39 pages • 1 hour read
Martin Buber, Transl. Walter KaufmannA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
An antinomy is a contradiction between two beliefs that on their own make sense. Coming from the Greek, antinomy is made up of two words: “anti” for against, and “nomos” for custom or law; thus, an antinomy is something which is contrary to a law or a custom. The author uses the term antinomy to talk about laws or customs that seem to run up against one another in contradictory ways.
In contemporary parlance, a cult is a small and manipulative social group largely defined by adherence to fringe religious beliefs and ruled over by a charismatic leader of some kind. For Buber, however, and for most literature prior to the 20th century, cult is simply a word that refers to a specific mode of prayer and worship. Christian tradition, for instance, speaks of the “cult of the saints,” which just means the devotion directed toward a particular saint or mode of piety.
Eros is love which is characterized by desire. In the Romantic period, Eros came to be seen as primarily romantic and sexual, but this is a narrow and altered view of Eros as conceived in the classical and medieval eras. Eros, rather than being concerned with purely material or sexual desire, was contained in the venue for desire at large; this could be desire for anything at all, but especially desire for another human being who is loved, or for the life of the spirit, especially the desire to be in communion with God.
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