Is Kierkegaard the greatest Christian philosopher of all time?

Is Kierkegaard the greatest Christian philosopher of all time?

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Ya

>concerned about losing his ‘self’
>loses it to Christianity
>”wasn’t he just the bestest Christian-philosophyer evars!”

You find yourself in god, you don’t lose it

unequivocally the worst fucking poster here

Which work is this from?

I Ii

II I-

even he knew he wasn't a christian lmao

That would be Aquinas.

Fuck off

no. That could be only a catholic.

What does he mean by losing yourself?

A literal lie. For your sake I hope you’re trolling.

And for the record, “Christian philosopher” is usually an oxymoron. They’re theologians. Scientists are closer to philosophers than monks and priests

Artificial crisis of the Platonist

>Artificial crisis of the Platonist
What does that mean?

It's fascinating how many people hate butterfly. He's such a retard that he brings many together.

Butterfly is a libtard

I’m not a liberal.

He’s afraid of losing a “self” that is always changing, developing as he ages. People have had this odd concept of themselves as seen through the lens of spirituality, or as Plato put it, a form.
Spiritualists think of their eternal soul as real and largely unchanging, though vulnerable to corruption, or perhaps even able to be sold to the devil, though that’s was probably thought too fantastical to Christians of Kierkegaards day.
Kierkegaard still sees the potential of losing it as hazardous, but subtle, here. What context I’m not sure of.

he's the mark twain of Christianity.

Thanks

No. First is Augustine and second Aquinas.

>butterfag changed its trip
kek, glad to see the shitposters are still winning

>theologians
are literally philosophers you mouthbreathing sappho wannabe
god, you're pathetic

I hate it when people derail threads with egotistical namefaggotry. I am going to read Either/Or soon, I am looking forward to it. Is it worth reading his other books aswell, or does Either/Or suffice to understand his thought?

>concerned about losing dignity and self-worth
>loses it to a tripname