom with the quantitative build ups

      of Plato and Hegel is that if we really value freedom then

      we have to affirm faith in the God-man whose leap from

      being God to becoming man alone is a model for freedom.

      Kierkegaard is arguing that if we value freedom and all

      that it implies in our Western culture then we cannot deny

      faith in agape and personhood without which our secular society

      has no real metaphysical basis but only hidden assumptions.

      Kierkegaard and Job with their faith could have for themselves

      the ethical task of always loving their beloved no matter what

      and of remaining in debt to those who are present in their absence.

      II.3.6 The Single Individual and the Posthorn

      Constantius tells the story of a stagecoach driver who arrives

      in a town with the mail and blows a posthorn to let the people

      know that he and the mail are there and this horn is unpredictable.

      It never sounds the same twice and thus symbolizes no repetition.

      However, the dialectic


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