Birth, sehnsucht and creation: reading buber between plato and kierkegaard

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SUMMARY

    On one hand, they must accept human insignificance relative to the world into which they were created, and therefore also in relation to the God who created this world; on the other hand, they must accept that the world was created for human beings, and God therefore accords significance to individual human actions within creation. As a religious philosopher, Buber is centrally concerned with questions relating both to the individual`s mission in the world and to the limits of human ability vis-à-vis God as creator of the world. On the surface, these . . .

     

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