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" ("das Zwischenmenschliche").
== See also ==
Dialogical analysis
Dialogical self
Interfaith dialogue
Intersubjectivity
== 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
== External links ==
Martin Buber, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
I and Thou – selected passages
[1] - Margulies, Hune (2017), Will and Grace:
Meditations on the Dialogical Philosophy of
Martin Buber..
