The Concept of Anxiety

Kierkegaard (2002) strongly emphasizes that man in sin is realized as a human being, as a synthesis of body and soul. Because, by committing sin, he realizes that he has a soul and that he is in the world. Sin touches him because it is something forbidden, which is understood through the soul as a m...

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Main Author: Dorian Sevo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Institute for Private Commercial and Competition Law 2018-06-01
Series:European Journal of Economics, Law and Social Sciences
Online Access:http://iipccl.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/136-139.pdf
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spelling doaj-025aafc5ea724cac82a105ae163040f32021-08-03T01:17:54ZengInternational Institute for Private Commercial and Competition LawEuropean Journal of Economics, Law and Social Sciences2519-12842520-04292018-06-0122136139The Concept of AnxietyDorian SevoKierkegaard (2002) strongly emphasizes that man in sin is realized as a human being, as a synthesis of body and soul. Because, by committing sin, he realizes that he has a soul and that he is in the world. Sin touches him because it is something forbidden, which is understood through the soul as a mistake. In this great work, Kierkegaard (2002) analyzes the nature of human anxiety that cannot escape him, because anxiety is part of his nature which characterizes him as a man. Anxiety is bizarre, because it comes to man from nothing, it stems from the interior of man's nature without any cause. Human conscience, Kierkegaard states, generates anxiety, because such is the nature of man, being a thinker he has anxiety. The essence of man is his ordinary anxiety.http://iipccl.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/136-139.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dorian Sevo
spellingShingle Dorian Sevo
The Concept of Anxiety
European Journal of Economics, Law and Social Sciences
author_facet Dorian Sevo
author_sort Dorian Sevo
title The Concept of Anxiety
title_short The Concept of Anxiety
title_full The Concept of Anxiety
title_fullStr The Concept of Anxiety
title_full_unstemmed The Concept of Anxiety
title_sort concept of anxiety
publisher International Institute for Private Commercial and Competition Law
series European Journal of Economics, Law and Social Sciences
issn 2519-1284
2520-0429
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Kierkegaard (2002) strongly emphasizes that man in sin is realized as a human being, as a synthesis of body and soul. Because, by committing sin, he realizes that he has a soul and that he is in the world. Sin touches him because it is something forbidden, which is understood through the soul as a mistake. In this great work, Kierkegaard (2002) analyzes the nature of human anxiety that cannot escape him, because anxiety is part of his nature which characterizes him as a man. Anxiety is bizarre, because it comes to man from nothing, it stems from the interior of man's nature without any cause. Human conscience, Kierkegaard states, generates anxiety, because such is the nature of man, being a thinker he has anxiety. The essence of man is his ordinary anxiety.
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