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Eu e Tu

by Martin Buber
Publisher: Paulinas Editora, October of 2014 ‧
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Toda a vida humana é um coexistir na dimensão quotidiana do tu e eu, mas também na dimensão absoluta e definitiva do eu e Tu. A tradição bíblica gira em torno deste TU, que é antes de mais o Deus de Abraão, de Isaac e de Jacob, o Deus dos pais, e, em seguida, o Deus de Jesus Cristo e dos Apóstolos, o Deus da nossa fé. A nossa fé é profundamente antropológica, está enraizada constitutivamente na coexistência, na comunidade do povo de Deus e na comunhão com esse eterno Tu. Uma existência assim é essencial na nossa tradição judaico-cristã e provém da iniciativa do próprio Deus» (João Paulo II).

Eu e Tu

by Martin Buber

Property Description
ISBN: 9789896733957
Publisher: Paulinas Editora
Release Date: October of 2014
Language: Portuguese
Dimensions: 144 x 217 x 12 mm
Cover: Softcover
Pages: 136
Format: Book
Collection: Biblioteca Indispensável
Categories: Books in Portuguese > Faith & Religion > Catholicism
EAN: 5603658195033

O universo nas profundezas do ser humano

Filipe

É um livro que tem uma linguagem bastante poética, com influência na teologia, onde mostra as profundezas do ser humano através da experiência.

Universal

A.

A relação com os outros, abordada num texto singular. Inserido numa coleção de excelente qualidade.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Martin Buber

Martin Buber was born in Vienna on February 8, 1878, and died in Jerusalem in 1965. It was through his grandfather, Salomon Buber, a Talmudist residing in Galicia (in present-day Ukraine), that he became acquainted with Hasidism. Contact with Hasidic wisdom and the deepening of its teachings caused him such a profound and spiritual upheaval that it ultimately determined his future life paths and all his subsequent philosophical reflection, as is evident from his earliest works: The Stories of Rabbi Nachman and The Legend of Baal Shem. After finishing his university studies, he also embraced the Zionist cause, of which he was a sympathizer, collaborating as an editor for the newspaper Die Welt, the movement's organ. In this context, Buber advocated for the creation of a "binational, Israeli-Palestinian" Jewish state; in his opinion, a state solely for Jews would lead to "the great modern deception." From 1924 to 1933, in Frankfurt, he dedicated himself to teaching, along with the study of the thought of several philosophers, with particular emphasis on Kierkegaard (1813-1855). In 1938, he left Europe to settle in Palestine, where he began teaching Jewish Religious Studies and Ethics at the University of Jerusalem.

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