a master’s project wittman...alfred adler and martin buber’s views of spirituality,...
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Running head: TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
1
Alfred Adler and Martin Buber: Telling the Dancer from the Dance
A Master’s Project
Presented to
The Faculty of the Adler Graduate School
_______________
In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for
The Degree of Master of Arts in
Adlerian Counseling and Psychotherapy
________________
By:
Ives K. Wittman
________________
Chair: Roger Ballou
Member: Herb Laube
________________
April 2016
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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Abstract
This project argues for Alfred Adler’s study of the soul in the creative force, claiming of
inferiorities, unity and holism, and social interest as expressions of spirituality and a striving for
perfection in a similar fashion to Martin Buber’s I-Thou philosophy of dialogue and his
interpretations of Hasidism as a way to re-vision Judaism. Adler’s study of the soul and Buber’s
I-Thou philosophy create a spiritual subjectivity that grounds the therapeutic relationship
between therapist and client. This project demonstrates through a historical perspective of Adler
and Buber’s lives and a comparison of Individual Psychology to Buber’s Hasidism and the
I-Thou relationship how Adler’s psychology and Buber’s spirituality and his views of
psychotherapy utilize an intersubjective and spiritual space for shared movement and an innate
striving to overcome in the therapist and client relationship.
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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Table of Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 4
The Argument ................................................................................................................................. 6
Part I: Background: Alfred Adler and Martin Buber ..................................................................... 8
Family Backgrounds and Early Childhood ................................................................................. 8
Religious and Spiritual Overview ............................................................................................. 11
Martin Buber’s Hasidism and Dialogical Spirituality .......................................................... 11
Alfred Adler, Jewish Roots, God, and Religion ................................................................... 14
Summary ................................................................................................................................... 17
Part 2: Individual Psychology, Buber’s Hasidism and Judaism .................................................. 17
Comparative Studies of Judaism and Individual Psychology ................................................... 18
Summary ............................................................................................................................... 23
Buber’s Early Hasidism as Jewish Spirituality ......................................................................... 24
Hasidism: Historical, spiritual, religious, and cultural landscape. ........................................ 24
An Adlerian response to Hasidism and Judaism................................................................... 25
Buber’s engagement with Judaism and Hasidism. ............................................................... 27
Buber’s reorientation of Hasidism and Judaism. .................................................................. 28
Buber’s Early Hasidism and Adler’s Individual Psychology - Primal and Subjective............. 30
Summary ................................................................................................................................... 32
Part 3: Therapeutic Implications: Buber’s I-Thou and Adlerian Therapy ................................... 33
Adlerian Community and Spirituality – Brief Literature Survey ............................................. 33
Adler and Buber Meeting Through Ferdinand Tonnies and Gemeinschaftsgefühl .................. 37
Adler and Buber Meeting Through Jääskeläinen (2000) .......................................................... 39
Adler’s Striving to Overcome and Creative Force and Spirituality .......................................... 41
Definitions of spirituality ...................................................................................................... 43
Buber’s I and Thou ................................................................................................................... 45
The Thou. .............................................................................................................................. 47
I-thou relationship and therapy. ............................................................................................ 48
Intersubjectivity, I-thou, and therapy. ................................................................................... 49
Adlerian Therapy Meets I-Thou Relationship .......................................................................... 50
Therapy in Meeting ................................................................................................................... 52
Forming the relationship. ...................................................................................................... 53
Assessment, analysis, and re-orientation. ............................................................................. 54
Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 56
References ..................................................................................................................................... 59
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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Introduction
In the dance of therapy, movement occurs when the therapist and client risk the
wholeness of their being in a relationship. A meeting of subjectivities and souls co-mingle in a
sanctuary for healing anxiety and neurosis. In the therapeutic moment, the spiritual work of
meeting convenes. Presence and connection engage the I-Thou relationship between therapist
and client. Genuine dialogue activates the creative force of therapist and client in a mutual
striving to overcome. Transcendence leads to alignment and engagement, the first step of the
four-step model of Adlerian therapy.
Alfred Adler and Martin Buber’s views of spirituality, psychotherapy, and community
offer a therapist a deeper understanding of his or her immanent resources in work with clients.
