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A review by 12_gon
The Lily of the Field and the Bird of the Air: Three Godly Discourses by Bruce H Kirmmse, Søren Kierkegaard
reflective
slow-paced
1.0
This is dull, monotonous, and wrong. Kierkegaard takes forever to state simplistic ideas, and even longer to support them. I get it Kierkegaard, mindfulness. Just because the Lily doesn't literally speak, doesn't mean they don't communicate to each other. The irony of Kierkegaard's acerbic ire towards poets given his masturbatory use of a incorrect metaphor. One must question if Kierkegaard has experienced a bird, as they are notably noisy. Like bird songs? Maybe if Kierkegaard wasn't so concerned with controlling the minds of others, he might mind his own business.
I'm not against the idea of God, I even enjoy the way Kierkegaard views God and prayer, but it's very patriarchal. Just wait for God's will, unless God is telling you to be a Poet, then you're not a real christian like Kierkegaard. The naturalistic ideologue behind all imbalanced power systems is the main source of inspiration for Kierkegaard. Swap Kierkegaard's use of God with Aryan and nothing significant changes.
The annoying part is Kierkegaard's hubris. He obscures his dialectic materialist drivel because he knows what God requires from his followers, which of course, means Kierkegaard is in charge. Man ain't never heard a bird, but hears God... yeah ok, whatever buddy. Love the cover, so pretty! The only reason for the full star is that beautiful cover and sexy title. The rest is for Kierkegaard's white man manifesto. Shut up, follow the rules, and you'll be happy says the white guy, as we tend to do [my bad idk].
I'm not against the idea of God, I even enjoy the way Kierkegaard views God and prayer, but it's very patriarchal. Just wait for God's will, unless God is telling you to be a Poet, then you're not a real christian like Kierkegaard. The naturalistic ideologue behind all imbalanced power systems is the main source of inspiration for Kierkegaard. Swap Kierkegaard's use of God with Aryan and nothing significant changes.
The annoying part is Kierkegaard's hubris. He obscures his dialectic materialist drivel because he knows what God requires from his followers, which of course, means Kierkegaard is in charge. Man ain't never heard a bird, but hears God... yeah ok, whatever buddy. Love the cover, so pretty! The only reason for the full star is that beautiful cover and sexy title. The rest is for Kierkegaard's white man manifesto. Shut up, follow the rules, and you'll be happy says the white guy, as we tend to do [my bad idk].