The second half of
Fear and Trembling is made up of three Problemata, through which Johannes de silentio examines if Abraham's actions can be understood through ethical rational thinking or if they require the distinct category of faith. They are: • Problema I: Is there a
Teleological Suspension of the Ethical? • Problema II: Is there an Absolute Duty to God? • Problema III: Was It Ethically Defensible for Abraham to Conceal His Undertaking from Sarah, from Eliezer, and from Isaac?
Problema I: Teleological suspension of the ethical Silentio identifies the ethical with the
universal, which in his framework is incumbent upon all people at all times.
Sin occurs when an individual asserts
himself over and against the universal. Faith, on the other hand, is a
paradox whereby an individual transcends the universal without sinning. Johannes de silentio argues that Abraham must occupy this category of faith, because without doing so, he would not be the father of the faith. (~1680) Abraham's relationship to God during the
binding cannot be logically understood or mediated away according to Silentio. To illustrate, he contrasts Abraham with three other historical and mythological figures—
Agamemnon,
Jephthah, and
Brutus—who similarly had to sacrifice or punish their offspring. Agamemnon had to sacrifice his daughter Iphigenia in order for the
Greek fleet to sail to
Troy; Jephthah had to sacrifice his daughter after a victory to fulfill a public vow to God; and Brutus had to order the execution of his sons for conspiring against him.
Fear and Trembling argues that all three are perceived as
tragic heroes, because their sacrifices served an ethical purpose that their communities could understand. The decisions made can be justified and mourned within a rational framework of universal ethics. (1789)Abraham's situation is fundamentally different for Silentio. Abraham does not sacrifice
Isaac for the sake of a nation, community, or public vow. His act is completely unintelligible to a rational system of ethics. The only justification that Abraham holds is in his
absolute relationship to God, which does not lend itself to universal ethical discussion. The distinction lies in what the author calls the
middle term: tragic heroes transgress the ethical for a higher yet still comprehensible
purpose, but Abraham's transgression cannot be publicly justified. His purpose is dictated solely by his direct relationship with God, which is what places him into the category of faith rather than that of the tragic hero.
Problema II: Absolute duty to God Problema II focuses on whether an individual can have an absolute duty to God, overriding all other ethical duties. In contrast to Problema I, Problema II deals not with what kind of ethical suspension occurs, or how it comes to be, but why it must be the case for Abraham. Silentio argues that in an ethical framework an individual's relationship to God is created and maintained through fulfillment of
ethical obligations. Silentio's critical move is to present a reversal of this relationship: in faith, the individual mediates his relationship to the universal through his relationship with God. Silentio asserts that a knight of faith exists in pure isolation and cannot explain himself or his actions to others. If a knight of faith were to try to explain himself to others, this would be done in terms of the universal and would constitute "temptation" (
Anfechtung)—a fallback to rational ethics that negates the movement of faith. Silentio reaffirms that faith is then an incommunicable paradox known only to the individual in question and to God.
Problema III: Abraham's concealment Problema III analyzes the question of whether
Abraham's concealment of the ordeal from
Sarah,
Eliezer, and
Isaac is ethically defensible. Silentio's answer to the question depends on what he identifies as the ethical, which he defines as not just the universal, but also the disclosed. To Silentio, it is critical that Abraham cannot be acting ethically in his concealment, since Abraham is obeying God's command directly and not explaining himself to anyone. :
Sjökungens drottning),
John Bauer (1911) for
Helena Nyblom's retelling of Agnete and the merman Problema III introduces two categories to explain Abraham's position: the
aesthetic and the
demonic. Silentio claims that aesthetics rewards concealment while the ethical demands disclosure. Silentio draws the contrast through the ends for which concealment is valued, where in the aesthetic it is valued for dramatic effect or personal interest. In the case of the demonic, concealment is based on sin or guilt, through which one asserts himself above the universal through sin rather than faith.
Fear and Trembling uses the
folk tale of
Agnete and the merman to illustrate the distinction. The merman conceals his intention to seduce out of guilt, therefore placing him in the demonic. The distinction allows Silentio to argue that concealment can place one in either the divine or the demonic, depending on what motivates the silence. In Abraham's case, silence is not a product of guilt or sin but of the incommunicability of his faith. (1668) Throughout Problema III, Silentio draws on a series of folkloric
myths and figures. Such as the account
Aristotle provides of a bridegroom who discovers from the
Oracle at Delphi that his marriage will bring calamity; this example is used to explore if disclosure is required, ethically, when it would destroy happiness. Silentio also analyzes the story of
Sarah from the
Book of Tobit, whose previous seven husbands were killed by a demon on their wedding night. In the case of Sarah, her willingness to marry
Tobias despite her past illustrates an absurd leap of faith. Finally, Silentio uses the figure of
Faust, a doubter who remains silent so as not to throw the world into chaos, illustrating a silence grounded in guilt rather than faith, distinguishing it from Abraham's. The illustrations explain how the dynamics of concealment and disclosure in these stories interact with the categories of the aesthetic, ethical, and religious, and how these tensions are resolved through
serendipity,
self-sacrifice, or appeal to the absurd. Silentio concludes that a tragic hero's sacrifice is mediated by a cultural context or public disclosure that justifies the action and makes it comprehensible to others. This is not the case for Abraham; his silence is not a concealment for personal interests or dramatic effect. The concealment is a necessary condition of his incommunicable faith. == Reception and influence ==