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         Buber Martin:     more books (100)
  1. Levinas & Buber: Dialogue & Difference
  2. The Legend of the Baal-Shem by Martin Buber, 1995-04-17
  3. The Martin Buber Reader
  4. Martin Buber on Psychology and Psychotherapy: Essays, Letters and Dialogue (The Martin Buber Library)
  5. Two Types of Faith (Martin Buber Library) by Martin Buber, Norman P. Goldhawk, et all 2003-12
  6. I and Thou: A New Translation With a Prologue "I and You" and Notes by Martin Buber, 1970
  7. Two Types of Faith (Martin Buber Library) by Martin Buber, Norman P. Goldhawk, et all 2003-12
  8. I and Thou: A New Translation With a Prologue "I and You" and Notes by Martin Buber, 1970
  9. Martin Buber: The Life of Dialogue by Maurice S. Friedman, 2002-12-06
  10. Encounter on the Narrow Ridge: A Life of Martin Buber by Maurice Friedman, 1998-06-15
  11. Caminos de Utopias/ Paths to Utopia (Spanish Edition) by Martin Buber, 1993-12-31
  12. Que es el hombre? (Spanish Edition) by Martin Buber, 2008-07-10
  13. On Zion: The History of an Idea (Martin Buber Library) by Martin Buber, 1997-09
  14. Tales of Rabbi Nachman by Martin Buber, 1988-04

21. Philosophers : Martin Buber
Brief biography on buber, and links to information on other philosophers.
http://www.trincoll.edu/depts/phil/philo/phils/buber.html
Martin Buber
Austrian/Jewish Philosopher
Jewish theologian and philosopher, born in Vienna. He studied philosophy at Vienna, Berlin, and Zürich, then became attracted to Hasidism, founding and editing a monthly journal Der Jude (191624). He taught comparative religion at Frankfurt (192333), and directed a Jewish adult education programme until 1938, when he fled to Palestine to escape the Nazis. He became professor of social philosophy at Jerusalem, where he wrote on social and ethical problems. He is best known for his religious philosophy, expounded most famously in Ich und Du (1923, I and Thou), contrasting personal relationships of mutuality and reciprocity with utilitarian or objective relationships.
Index
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22. EpistemeLinks: Website Results For Philosopher Martin Buber
General website search results for martin buber including brief biographies, link resources, and more. Provided by EpistemeLinks.
http://www.epistemelinks.com/Main/Philosophers.aspx?PhilCode=Bube

23. Existential Primer: Martin Buber
1878 February 8, Born in Vienna to agronomist Carl buber. 1881 (?) Mother leaves family, martin sent to live with his grandparents in Lemberg (Lviv,
http://www.tameri.com/csw/exist/buber.shtml
The Existential Primer
Forums About Tameri Existentialism ... Merleau-Ponty Page Link / Page Link / Page Link /
Martin Buber
Introduction Biography Chronology Commentaries ... Bibliography
Existentialism
Introduction Definitions Ethics Divisions ... Suggested Reading Please consider making a donation to The Existential Primer Do not use this site as a study guide. The incomplete nature of this Web site might result in misunderstanding the profiled individuals. The pages are sometimes posted unedited or appear in outline form. These documents contain excerpts from the works of others. Read their books Citations are not in MLA or APA format to prevent “borrowing” from this site. Included passages are in the format Work, Author, Page , with full citations at the end of Web pages.
Note
This page was added December 2004, to indicate my future plans for the Existential Primer. Please know that this page may be delayed at least until 2006 while I address the primary pages of the primer. I consider it important to complete pages on Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre, and Camus before expanding further.
Introduction
Biography
Chronology
1878 February 8 Born in Vienna to agronomist Carl Buber.

