Martin Buber's Journey to Presence

Phil Huston

Abrahamic Dialogues

Pages: 288

Hardback
ISBN: 9780823227396
Published: 15 July 2007
$88.00
Fordham University Press
Fordham University Press

What does Martin Buber mean, in I and Thou, by the claim that the one thing that matters is full acceptance of presence? An attempt to answer this question led the author on a journey of exploration through Buber's early writings, to reach a clarification of Buber's predialogical concept of God. She examines Buber's first major philosophical work: Daniel: Dialogues in Realization, drawing attention to inaccuracies in the available English translation. Buber's desire for presence, she finds, began with an overwhelming experience of absence. His search is for a presence that will not let him down, that will not be a "mis-encounter"--that is, for a presence that will ensure that there is meaning.

This book will be an invaluable text for the student looking for a readable guide to Buber's early writings. It will help readers to understand the rich depth and many layers of thought in Buber's masterpiece, I and Thou, and to appreciate the radical change that took place in Buber's concept of God prior to its publication in 1923.

A rare insight into Martin Buber's personal struggle with the question: 'What sort of a God do I believe in?'——William Mathews, Centre of Philosophy, Milltown Institute

This is a thoughtful study of Martin Buber's early philosophical work.——Choice

Focuses on Buber's 1913 work Daniel: Dialogues in Realization in a study of the philosopher and theologian's idea of presence.——The Chronicle of Higher Education

An excellent key to unlocking all of Martin Buber's later work.——Brendan Purcell, University College Dublin

Phil Huston has been a Lecturer in Philosophy at The Milltown Institute for the last ten years. She obtained her doctorate at University College, Dublin.