Seeking Communion as Healing Dialogue: Gabriel Marcel's Philosophy for Today discusses society's problems with interpersonal communication, arguing that these issues are more deeply rooted in problems in being. Margaret M. Mullan draws on the work of Gabriel Marcel to explore the meaning of body, of being with, and of being at all in today's world, answering questions about why we are often unable to dialogue with the people around us, why we feel disconnected and alone even in an increasingly technological world, and how these changing technologies expose and sometimes exacerbate our weak connections to others. Engaging Marcel's reflective method and theory of communion, Mullan explores how we seek communion amid technology and proposes that Marcel's reflections are generative contributions to the understanding and study of communication, offering a way to seek healing dialogue in present day. Scholars of communication, philosophy, conflict studies, and media studies will find this book particularly useful.
Autorentext
Margaret M. Mullan is assistant professor at East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania.
Inhalt
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Dialoguing on Edge
Chapter 2: Technology's Changes and Our Diminishing Relationships: Gabriel Marcel's Approach to Technics
Chapter 3: Restlessness and Disunion Within: Our Problems With Being
Chapter 4: Positioning for Communication: Gabriel Marcel's Philosophy of Body
Chapter 5: Seeking Communion Amid Disconnections: Gabriel Marcel's Intersubjectivity
Chapter 6: Seeking Communion as Healing Dialogue: Gabriel Marcel's Philosophy For Now
References
About the Author