1. KIerkegard
In what would be characteristically seen as intrinsically manifested throughout the areas of existentialism, this idea of suffering, its components, as well as its distinctiveness on the part of the feebleness of human life becomes a common and usual conception for Kierkegaard, so as not to be considered. ... Kierkegaard notes this in bodily sickness, but far from being true, death only succumbs to the end of the body, meaning to say to die from a bodily death. ... Despair becomes an eternal sickness that the self loses its capability of dying in the same sense that the body dies of sickness. ...
- Word Count: 3547
- Approx Pages: 14
- Grade Level: Undergraduate