MartinBuber_img1.gif Martin Buber
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Two types of relationships: I-It and I-Thou
Buber establishes the necessity of a distinction between types of relationships by noting that humans do not relate to that which is other than their selves as mere things alone. Put more simply, we do not treat others only as objects - as means to an end. Living such that all is treated as an object (in extreme cases, even one's self is considered an object - an It) is a empty and confusing existence. If we see the world only through our experiences, then we will miss much of that which is.
I-It:
We experience most things as just that - things. They do not respond to our perception, they are not changed by it. We experience them as objects - as It. Even if we distinguish between the outer and the inner experiences, we still do not add anything significant or different to our experience. Indeed, Buber claims that even a distinction between those experiences which are open and those which are secret does not add anything. Fundamentally, we still experience the other as an It. There is no relation between observer and observed - no connection. The experience is totally in the observer and not it that which is observed. But this is only part of our awareness of the world.
I-Thou:
We reach a new level of awareness when we approach the other as a Thou - as a relational being. The Thou is changed by my awareness of it in that it responds to my awareness - and thus establishes a relation between I and Thou. Buber notes three ways in which we can become aware of the Thou:
      • In nature: this is the bare minimum awareness of Thou - other creatures can respond to us or not, depending on their own awareness of our Thou-ness. When we attempt to communicate with them (which we would never do with an object), we are at "the threshold of speech" - because we never know if they understand us as a Thou.
      • In other humans: this is the most common experience of another Thou. While we can experience other persons as objects, we only know them as complete beings when we are aware of them as another Thou - a being which we can enter into a relationship with. When we address another, we usually get a response. This establishes the I-Thou relationship with the other, and is fully realized in conversations.
      • In spiritual beings: Here is where we get close to Mysticism in our expression - for Buber says here that "here the relation is clouded, yet it discloses itself; it does not use speech, yet begets it." In the end, we cannot speak of the Thou of which we are aware - yet it still seems to be undeniably here for us.
How do we know if the Thou exists?
"But with what right do we draw what lies outside speech into relation with the world of the primary word?"

The essence of his answer is this: we realize that each thing we encounter can be a Thou if we choose to see it as such.
"In every sphere in its own way, through each process of becoming that is present to us we look out toward the fringe of the eternal Thou. In each we are aware of a breath from the eternal Thou; in each Thou we address the eternal Thou."
We are acutely aware that there is more to the world than our experience of it - there is some profound other of which we are aware, yet cannot express. That of which we are aware is not an It, not an object which can be experienced, but rather something of which we become aware. The clearest way to express this is that we can have a relationship with the other.
Consider a human relationship which has progressed to a deep level of understanding. To some people, this relationship will look like each of the persons in it are treating each other as objects. But to the persons in the relationship, they are aware of the other as a Thou - a being apart from the I, yet also a part of the I. It is a pity that quite a few 'relationships' are nothing of the sort - each of the persons experiences the other as an object, as an It rather than as a Thou. These are the 'relationships' which remain static and which end in disaster. We are unsatisfied with such 'relationships' because we feel they are missing something. We are correct - they are missing the very thing which defines them as relationships - a Thou. A true relationship with the Thou is a dynamic, growing, creative , changing awareness.
But a relationship can only be built on choice - the Thou can "step up to meet me", but I must choose to reciprocate - or the relationship fails. If I go out looking for a relationship by looking for an object, then I will never find that which I seek.
For Buber, the same is true of our 'search' for God - if we see God as a thing, as something to be experienced, then we will be frustrated in our search. God is not an It, but rather is a Thou. All that we need to do to find God is to choose to become aware of God. How do we do that?
"If you explore the life of things and of conditioned being you come to the unfathomable (witness the current state of physics), if you deny the life of things and of conditioned being you stand before nothingness (are you listening, Nietzsche?), if you hallow this life you meet the living God."
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