Yes, Kierkegaard just wants his Christian readers to realize how extreme faith really is, how passionate, how offensive to reason it is. So that Christians don't be so cavalier about the idea of faith.lancek4 wrote: I had not heard of this interpretation; it is an interesting angle; I do not think I would have thought of it.
Indeed, K offers a kindness for Issacs blind faith in his father, and the faith of his father. That Abraham would be justified in making himslef a monster to Issac's eyes, that Issac could then, in his last moments be comforted in his universal faith. Yet abraham does not.
I felt that one way of taking it was that faced with the kind of faith of Abraham, I tremble in fear because such a faith offends me so, that I cannot bring myself to realize such faith, that it is indeed absurd.
What is the silence of which K speaks in the third proiblemata ?
The question is: Was Abraham Ethically Defensible in Keeping Silent About His Purpose?
Let's say Agamennon and Abraham comes up to you.
Agamennon says to you, I need to kill Iphigenia in order to save the city and save thousands of my fellow Greek citizens.
Abraham says to you, I need to kill Isaac because God told me to.
Ok, then which one makes more sense to you, and which one would you restrain and call the funny farm.
Being silent means one doesn't expose how ethically ludicrous your statement is, if it doesn't have any ethical justification in it.
If Agamennon didn't say anything and just killed Iphigenia without telling anyone, we would try to stop him and criticize him.
By telling us, he's letting us in on the ethical justification for his killing his daughter and we would rationally understand and comprehend it.
Abraham has no such luxury, telling us his purpose does not let us in on the ethical justification of killing Isaac because there is no ethical justification. Thus the answer to Was Abraham Ethically Defensible in Keeping Silent About His Purpose? is no. But the answer to Would Abraham be Ethically Defensible in Telling Sarah About His Purpose? would still be also no.