Dos antihegelianos: Stirner y Kierkegaard
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.60685/filha.v13i19.2356Keywords:
Hegel, Stirner, KierkegaardAbstract
The article deals with anti-Hegelianism on the side of Max Stirner and Sören Kierkegaard. The first affirming the unbreakable oneness and the second giving rise to existentialism with the (tragic) celebration of the finite and irreplaceable character of the individual. It is divided into six parts; the first two, closely following Wanda Bannour's exhibition, deal with the Stirner insurrection; the third is a transition to Kierkegaard, complemented in the fifth and sixth parts. The fourth is a synopsis of G. W. F. Hegel to remember in what concretely the German and the Danish are opposed to him. Stirner is nihilistic by excess and Kierkegaard proposes a radically different conception of Christianity.