
VIETTELIJÄN PÄIVÄKIRJA
V. A. K.
The diary opens with a thoughtful introduction that places Søren Kierkegaard’s early work in the broader sweep of European thought. It explains how the Finnish translation arrived at a time when his name was still gaining the reputation that would later make him a cornerstone of existential philosophy. The preface also offers a concise guide for readers unfamiliar with the depth of his singular, subjective voice.
Soon the narrative turns inward, sketching the young Kierkegaard’s upbringing in Copenhagen as the youngest child of an aging, austere father. From his childhood melancholy to the physical ailments that isolated him, the text reveals how personal suffering shaped his restless intellect. His university years expose him to German romanticism and Hegelian ideas, which he absorbs and then reshapes with a distinctive irony.
Through vivid anecdotes and reflective passages, the diary invites listeners to hear the formative moments that forged a thinker obsessed with faith, freedom, and the paradoxes of the human heart. Its intimate tone makes the early struggles of a future philosophical giant both accessible and compelling.
Language
fi
Duration
~5 hours (331K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-05-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1813–1855
A restless, searching voice in nineteenth-century thought, this Danish writer turned questions of faith, choice, anxiety, and selfhood into some of the most vivid philosophy ever written. His work still feels strikingly modern because it speaks to inward struggle rather than abstract systems.
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