A Gabriel Marcel Reader

St. Augustine's Press (2011)
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Abstract

French existentialist philosopher Gabriel Marcel is one of the most influential thinkers of the twentieth century. The central themes of his philosophy, which are developed with a blend of realism, concreteness, and common sense, continue to be relevant for the plight of humanity in the twentieth-first century. All of Marcel’s important ideas are introduced here, ranging from his unique conception of philosophy; to his original approach to epistemology and the nature of knowledge; to his view on the nature of the human person, including the idea of beingin- a-situation and the importance of the “context” that the subject lives in for the subject’s ideas and experiences; to his approach to religious themes, including the issues of the rationality of religious belief, the question of God’s existence, and our longing for the transcendent; and his “concrete approaches” of fidelity, hope, love and faith. There are also selections in which he discusses some of his misgivings about the direction of contemporary culture, especially the effects of technology.

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Brendan Sweetman
Rockhurst University

Citations of this work

Gabriel (-honoré) Marcel.Brian Treanor - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Pedagogy for a Liquid Time.Larry Green & Kevin Gary - 2015 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 35 (1):47-62.

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