Philosophe

Martin Buber

1878 - 1965

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Martin Buber (en allemand: /ˈmaʁtiːn̩ ˈbuːbɐ/, ? Écouter [Fiche]; yiddish: מארטין בובער ; hébreu : מרטין בובר), né le 8 février 1878 à Vienne et mort le 13 juin 1965 à Jérusalem, est un philosophe, conteur et pédagogue israélien et autrichien. En savoir plus sur Wikipédia

His biography is available in 65 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 64 in 2024). Martin Buber is the 134th most popular philosophe (up from 138th in 2024), the 71st most popular biography from Austria (down from 60th in 2019) and the 3rd most popular Austrian Philosophe.

Martin Buber is most famous for his book I and Thou.

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Among Philosophes

Among philosophes, Martin Buber ranks 134 out of 1,267Before him are Pyrrho, Anaximenes of Miletus, Simone Weil, Joseph Priestley, John Wycliffe, and Johann Friedrich Herbart. After him are Zygmunt Bauman, Giambattista Vico, Tommaso Campanella, Philo, Charles Fourier, and Duns Scotus.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1878, Martin Buber ranks 3Before him are Lise Meitner, and Janusz Korczak. After him are John B. Watson, Reza Shah, Gustav Stresemann, Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia, Werner von Blomberg, Manuel L. Quezon, Pancho Villa, André Citroën, and Alfred Döblin. Among people deceased in 1965, Martin Buber ranks 10Before him are Malcolm X, Edward Victor Appleton, W. Somerset Maugham, Syngman Rhee, Albert Schweitzer, and Farouk of Egypt. After him are Eli Cohen, Hermann Staudinger, Stan Laurel, Adlai Stevenson II, Edgard Varèse, and Paul Hermann Müller.

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In Austria

Among people born in Austria, Martin Buber ranks 71 out of 1,424Before him are Amon Göth (1908), Christian Doppler (1803), Oskar Kokoschka (1886), Ernst Kaltenbrunner (1903), Victor Francis Hess (1883), and Archduke Otto of Austria (1865). After him are Richard Adolf Zsigmondy (1865), Kurt Waldheim (1918), Anna Freud (1895), Fritz Pregl (1869), Shmuel Yosef Agnon (1888), and Elfriede Jelinek (1946).

Among Philosophes In Austria

Among philosophes born in Austria, Martin Buber ranks 3Before him are Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889), and Karl Popper (1902). After him are Paul Feyerabend (1924), Josef Breuer (1842), Ivan Illich (1926), Otto Weininger (1880), Alfred Schütz (1899), Otto Neurath (1882), Jean Améry (1912), Karl Leonhard Reinhold (1757), and André Gorz (1923).

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