
Poemat o śmierci. Rozważanie o śmierci Karola Wojtyły jako medytacja filozoficzno-religijna
Author(s) -
Marian Kisiel
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
roczniki humanistyczne
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2544-5200
pISSN - 0035-7707
DOI - 10.18290/rh.2068s-6
Subject(s) - existentialism , philosophy , antinomy , soul , meditation , metaphysics , contradiction , inscribed figure , epistemology , psychoanalysis , literature , theology , art , psychology , geometry , mathematics
This article focuses on Karol Wojtyła’s Rozważanie o śmierci [“On Death”] as a philosophical and religious poem. Wojtyła’s text includes numerous references to other literary works; as sources of his meditation, the poet polemically recalls existential metaphysics (Heidegger) and affirmatively turns to the Gospels (the letters of St. Paul). Having discussed such notions as “maturity,” “mystery,” “angst,” and “hope,” Wojtyła perceives death as the readiness for the “difficult encounter” with “the One in whom one’s being embraces its entire future.” In fact, the meditation itself is the encounter: God – that is, you – makes dialogue possible here, as He posits himself towards the person, that is, I. The philosophers of dialogue know this relationship as “the possibility of being addressed.” Recognising the antinomy of “body” and “soul”, the poet presumes that the contrast of “life” and “death” is inscribed in it as well. As Pontiff, Wojtyła confirms this intuition in Dominum et Vivificantem.