24. Martin Buber And Jewish-Arab Peace, By Dan Leon
An article in Cross Currents, spring 199899 issue, on martin buber and the peace process in Israel and Palestine.
http://www.crosscurrents.org/leon.htm
MARTIN BUBER AND JEWISH-ARAB PEACE
by Dan Leon
The road to peace between Arabs and Jews, as Buber knew, is not paved by power. DAN LEON, who lives in Jerusalem, is co-managing editor of the Palestine-Israel Journal of Politics, Economics, and Culture, the first joint quarterly, now in its fifth year. The assassination of Mahatma Gandhi and the establishment of the state of Israel were separated by about half a year (January and May 1949). Writing in 1938, Gandhi had not been sympathetic to the Jewish national home in Palestine since he thought that "Palestine belongs to the Arabs in the same sense that England belongs to the English or France to the French. Why should [the Jews] not, like other peoples of the earth, make that country their home where they are born and earn their livelihood"? He urged German Jews "to claim Germany as their home" and to follow the example of civil resistance. "The Jews of Germany can offer Satyagraha under infinitely better auspices than the Indians of South Africa." "The calculated violence of Hitler may even result in a general massacre of Jews (but) to the God-fearing, death has no terror" (1938).
Buber's Response
But the main thrust of Buber's letter concerned Jewish rights in Palestine. He wrote that Jews and Arabs must

25. Martin Buber On LibraryThing | Catalog Your Books Online
There are 12 conversations about martin buber s books. Member ratings. Average (4.02) Disambiguation notice. Users with books by martin buber
http://www.librarything.com/author/bubermartin
Language: English [ others

26. "A Few Thoughts On Martin Buber's I And Thou" By John Barich
The great Jewish philosopher, martin buber, sought to answer these questions in his famous essay I and Thou. buber, in this seminal work,
http://www.rjgeib.com/barich/papers/martin-buber.html
Martin Buber
"All real living is meeting (11)."
"If you hallow this life you meet the living God (79)" "He who loves a woman, and brings her life to present realization in his, is able to look in the Thou of her eyes into a beam of the eternal Thou (86)."
"A Few Thoughts on Martin Buber's I and Thou"
by John Barich
How does one relate to God? How does on relate to other people and to nature? The great Jewish philosopher, Martin Buber, sought to answer these questions in his famous essay I and Thou. Buber, in this seminal work, provides a framework centered on the concepts of relation and the personhood of God. Through authentic relationships with our fellow men and women, we come to know the eternal Thou God. What Buber means by this will be brought out in what follows. Now, Buber did not consider the world of "I-It" to be evil in and of itself. He observes that we all live in this world. We all relate to that which is outside of us, even to ourselves, as objects. We could not live unless we, to some extent, manipulated nature to meet our basic needs. The problem has to do with proportion. If we allow the "I-It" way of viewing the world to dominate our thinking and actions, we will be spiritually emaciated and pauperized, and live lives of "quiet desperation." According to Buber, to enter the I-Thou relation is to perceive reality from a new and higher vantage point. I am able, in relation, to extricate myself from the closed world of I-It. I see that I am a free person, possessing a unique destiny. In the presence of my Thou, I am able to make a decision, out of the depths of my being, a decision which permits me to discern my destiny, the "grand-will" guiding my life. My life becomes a perpetual series of decisions where I consciously choose to live out that which has been ordained by God. Through my relationships, in which I give of myself, I become real, alive: I am able to turn my being towards the center of reality I approach the Face.

27. The Hasidism Of Martin Buber (Rexroth)
martin buber is practically the only religious writer a nonreligious person could take seriously today. Paul Tillich probably runs him a close second,
http://www.bopsecrets.org/rexroth/buber.htm
B U R E A U O F P U B L I C S E C R E T S
The Hasidism of
Martin Buber
Quest of the Historical Jesus The Idea of the Holy Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans I and Thou , one of the most moving books ever written. I and Thou is a little book, a true pocket book, a vade mecum , to go with you on your way, like The Little Flowers of St. Francis , or Angelus Silesius, or The Imitation of Christ , or the Bhagavad-Gita Gospel of Buddha vade mecum I and Thou for this fall [1958]. That will mean that somewhere close to twenty-five books by Martin Buber will be in print in English, many of them in paperback editions. A large number of these latter have been published in the last two years. virgina intacta Ever Book of Mormon . Anybody, even mathematical physicists, can believe the Athanasian Creed by an act of transfiguration of its statements. I and Thou is one of the greatest prose poems, an Isaiah , and a Song of Myself From I and Thou Five Existentialist Theologians . Now when Will Herberg was young and giddy and a Marxist, he had the reputation of being the only American of that persuasion whom the Kremlin ever took seriously as a thinker. He once wrote a pamphlet which I still treasure, called The Stalinist Position on the American Negro Between Man and Man is concerned almost entirely with the question of personality, the person as human being, the person as a member of society, the absolute personality. As such, written in Germany in the second quarter of this century, it is perforce a running commentary on Kierkegaard, Husserl, Heidegger, Scheler. But this does not make Buber an Existentialist any more than Aquinas is a Nominalist or an Averroist. Again, the American lectures gathered as

