The Word and the Spiritual Realities (the I and the Thou): Pneumatological Fragments
This volume will constitute the first published English translation of Ferdinand Ebner’s seminal 1921 work, Das Wort und die geistigen realitäten - long available in major languages but never in English. It is frequently compared with Martin Buber’s I and Thou, published in 1923, which actually draws its central I-Thou insight from Ebner.

In recent centuries, Philosophy reflects a turn toward the autonomous subject versus a biblical sense of person. The limits/failures of science manifest in the horrors of World War I led to the emergence of a “Dialogical Personalist Philosophy” in reaction to the universal doubt of Cartesian thought and to German idealism, which engages the idea or representation but not the reality of “things-in-themselves.”

The core of Ebner: human speech is constitutive of human existence: humans are given the “word.” “Having the word” is a miraculous gift from God. It is only in the word, in language, that an “I” meets a “Thou,” that relationship and self-identity can occur, and this word is given in Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh: “In the beginning was the Word”; Jesus, the Logos of St. John’s Gospel, mediates between God and man and “stands” between I and Thou. It is through Jesus that it is possible to address God in the human thou. The key to life’s meaning, to the centrality of relationship, and to God’s continuous action in HIs creation, is found in the I-Thou question: why the I can never be found in itself, and so must look in the thou, while the false I will try to possess the thou as an object of power. This is Ebner’s critique of idealist thought: reality, truth, and personal identity are neither ideas, nor found in ideas, therefore, Descartes’ cogito must be rejected, for the existence of the I can’t be founded or proved by solitary thinking, but only in relation with a thou.
1138509367
The Word and the Spiritual Realities (the I and the Thou): Pneumatological Fragments
This volume will constitute the first published English translation of Ferdinand Ebner’s seminal 1921 work, Das Wort und die geistigen realitäten - long available in major languages but never in English. It is frequently compared with Martin Buber’s I and Thou, published in 1923, which actually draws its central I-Thou insight from Ebner.

In recent centuries, Philosophy reflects a turn toward the autonomous subject versus a biblical sense of person. The limits/failures of science manifest in the horrors of World War I led to the emergence of a “Dialogical Personalist Philosophy” in reaction to the universal doubt of Cartesian thought and to German idealism, which engages the idea or representation but not the reality of “things-in-themselves.”

The core of Ebner: human speech is constitutive of human existence: humans are given the “word.” “Having the word” is a miraculous gift from God. It is only in the word, in language, that an “I” meets a “Thou,” that relationship and self-identity can occur, and this word is given in Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh: “In the beginning was the Word”; Jesus, the Logos of St. John’s Gospel, mediates between God and man and “stands” between I and Thou. It is through Jesus that it is possible to address God in the human thou. The key to life’s meaning, to the centrality of relationship, and to God’s continuous action in HIs creation, is found in the I-Thou question: why the I can never be found in itself, and so must look in the thou, while the false I will try to possess the thou as an object of power. This is Ebner’s critique of idealist thought: reality, truth, and personal identity are neither ideas, nor found in ideas, therefore, Descartes’ cogito must be rejected, for the existence of the I can’t be founded or proved by solitary thinking, but only in relation with a thou.
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The Word and the Spiritual Realities (the I and the Thou): Pneumatological Fragments

The Word and the Spiritual Realities (the I and the Thou): Pneumatological Fragments

The Word and the Spiritual Realities (the I and the Thou): Pneumatological Fragments

The Word and the Spiritual Realities (the I and the Thou): Pneumatological Fragments

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Overview

This volume will constitute the first published English translation of Ferdinand Ebner’s seminal 1921 work, Das Wort und die geistigen realitäten - long available in major languages but never in English. It is frequently compared with Martin Buber’s I and Thou, published in 1923, which actually draws its central I-Thou insight from Ebner.

In recent centuries, Philosophy reflects a turn toward the autonomous subject versus a biblical sense of person. The limits/failures of science manifest in the horrors of World War I led to the emergence of a “Dialogical Personalist Philosophy” in reaction to the universal doubt of Cartesian thought and to German idealism, which engages the idea or representation but not the reality of “things-in-themselves.”

The core of Ebner: human speech is constitutive of human existence: humans are given the “word.” “Having the word” is a miraculous gift from God. It is only in the word, in language, that an “I” meets a “Thou,” that relationship and self-identity can occur, and this word is given in Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh: “In the beginning was the Word”; Jesus, the Logos of St. John’s Gospel, mediates between God and man and “stands” between I and Thou. It is through Jesus that it is possible to address God in the human thou. The key to life’s meaning, to the centrality of relationship, and to God’s continuous action in HIs creation, is found in the I-Thou question: why the I can never be found in itself, and so must look in the thou, while the false I will try to possess the thou as an object of power. This is Ebner’s critique of idealist thought: reality, truth, and personal identity are neither ideas, nor found in ideas, therefore, Descartes’ cogito must be rejected, for the existence of the I can’t be founded or proved by solitary thinking, but only in relation with a thou.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813234069
Publisher: Catholic University of America Press
Publication date: 08/06/2021
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

A Note on the Need for an English Translation of Ebner Krzysztof Skorulski vii

Translator's Note Harold J. Green xi

Editor's Introduction and Acknowledgments Joseph R. Chapel 1

Preface 47

1 Fragment 1. The Spiritual Realities 53

2 Fragment 2. Word and Personality-Origin of the Word-Aloneness-I and Thou 56

3 Fragment 3. Word and Human Becoming-Proofs of God-Atheism-Word and Self-Consciousness-Dependence of the I 64

4 Fragment 4. I Think and It Thinks-Kierkegaard-The Concrete I- Verbalization of Thinking-Ideal, Concrete, Fictitious Thou-Word and Truth 76

5 Fragment 5. Knowledge of the Spiritual Life-The Philosophers and the Word-The Word and the Spiritual Life-Science and the Word-Pneumatology 89

6 Fragment 6. Sense and Senses-The Lower Senses-Hearing and Seeing-Beauty-Musical Intuition-Tone and Word-Word and Spiritual Neediness 97

7 Fragment 7. Reason and Word 116

8 Fragment 8. The Primal Word 124

9 Fragment 9. Consciousness and Being-Conscious-Pneuma and Psyche-Psychology-Insanity 130

10 Fragment 10. The Existence of the I-Idealism-The Word and Love 147

11 Fragment 11. The Oblique Case and the Meaning of the M-Sound 157

12 Fragment 12. Mathematical Thought and the I-Harmony-Descartes-Word and Mathematical Formula-Substance and Ethos-The Principle of Identity-Reality 171

13 Fragment 13. Verb and Sentence-The Meaning of the T-Sound 198

14 Fragment 14. Existential Declaration and Personality-The Becoming and Being of the Spiritual Realities-Love 209

15 Fragment 15. The Human and the Divine-God as Mental Image and as Reality 228

16 Fragment 16. Otto Weininger-Spirit and Sexuality-The Jews-Christ 237

17 Fragment 17. The Ultimate Meaning of the Cogito-Self-Knowledge-Ethos and Grace-Sin and the Word 256

18 Fragment 18. Nature and Spirit, Universal Life, and Individual Existence-Culture and Christianity- Conclusion 270

Index 291

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