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Common people

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e­­‑ISSN 2084­–1043 p-ISSN 2083­–6635 Published online: 30.11.2021

Vol. 11 (1/2021) pp. 171–192 www.argument-journal.eu

Common people: Kierkegaard and the dialectics of populism René ROSFORT* ABSTRACT In this article, I propose to use Søren Kierkegaard’s existential critique of the establishment — intellectual, social, and religious — in the name of common people to bring out the dialectic character of populism often overlooked or ignored in the present-day use of the concept. Although populism is generally viewed as negative, Kierkegaard can help us to see that notwithstanding the very real and dangerous threat that populism poses to liberal societies, it is not, from a liberal perspective, unequivocally negative. Populism is endemic to liberalism, and we should not — and cannot — simply try to suppress or eradicate populism from our agendas. Instead, we have to see how populism dialectically reveals serious problems at the heart of contemporary liberalism. A Kierkegaardian approach to populism will allow me to bring out one of the most fundamental of these problems, namely the persistent inequality that permeates liberal democracies undermining the admittedly vague Enlightenment ideal of equality.

KEYWORDS liberalism; existential philosophy; elitism; equality; faith; reason; enlightenment; humanism

* Associate professor at the Søren Kierkegaard Research Centre, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. E-mail: rer@teol.ku.dk. DOI: 10.24917/20841043.11.1.10


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