HomePhilosophia: International Journal of Philosophyvol. 41 no. 2 (2012)

Martin Buber on Transcending the World — In the World

Peter M. Collins

Discipline: Philosophy

 

Abstract:

Martin Buber’s sustained effort to transcend the world—in the world— can be explained by his interpretation of Hasidism and his philosophy of dialogue. His motivation is derived from personal and cultural circumstances; indigenous to both was what he called the “eclipse of God,” the disappearance of God from the world, which he viewed as the culprit in the disintegration of authentic human values. He learned and taught that human persons encounter God (the Supreme Thou), not by escaping the world, but by “redeeming” the world through I-Thou relationships with others in daily living. Buber’s contemporary significance is addressed in closing.