I
and Thou
By Buber, Martin, Translator Smith, Ronald G.
2000/12 - T. & T. Clark Publishers, Ltd.
0567220605 - Trade Paper, 171p.
Our Price $19.95
2000/06 - Scribner Book Company, Translator Smith, Ronald G.
0743201337 - Hardcover, 128p.
Our Price $22.00
Related Books: Judaism
and Kabbala, Modern
Philosophy
Publisher
Today considered a landmark of twentieth-century intellectual history, I
and Thou is also one of the most important books of Western
theology. In it, Martin Buber, heavily influenced by the writings of
Frederich Nietzsche, united the proto-Existentialists currents of modern
German thought with the Judeo-Christian tradition, powerfully updating
faith for modern times. Since its first appearance in German in 1923,
this slender volume has become one of the epoch-making works of our
time. Not only does it present the best thinking of one of the greatest
Jewish minds in centuries, but has helped to mold approaches to
reconciling God with the workings of the modern world and the
consciousness of its inhabitants.
This work is the centerpiece of Buber's groundbreaking
philosophy. It lays out a view of the world in which human beings can
enter into relationships using their innermost and whole being to form
true partnerships. These deep forms of rapport contrast with those that
spring from the Industrial Revolution, namely the common, but basically
unethical, treatment of others as objects for our use and the incorrect
view of the universe as merely the object of our senses, experiences.
Buber goes on to demonstrate how these interhuman meetings are a
reflection of the human meeting with God. For Buber, the essence of
biblical religion consists in the fact that — regardless of the
infinite abyss between them — a dialogue between man and God is
possible.
Ecumenical in its appeal, I and Thou
nevertheless reflects the profound Talmudic tradition from which it has
emerged. For Judaism, Buber's writings have been of revolutionary
importance. No other writer has so shaken Judaism from parochialism and
applied it so relevantly to the problems and concerns of contemporary
men. On the other hand, the fundamentalist Protestant movement in this
country has appropriated Buber's "I and Thou encounter" as the
implicit basis of its doctrine of immediate faith-based salvation. In
this light, Martin Buber has been viewed as the Jewish counterpart to
Paul Tillich.
This is the original English translation, available in
America only in this hardcover edition of I and Thou. Martin
Buber considered Ronald Smith's the best of the English translations and
it was prepared in the author's presence. The more poetic rendering,
this translation can be looked at as the King James Version of Buber's I
and Thou.