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  1. Four Upbuilding Discourses (1843) is a book by Søren Kierkegaard . History. Kierkegaard writes these discourses because he's not sure that the other two have done their job. [1] . He revisits the story of Job once more but here he puts the emphasis not on what he said but what he did. [2] .

  2. Every upbuilding view of life first finds its resting place or first becomes upbuilding, by and in the divine equality that opens the soul to the perfect, and blinds the sensate eye to the difference, the divine equality.

  3. Four Upbuilding Discourses (August 31, 1844) was published in The Essential Kierkegaard on page 84.

  4. Kierkegaard's Writings, V, Volume 5: Eighteen Upbuilding Discourses. There is much to be learned philosophically from this volume, but philosophical instruction was not Kierkegaard's aim here, except in the broad sense of self-knowledge and deepened awareness.

  5. Followed by. Four Upbuilding Discourses, 1843. Repetition ( Danish: Gjentagelsen) is an 1843 book by Søren Kierkegaard and published under the pseudonym Constantin Constantius to mirror its titular theme. Constantin investigates whether repetition is possible, and the book includes his experiments and his relation to a nameless patient known ...

  6. Recent Danish Literature on the Upbuilding Discourses 1843 and 1844 and Three Discourses on Imagined Occasions. Pia Søltoft - 2000 - Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook 2000 (1):251-260.

  7. Lastly, as H. Hong points out, Kierkegaard distinguished between a "deliberation" and an "upbuilding discourse". Works of Love , for example, is a deliberation. A deliberation is meant to awaken with the goal of provoking action.