This book offers an original intersection of concepts from Immanuel Kant¿s moral command ethics and Søren Kierkegaard¿s existential ethics. The former moral law is based on theoretical ground while the latter¿s quest for selfhood views it as the very act of living. This work questions whether these approaches to morality are mutually exclusionary and advocates the traversing of the ethical parallax to allow for intellectual openness and an empathetic perception of the `other¿.
Foreword S.P. Singh. Preface. Acknowledgements. Introduction 1. Moral Imperative and Kant¿s Critical Philosophy 2. Kierkegaard and the Quest for Selfhood 3. Dialogue of Perspectives: Nietzsche, Kant, Kierkegaard, Bhagavad-Gita 4. Issues in Perspectives 5. Freedom in Framework 6. Traversing the Ethical Parallax. Bibliography. Index