The Philosophy of Martin Buber
(Volume XII, 1967)
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A distinguished group of philosophers and scholars have
contributed to this volume from a wide range of fields that does
justice to most aspects of Martin Buber's thought. Our volume is
exceptionally rich in the dialogue, not only between Buber and the
contributors but also between Buber's thought and that of such
eminent thinkers as Alfred North Whitehead, Paul Tillich, and Gershom
Scholem.
The sense in which Buber does and does not regard himself as
belonging to the traditional categories of philosopher and theologian
is made explicit in the "Philosophical Accounting" that he
offers at the beginning of his Responsa. These responsa give us an
understanding of another unique form that philosophizing may take in
our age, while still remaining genuine philosophy. This bursting of
ready-made categories is of great importance in an age in which it has
all too often become customary to limit the boundaries of "pure
philosophy" within the methods and analyses of one or another school.
It is particularly important in the case of a thinker like Buber who
does not fit into any category.
Martin Buber: Autobiographical Fragments
Gabriel
Marcel: I and Thou
Charles Hartshorne:
Martin Buber's
Metaphysics
Philip Wheelwright: Buber's Philosophical
Anthropology
Nathan Rotenstreich:
The Right and the
Limitations of Buber's Dialogical Thought
Emmanuel Levinas:
Martin Buber and the Theory of Knowledge
Marvin Fox:
Some
Problems in Buber's Moral Philosophy
Maurice Friedman:
The
Bases of Buber's Ethics
Fritz Kaufmann:
Martin Buber's
Philosophy of Religion
Malcolm L. Diamond:
Dialogue and
Theology
Mordecai M. Kaplan: Buber's Evaluation of
Philosophic Thought and Religious Tradition
Emil L.
Fackenheim: Martin Buber's Concept of Revelation
Hugo
Bergman: Martin Buber and Mysticism
Emil Brunner:
Judaism and Christianity in Buber
Max Brod:
Judaism and
Christianity in the Work of Martin Buber
Hans Urs von
Balthasar: Martin Buber and Christianity
Nahum N. Glatzer: Buber as an Interpreter of the Bible
James Muilenburg: Buber as an Interpreter of the Bible
Rivkah
Schatz-Uffenheimer: Man's Relation to God and World in Buber's
Rendering of the Hasidic Teaching
Robert Weltsch:
Buber's
Political Philosophy
Jacob Taubes:
Buber and Philosophy of
History
Herbert W. Schneider: The Historical Significance
of Buber's Philosophy
Jean Wahl: Martin Buber and the
Philosophies of Existence
Paul E. Pfuetze:
Martin Buber
and American Pragmatism
Ernst Simon:
Martin Buber, the
Educator
Leslie H. Farber: Martin Buber and Psychotherapy
Carl F. von Weizsäcker: I-Thou and I-It in the
Contemporary Natural Sciences
Louis Z. Hammer:
The
Relevance of Buber's Thought to Aesthetics
Carl Kerényi:
Martin Buber as Classical Author
Helmut Kuhn:
Dialogue in
Expectation
Walter Kaufmann: Buber's Religious
Significance
Martin Buber:
Replies to My Critics
Bibliography
of the Writings of Martin Buber
Index by Marvin Katz
Questions or comments should be directed to
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***Last Update
04/24/2007***