Today the tempter does not lead the creative man to a high mountain to — Maurice Stanley Friedman
"Today the tempter does not lead the creative man to a high mountain to show him all the kingdoms and splendor of the world, as Satan did to Jesus. Instead he tempts him through infinity — to lose himself in the inessential, to roam about in the great confusion in which all human clarity and definiteness has ceased. Thus the threat of infinity which Buber experienced as a fifteen-year-old now takes on new form — the form of formlessness, of the whirl of unmastered possibilities which every young person who goes out into the world experiences, but which Buber himself experienced to an overwhelming degree."
Maurice Stanley Friedman was an interdisciplinary, interreligious philosopher of dialogue. His intellectual career spanned fifty years of study, teaching, writing, translating, traveling, and mentoring. He co-founded the Institute for Dialogical Psychotherapy. He is known for applying Martin Buber’s philosophy of dialogue to the human sciences. After receiving his Ph.D. in religion and history fro
Maurice Stanley Friedman was an interdisciplinary, interreligious philosopher of dialogue. His intellectual career spanned fifty years of study, teaching, writing, translating, traveling, and mentoring. He co-founded the Institute for Dialogical Psychotherapy. He is known for applying Martin Buber’s philosophy of dialogue to the human sciences. After receiving his Ph.D. in religion and history fro
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