28. Biography: Buber, Martin
Glossary of Religion and Philosophy Short Biography of martin buber.
http://atheism.about.com/library/glossary/western/bldef_buber.htm
zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') You are here: About Agnosticism / Atheism Agnosticism / Atheism Atheism ... Help Martin Buber Back to Last Page Glossary Index Related Terms God
Biography:
Ich und Du (I and Thou) in which he argues that there are two basic attitudes which people can have: I-Thou and I-It. The first, I-Thou, represents a mutual, reciprocal relationship between two independent subjects. The second, I-It, is a relationship of utilization and control between subject and object. For Buber a fundamental distinction between the two relationships is the in the nature of the I. With the first, the I is inseparable from the relationship and cannot be considered outside of it. But in the second, the I is an observer and only partially involved. Unfortunately, every Thou eventually becomes an It, because the I-Thou relationship cannot go on forever. A balanced, healthy person, however, is able to maintain a balance between the two types of situations. Actually, it is not true that every Thou eventually becomes an it. Buber argued that God was an eternal Thou, and thus a subject with which humans can maintain an indefinite I-Thou relationships, better allowing for the creation of balance and the development of a healthy life. Also Known As: none Alternate Spellings: none Common Misspellings: none Related Resources: What is Christianity?

29. Martin Buber's I And Thou
martin buber’s I and Thou (Ich und Du, 1923) presents a philosophy of personal dialogue, in that it describes how personal dialogue can define the nature of
http://www.angelfire.com/md2/timewarp/buber.html
Martin Buber’s I and Thou Martin Buber’s I and Thou Ich und Du , 1923) presents a philosophy of personal dialogue, in that it describes how personal dialogue can define the nature of reality. Buber’s major theme is that human existence may be defined by the way in which we engage in dialogue with each other, with the world, and with God. According to Buber, human beings may adopt two attitudes toward the world: I-Thou or I-It I-Thou is a relation of subject-to-subject, while I-It is a relation of subject-to-object. In the I-Thou relationship, human beings are aware of each oher as having a unity of being. In the I-Thou relationship, human beings do not perceive each other as consisting of specific, isolated qualities, but engage in a dialogue involving each other's whole being. In the I-It relationship, on the other hand, human beings perceive each other as consisting of specific, isolated qualities, and view themselves as part of a world which consists of things. I-Thou is a relationship of mutuality and reciprocity, while I-It is a relationship of separateness and detachment.

30. Martin Buber Quotes
martin buber Play is the exultation of the possible.
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/m/q121941.html

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Category: German Philosopher Quotes Date of Birth: February 8 Date of Death: June 13 Nationality: German Amazon: Martin Buber on Amazon Related Authors: Arthur Schopenhauer Friedrich Nietzsche Immanuel Kant Karl Marx ... Jurgen Habermas More Martin Buber Quotations: A person cannot approach the... All journeys have secret... An animal's eyes have the... For sin is just this... ... To be old can be... Quote Keywords: Exultation Play Possible Dictionary Links: Exultation Play Possible Quotes ... RSS Feeds About Us Inquire Privacy Terms

31. Martin Buber: The Life Of Dialogue
martin buber (18781965).was a Viennese Jewish philosopher and religious leader who translated the Old Tetament into German. He was a Zionist.
http://www.religion-online.org/showbook.asp?title=459

