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Martin Bubers philosophy of dialogue sought to express the human experience through the ways in which we encounter and interact with others. His IThou theory of dialogue and IIt theory of monologue expressed ways of understanding ones place in the world in relation to others, objects, and especially God. Buber died in 1965, leaving behind a vast library of writings and ardent students and scholars eager to engage with his ideas. One of the most prominent scholars was Maurice Friedman. Friedman and Buber shared a professional as well as a personal relationship, based on translating, interpreting, and intellectual curiosity. Beginning in the summer of 1950 and ending with Bubers death, this volume takes the reader through Bubers three visits to America, his wifes death, the authors stay in Jerusalem, and the articulation of Bubers culminating philosophy of the interhuman. In tracing this chronology, Friedman draws extensively on his personal collection of letters exchanged with Buber. Intimate and meditative, this book provides an exploration of a deeply intellectual friendship shared between two extraordinary thinkers.
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