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Maurice Friedman and Martin 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 Buber's death, this volume takes the reader through Buber's three visits to America, his wife's death, the author's stay in Jerusalem, and the articulation of Buber's culminating philosophy of the interhuman. In tracing this chronology, Friedman draws extensively on his personal collection of letters exchanged with Buber.

Produktbeschreibung
Maurice Friedman and Martin 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 Buber's death, this volume takes the reader through Buber's three visits to America, his wife's death, the author's stay in Jerusalem, and the articulation of Buber's culminating philosophy of the interhuman. In tracing this chronology, Friedman draws extensively on his personal collection of letters exchanged with Buber.
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Autorenporträt
Maurice Friedman is professor emeritus of religious studies, philosophy, and comparative literature at San Diego State University, where he taught from 1973-1991 and is co-director of the Institute for Dialogical Psychotherapy in San Diego. He has written nearly twenty books, four of which were on Martin Buber.