32. Martin S Friedman - Martin Buber's Mystery Play Elijah - Modern Judaism 16:2
A review, by martin S. Friedman, of buber s play, Elijah.
http://muse.jhu.edu/demo/modern_judaism/v016/16.2friedman.html
Modern Judaism
Martin Buber's Mystery Play Elijah
Maurice Friedman
Although Martin Buber's "mystery play" Elijah was not written until 1956 and was not published in German until 1963, Buber's active interest in writing a play on Elijah dates back to 1901 and the Jewish Renaissance Movement, which he saw as the central thrust of the cultural Zionism which he espoused. Two of the poems which he published on Elijah in that period seemed to Buber of sufficient lasting worth to be taken up into his Nachlese , or "gleanings," prepared just before his death. Both poems transcend the realm of culture in the direction of genuine religious intimations, through intimations informed by the Nietzschean vitalism and the immanentist, becoming-of-God mysticism that permeated Buber's being at that period. Elijah , composed forty years later: The cognizance of inner duality and the immanent demand for decisionthat is, of the soul's unificationdivided the people into two [End Page 135] psychologically distinct factions: one consisted of persons who choose, who make decisions, who are impelled toward unconditionality and are dedicated to their goal; the other of laissez-faire men, decisionless persons, persons who remain indolently inert in their conditionality, and whose aim is self-aggrandizement and self-satisfactionor, in biblical terms, persons who are servants of God, and persons who are servants of Baal. It should be remembered, however that those persons do not by any means decide for Baal and against God, but that, as stated by Elijah, they "hobble along on two tree-limbs" (1 Kings 18:21).

33. "Martin Buber: Toward A Greater Humaneness" By Ida Postma
When he met the philosopher martin buber for the first time in 1953, Aubrey Hodes was a desperate young man. A South African by birth, he was then living in
http://www.theosophy-nw.org/theosnw/world/mideast/rel-ida1.htm
Martin Buber: Toward a Greater Humaneness
By Ida Postma When he met the philosopher Martin Buber for the first time in 1953, Aubrey Hodes was a desperate young man. A South African by birth, he was then living in a kibbutz in the Galilee, where he herded sheep. Every week he made the wearisome journey from the hills of Nazareth to Jerusalem to visit a relative in the schizophrenic ward of a mental hospital there. In spiritual turmoil himself, the anguish of watching her become progressively worse was so keen that at times it made him physically shake. Friends advised him to discuss his difficulties with Professor Buber, who was always accessible to those in distress. One day a bookseller, who knew Hodes, handed him Buber's latest work, The Way of Man , which he read right through, standing in a corner of the shop. At that moment he knew he had to talk to the author in person. For a while a feeling of awe held him back, but finally he mustered his courage and called Buber by telephone. Minutes later he found himself in the booklined study he came to know so well; for although separated by two generations, a friendship sprang up that lasted until Buber's death in 1965. In a biography ( Martin Buber: An Intimate Portrait.)

34. Martin Buber, Quotes By Martin Buber At MindPleasures.com
martin buber, Quotes by martin buber at MindPleasures.com.
http://www.mindpleasures.com/Quotes/Philosophy/Buber/Buber.shtml
Literary and Philosophical Quotes Philosophers Martin Buber -:- Martin Buber Reading List by Katharena -:- Martin Buber Essentials Existentialism Philosophical Movements ... Religious Studies
Quotes by Martin Buber
Martin Buber, 1878-1965. Martin Buber was an Austrian-born Judaic scholar and philosopher whose influential I and Thou posits a direct personal dialogue between God and the individual. -:- Martin Buber Reading List by Katharena -:- Martin Buber: Main Page Thought Provoking Quotes by Martin Buber Discuss existentialism and Martin Buber ... MP3 Songs
  • The atheist staring from his attic window is often nearer to God than the believer caught up in his own false image of God. Play is the exultation of the possible. The world is not comprehensible, but it is embraceable: through the embracing of one of its beings. I can look on (a tree) as a picture: stiff column in a shock of light, or splash of green shot with the delicate blue and silver of the background. I can perceive it as movement: flowing veins on clinging, pressing pith, suck of the roots, breathing of the leaves, ceaseless commerce with earth and air - and the obscure growth itself. I can classify it in a species and study it as a type in its structure and mode of life.

