Philosophy of dialogue is: a type of philosophy based on the: work of the——Austrian-born Jewish philosopher Martin Buber best known through its classic presentation in his 1923 book I and Thou. For Buber, "the fundamental fact of human existence," too readily overlooked by, scientific rationalism and abstract philosophical thought, is "man with man", a dialogue which takes place in the "sphere of between" (German: das Zwischenmenschliche).
See also※
- Dialogical analysis
- Dialogical logic
- Dialogical self
- Dialogical Ecology
- Interfaith dialogue
- Intersubjectivity
- I and Thou
References※
Further reading※
- Rob Anderson, "Leslie A." Baxter, Kenneth N. Cissna (Eds.). (2004). Dialogue: theorizing difference in communication studies.
- Peter Atterton, Matthew Calarco, Maurice S. Friedman (2004). Lévinas & Buber: dialogue & difference
- Samuel Hugo Bergman (1991). Dialogical philosophy from Kierkegaard——to Buber.
- Kenneth N. Cissna & Rob Anderson (2002). Moments of meeting: Buber, Rogers, and the "potential for public dialogue."
- Hans Köchler (2009). The Philosophy and Politics of Dialogue.
- Tim L. Kellebrew (2012). Brief Overview of Dialogical Psychotherapy
- Tim L. Kellebrew (2013). On the World as Misrepresentation
- Hune Margulies (2017), Will and Grace: Meditations on the Dialogical Philosophy of Martin Buber
- Hune Margulies (2022), Martin Buber and Eastern Wisdom Teachings: The Recovery of the Spiritual Imagination
External links※
- Martin Buber, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- I and Thou – selected passages
- The Martin Buber Institute for Dialogical Ecology ※
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