16657, The Corsair Affair and Articles Related to the Writings, pp. 38-46, esp. p. 46, KW XIII.
23 See Corsair Affair, Historical Introduction, pp. VII-xxv, KW XIII.
24 See Supplement, pp. 2.141-43 (Pap. X1 A 138).
25 See Supplement, p. 2.167 (Pap. X3 A 318), also pp. 137-38 (Pap. IX A 54).
26 JP Vl 6356 (Pap X1 A 138). See Supplement, pp. 2.141-43 (Pap. X1 A 138).
27 Point of View, KWXXII (S V XIII 523, 542, 549, 579).
28 Ibid. (497). See also Supplement, p. 2.140 (Pap. X1 A 118).
29 Later, however, two new pseudonyms were used H H for the author of Two Ethtcal-Religious Essays (1849) and Anti-Climacus for the author of The Sickness unto Death (1849) and Practice in Christianity (1850) At first sight, the prefix “Anti” may mislead a reader in regard to the relation of the two pseudonyms Climacus and Anti-Climacus. The prefix does not mean “against.” An old form of “ante” (before), as in “anticipate,” the prefix means a relation of rank, as in “before me” in the First Commandment. In a journai entry, Kierkegaard explains: “Johannes Climacus and Anti-Climacus have several things in common; but the difference is that whereas Johannes Climacus places himself so low that he even says that he himself is not a Christian, one seems to be able to detect in Anti-Climacus that he considers himself to be a Christian on an extraordinarily high level . I would place myself higher than Johannes Climacus, lower than Anti-Climacus” (JP VI 6433 [Pap. X1 A 517]). See also Point of View, KW XXII (SV XIII 531); Kierkegaard: Letters and Documents, Letters 213, 221, KW XXV; JP VI 6439 (Pap. X1A 530); Pap. X5 B 20.
30 Point of View, KW XXII (SV XIII 523).
31 See Supplement, pp. 2.138, 2.141-43 (Pap. IX A 228; X1 A 138).
32 See Supplement, pp. 2.138-39 (Pap. IX A 241).
33 JP VI 6361 (Pap. X1 A 147): “It will never do to let the second edition of Either/Or be published without something accompanying it.
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