35. Literary Encyclopedia: Martin Buber
Born 8 February 1878 in Vienna, martin Mordechai buber spent his childhood in Lvov/Lemberg martin buber. The Literary Encyclopedia. 15 Jan. 2004.
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=5588

36. Martin Buber Quote - Quotation From Martin Buber - Integrity/Individuality Quote
martin buber quotation - part of a larger collection of Wisdom Quotes to challenge and inspire.
http://www.wisdomquotes.com/000381.html
Wisdom Quotes
Quotations to inspire and challenge Main Martin Buber A person cannot approach the divine by reaching beyond the human. To become human, is what this individual person, has been created for. This quote is found in the following categories: Integrity/Individuality Quotes
Return to Main for a list of all categories
Web www.wisdomquotes.com
Please feel free to borrow a few quotations as you need them (that's what I did!). But please respect the creative work of compiling these quotations, and do not take larger sections. Main page
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37. Quoteland :: Quotations By Author
Books by and about martin buber Engrave a Quote martin buber, I and Thou , 1923 Click here for more information about martin buber
http://www.quoteland.com/author.asp?AUTHOR_ID=1901

38. FIRST THINGS: A Journal Of Religion, Culture, And Public Life
Book review of The Letters of martin buber , with critiques of buber s philosophy and views on Judaism.
http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9403/dann.html
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      Buber Without Tears
      by Werner J. Dannhauser
      The Letters of Martin Buber: A Life of Dialogue.
      Ed. Nahum N. Glatzer and Paul Mendes-Flohr
      Trans. Richard and Clara Winston and Harry Zohn
      Schocken Books,
      722 pages, $45
      This volume helps one do just that. Its philological cleanliness reminds one of the standards set by the Wissenschaft des Judentums The correspondents are an illustrious lot, including as they do (I list them alphabetically as is appropriate for such an all-star cast) S.Y. Agnon, Walter Benjamin, Emil Brunner, Albert Einstein, Mahatma Gandhi, Dag Hammarskjold, Theodor Herzl, Herman Hesse, Franz Kafka, Francois Mauriac, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franz Rosenzweig, Bertrand Russell, Gershom Scholem, Chaim Weizmann, Franz Werfel, Israel Zangwill, and Stefan Zweig. Der Jude I and Thou In any event, the emphasis of this volume is, as it ought to be, on the public deeds and the thought of Buber; the private lives of people like him usually give little sustenance to human prurience and nosiness. However, most of the letters in this judicious selection do not center on such controversies; quite properly they emphasize the life of the mind as lived by Martin Buber. The most fascinating letters collected here are those between Buber and Franz Rosenzweig (1886-1929), his collaborator and friend who bore up heroically under the strains of a crippling disease during the last seven years of his life. Together they developed what Rosenzweig called "the new thinking," a kind of Jewish postmodernism whose non-Jewish pagan equivalent was none other than the philosophy of Martin Heidegger. They sought to take Judaism beyond the confines of what they saw as a denuded and arid rationalism, and there is no question that they performed a service in revitalizing the Jewish faith by emphasizing its vitalism, though Gershom Scholem probably did more enduring work in this area by his pathbreaking studies of mysticism.

39. Buber, Martin: A Land Of Two Peoples
buber, martin A Land of Two Peoples, university press books, shopping cart, new release notification.
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Buber, Martin A Land of Two Peoples Martin Buber on Jews and Arabs . Edited by Paul Mendes-Flohr. Edited with Commentary and a new Preface by Paul Mendes-Flohr . 342 p. 5_1/2 x 8_1/2 1983, 2005 Paper COBE $18.00sp ISBN: 978-0-226-07802-1 (ISBN-10: 0-226-07802-7) Spring 2005
Collected in A Land of Two Peoples are the private and open letters, addresses, and essays in which Buber advocated binationalism as a solution to the conflict in the Middle East. A committed Zionist, Buber steadfastly articulated the moral necessity for reconciliation and accommodation between the Arabs and Jews. From the Balfour Declaration of November 1917 to his death in 1965, he campaigned passionately for a "one state solution.
With the Middle East embroiled in religious and ethnic chaos

40. Martin Buber — Infoplease.com
buber s middle way.(The martin buber Reader Essential Writings)(Book Review) (First Things A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life)
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0809277.html
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    Buber, Martin
    Buber, Martin (b OO key Hasidim I and Thou (1923, 2d ed. 1958). Conceiving the relations between God and man not as abstract and impersonal, but as an inspired and direct dialogue, Buber has also had a great impact on contemporary Christian thinkers. He worked to permeate political Zionism with ethical and spiritual values and strongly advocated Arab-Israeli understanding. Among his writings are Jewish Mysticism and the Legends of Baalshem Mamre (tr. 1946, repr. 1970)

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