1st Edition

Immediacy and its Limits (Routledge Revivals) A Study in Martin Buber's Thought

Edited By Nathan Rotenstreich Copyright 1991
    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    132 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1991, this book focuses on a major problem in the philosophy of Martin Buber. This is the topic of immediacy which is presented in terms of the contact between human beings on the one hand, and man and God on the other. The basic theme throughout is whether the I-Thou relation refers to immediate contact between human beings, as Buber saw it, or whether that relation is something established or aspired to. This is an important study which should be consulted in any future discussion of Martin Buber’s thought. At the same time, it raises critical issues for recent European philosophy. Students of philosophy, and religious and social thought will find its critical exposition extremely helpful.

    1. Introduction: Humaneness as Fulfilment  2. Background  3. Existence and its basis  4. Trends and Topics  5. The Fellow and the Other  6. Horizon and its Hold  7. Ontology  8. The Encounter  9. Immediacy of Mediation  10. Faith and Reciprocity  11. Religion versus Philosophy  12. Reconsideration

    Biography

    Nathan Rotenstreich