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Dialogues Concerning Radical Evil

Augustine, Kant, and Kierkegaard

Dialogues Concerning Radical Evil cover

Dialogues Concerning Radical Evil

Augustine, Kant, and Kierkegaard

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Pre-order. Available 10 Dec 2026
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Description

The perennial enigma of the human condition is our propensity-seemingly innate-to subvert the universal moral law that ultimately corrupts our character.

This book explores this phenomenon through the perspectives of Augustine, Kant, and Kierkegaard. Erik Hanson attends to the problem of culpability inherent in Augustine's account, while demonstrating that Kierkegaard's assessment retained much of the existential and theological intuition he shared with Augustine, even as he wrote in critical dialogue with Kant.

Hanson shows that Kant's analysis of radical evil (das radikale Böse) presents a philosophical counterpart to Augustine's theological description of original sin (peccatum originale). Augustine held that human evil is the outworking of an inherited corruption of human agency, arising from the Edenic transgression of our forebears. This account presented a problem that medieval theologians struggled to resolve: If human evil is a transgenerational penalty, how can succeeding generations bear responsibility for what lay outside their agency? If it is an inherited sickness, how can they remain culpable? This tension between inherited guilt (reatus) and inherited corruption (vitium) lies at the heart of the Augustinian dilemma.

Hanson argues that while Kant's response retains the centrality of individual liability, it cannot account for evil's origin, a shortcoming Kierkegaard takes up in The Concept of Anxiety. Yet Kierkegaard also retains the Augustinian basis for evil's universality in his account of despair (fortvivlelse) as developed in The Sickness Unto Death. For Kierkegaard, despair is not merely a Kantian subversion of the moral law, but an ontological misrelation of the self to itself before God. This defiance against the possibility of a God-relation, rather than mere moral transgression, accounts for every subsequent human evil.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Augustine and Inherited Sin
2. Immanuel Kant and Radical Evil
3. Kierkegaard, Despair and Anxiety
4. The Significance of Kierkegaard's Existential and Psychological Analysis
Bibliography
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published 10 Dec 2026
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Pages 256
ISBN 9781666946079
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions 229 x 152 mm
Series New Kierkegaard Research
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

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