In The Toils of Understanding, Husain Sarkar analyzes not only Kierkegaard's answer to that question but also offers a new theory of understanding which provides a framework in which to do so. Sarkar's theory proposes to place Kierkegaard's account of how an individual is destroyed: what forms of corruption society can wreak on him; what, if anything, society can do to save him; and what, if anything, he can do to save society; and finally, how what really saves the individual lies in the individual, for his being saved could not depend on the work of others--it could not be a secondhand gift from God.
The Toils of Understanding is wide-ranging. The central theme is that understanding is essential if the individual and society are to be saved. On the way to various conclusions, The Toils of Understanding argues with a host of interpreters of Kierkegaard. The result is a keen study, not only of the Present Age, but also of several issues central to Kierkegaard and central to contemporary philosophy.
