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Merold Westphal. Becoming a Self: A Reading of Kierkegaard's "Concluding Unscientific Postscript." West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1996. Pp. xiii + 261. Cloth, $32.95. Paper, $16.95.
The Purdue University Press Series in the History of Philosophy describes itself as attempting to provide insight into a philosopher by means of a focus on a single major text. Such a focus is unusual for a series in the history of philosophy, and Westphal's accomplishment in this study is a fine example of how fruitfully this can be done. Commentary on over six hundred pages of Kierkegaard's Postscript is presented in ten manageable chapters, which follow the order of the Postscript and deal with segments of it ranging from as few as twelve pages to as many as one hundred and seventy-five pages. The result is a commentary which can wonderfully guide students through the Postscript in its entirety, or through the assignment of individual chapters to accompany discrete reading selections. Westphal's discussions are informed by an unusually wideranging knowledge of the history of philosophy-he considers the text not only in relation to Plato, Aristotle, Hume, Kant, and Hegel, as others commentators have, but also brings to this work his clear strengths in phenomenological, existential, and postmodern thought (so we get useful comparisons with Gadamer, Derrida, Levinas, Heidegger, Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, and Sartre, among others). Lying behind Westphal's entire approach to the book is his desire to address the two most common major criticisms of Kierkegaard's thought, namely, that it is individualist and irrationalist. Thus, the major perspective from which everything is approached is the tension between the...