Early reception (1791–1860)
Either/Or established Kierkegaard's reputation as a respected author. Henriette Wulff, in a letter to
Hans Christian Andersen, wrote, "Recently a book was published here with the title
Either/Or! It is supposed to be quite strange, the first part full of Don Juanism, skepticism, et cetera, and the second part toned down and conciliating, ending with a sermon that is said to be quite excellent. The whole book attracted much attention. It has not yet been discussed publicly by anyone, but it surely will be. It is actually supposed to be by a Kierkegaard who has adopted a pseudonym...."
Julia Watkin said "Kierkegaard replied to Heiberg in
The Fatherland as Victor Eremita, blaming Heiberg for not reading the
preface to Either/Or which would have given him the key to the work." Kierkegaard later used his book
Prefaces to publicly respond to Heiberg and Hegelianism. Kierkegaard also published a short article,
Who is the Author of Either/Or?, a week after the publication of
Either/Or itself. Kierkegaard later referred to his concept of choosing yourself as the single individual in
The Concept of Anxiety, June 17, 1844, and then in his
Four Upbuilding Discourses, August 31, 1844, and once again in
Upbuilding Discourses in Various Spirits, 1847.
William James echoed Kierkegaard in his lecture on
The Sick Soul where he wrote, "the man must die to an unreal life before he can be born into the real life." (1849–1910)
August Strindberg was familiar with
Either/Or and this book made him "forever a champion of the ethical as juxtaposed to the aesthetic life conception and he always remained faithful to the idea that
art and
knowledge must be
subservient to life, and that life itself must be lived as we know best, chiefly because we are part of it and cannot escape from its promptings." Strindberg was obviously attracted to
Either/Or Part II where Kierkegaard developed his
categorical imperative. He wrote the following in
Growth of a Soul published posthumously in 1913 about Kierkegaard's
Either—Or: "it was valid only for the priests who called themselves Christians and the seducer and
Don Juan were the author himself, who satisfied his desires in imagination". Part II was his "Discourse on Life as a Duty, and when he reached the end of the work he found the moral philosopher in despair, and that all this teaching about duty had only produced a
Philistine." He then states that Kierkegaard's
discourses might have led him closer to Christianity but he didn't know if he could come back to something "which had been torn out, and joyfully thrown into the fire". However, after reading the book he "felt sinful". Kierkegaard put an end to his own
double-mindedness about devoting himself completely to aesthetics or developing a balance between the aesthetic and the ethical and going on to an ethical/Christian religious existence in the first part of his authorship
(1843-1846) and then described what he had learned about himself and about being a Christian beginning with
Upbuilding Discourses in Various Spirits (1847). He learned to choose his own Either/Or.
Later reception Although
Either/Or, published in 1843, was Kierkegaard's first major book, it was one of his last books to be translated into English, as late as 1944. Frederick DeW. Bolman Jr. insisted that reviewers consider the book in this way: "In general, we have a right to discover, if we can, the meaning of a work as comprehensive as
Either/Or, considering it upon its own merits and not reducing the meaning so as to fit into the author's later perspective. It occurred to me that this was a service to understanding Kierkegaard, whose esthetic and ethical insights have been much slighted by those enamored of his religion of renunciation and transcendence. ... Kierkegaard's brilliance seems to me to be showing that while goodness, truth, and beauty can not speculatively be derived one from another, yet these three are integrally related in the dynamics of a healthy character structure". David F. Swenson, a professor at the
University of Minnesota, introduced three lectures about Kierkegaard in 1918 in which he "presented Soren Kierkegaard’s delineation of three fundamental modes of life: First, the Life of Enjoyment – Folly and Cleverness in the Pursuit of Pleasure; second, the Life of Duty – Realizing the Self through Victorious Accomplishments; third, the Life of Faith – The Religious Transformation of the Self through Suffering. Miguel de Unamuno published his 1914 novel
Mist in response to his reading of Kierkegaard's Diary of a Seducer.
Thomas Henry Croxall was impressed by "A"s thoughts on music in the essay, "The Immediate Stages of the Erotic, or Musical Erotic". Croxall argues that "the essay should be taken seriously by a musician because it makes one think, and think hard enough to straighten many of one's ideas; ideas, I mean, not only on art, but on life" and goes on to discuss the psychological, existential, and musical value of the work.
Reinhold Niebuhr questioned Kierkegaard's emphasis in his pastoral epistle at the end of Or. He wrote the following in 1949. Johannes Edouard Hohlenberg wrote a biography about Søren Kierkegaard in 1954 and in that book he speculated that the
Diary of the Seducer was meant to depict the life of P.L. Moller who later (1845) wrote the articles in
The Corsair detrimental to the character of Kierkegaard. The
Diary of a Seducer by itself, is a provocative novella, and has been reproduced separately from
Either/Or several times.
John Updike said of the
Diary, "In the vast literature of love, ''The Seducer's Diary'' is an intricate curiosity – a feverishly intellectual attempt to reconstruct an erotic failure as a pedagogic success, a wound masked as a boast". In contemporary times,
Either/Or received new life as a grand philosophical work with the publication of
Alasdair MacIntyre's
After Virtue (1981), where MacIntyre situates
Either/Or as an attempt to capture the
Enlightenment spirit set forth by
David Hume and
Immanuel Kant.
After Virtue renewed
Either/Or as an important ethical text in the Kantian vein, as mentioned previously. Although MacIntyre accuses Victor Eremita of failing to provide a criterion for one to adopt an ethical way of life, many scholars have since replied to MacIntyre's accusation in
Kierkegaard After MacIntyre.
In popular culture The 1997
Elliott Smith album
Either/Or derives its name from
Either/Or, reflecting Smith's interest in philosophy, which he studied at
Hampshire College in
Massachusetts. The novel
Either/Or by
Elif Batuman is named after Kierkegaard's
Either/Or, and the main character reflects on the themes of Kierkegaard's work within the book. ==References==