Martin Buber's I and Thou On Marriage And The Divine.
This paper discusses specific themes in Martin Buber's work of religious philosophy and ethics, "I and Thou" (Kaufmann translation). The paper addresses the importance of marriage as part of human experience, as well as Buber's opinion that human experience is profoundly isolating without marriage. He cites the Whorf-Sapir hypothesis, often used to support the idea that humans are hopelessly alone even with communication, but Buber refutes this, citing the "Eternal Thou" or divine spark in each of us, which transcends our initial isolation. 4pgs. No sources/ Bibliography.