Through Adler’s Individual Psychology and his concept of the creative force and Buber’s
personal engagement of Judaism as he envisioned it through Hasidism and his I-Thou dialogical
philosophy of relationship, Adler and Buber offer a framework for spirituality, soul work, and
subjectivity in the in-between space of the therapeutic encounter. Through the creative force and
the I-Thou relationship, an intersubjective and interhuman striving to overcome provokes both
client and therapist towards mutual self-discovery and goal striving.
An overarching spiritual theme between Adler and Buber’s outlooks was their view of
the soul as intrinsic to the human spirit. Adler and Buber believed in the healing of the soul as a
priori to well-being and one’s striving in interpersonal and communal relationships (Buber,
1958/2006; Duba, 2012). Buber and Adler’s focus on the soul leaves them somewhat at odds
with a current institution charged with promoting the counseling profession. A current white
paper on the concept of spirituality posted by the Association for Spiritual, Ethical, and Religious
Values in Counseling (ASERVIC), a division of the American Counseling Association (n.d.),
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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considers concepts of “meaning,” “innate,” “unique,” “creativity,” “transcendence,”
“connectedness,” “compassion,” “life force,” and “wholeness” (paras 3, 4, 5, & 6); however,
nowhere in the document does one find mention of the soul. The omission of the soul in an
institutional treatise on spirituality and psychology eerily recalls Adler’s criticisms of the
psychological institutions of his day. In a piece from 1935 entitled “The Structure of Neurosis,”
Adler stated, “The very word ‘psychology’ means science of the soul” (Duba, 2012, p. 218). He
rebuked the “schools” of psychology and their work as “mechanistic” (p. 218) excluding the soul
as part of the holistic nature of the human condition. Adler’s statement harkened back to Greek
roots of psychology with Aristotle’s work on the soul that eventually gave way to a mechanistic
view of psychology beginning with Renee Descartes (Vidal, 2011). The Enlightenment
reconfiguring of psychology led to the field’s focus away from the study of the soul to the study
of the mind. Buber and Adler’s shared views of the soul and relationship challenged the
institutions of their times.
Like Adler, Buber professed the unique soul of persons as central to healing and
wholeness. His re-visioning of Judaism with Hasidism and soul emphasis challenged the
institution of traditional, rabbinic Judaism. Buber espoused his soul views in his comments on
psychotherapy when he wrote, “The sicknesses of the soul are sicknesses of relationship. They
can only be treated completely if I translate the realm of the patient and add to it the world as
well” (Agassi, 1999, p. xi). The relationship between the client and therapist becomes the
immediate world of healing: a relationship embodied by spirituality and subjectivity. Friedman
(1960) argued that Buber’s ideas of dialogue stemmed from a person’s wholeness and “when the
soul achieves unification” (p. 95). This meant the “unity of all faculties within the personality
that constitutes wholeness of man, and it is this that Buber calls spirit” (p. 92). Furthermore,
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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Friedman (1960) quoted Buber as saying “he who lives the life of dialogue knows a lived unity:
the unity of life” (p. 92) where living with presence and dialogue is a “being that is whole in
itself” (p. 94). Adler stressed the unity of personality informed by a creative force while Buber
professed unification of the soul within the I-Thou relationship of dialogue. In the therapist and
client encounter, telling the dancer from the dance becomes the spiritual dance of souls. Healing
towards wholeness becomes a transcendent experience for therapist and client.
The Argument
This project is a comparison of Buber and Adler that has yet to be fully explored in the
realm of spirituality. Jääskeläinen (2000) appeared to be the only peer-reviewed comparative
study of Buber and Adler. The author briefly described similarities between the work of the two
men that included Kantian epistemologies, pragmatism, I and Thou relations, social interest,
empathy and understanding, dialogue, meanings of life, and therapeutic implications. This
project continues to draw on Jääskeläinen’s (2000) as a signpost for the current investigations
into Adler and Buber.
This project begins by briefly exploring the crossing points in the backgrounds of Adler
and Buber as they informed their life work in psychotherapy and spirituality. One comes to
realize that although the men may have never met face to face, they were influenced by similar
geographic, spiritual-religious, and cultural spheres. Both Buber and Adler came from Austrian
backgrounds and spent portions of their childhood and adult lives in Vienna. Both men were
born into Jewish families with differing degrees of traditions and observance. Around 1910,
Buber’s re-visioning of Judaism through Hasidism pushed against traditional Jewish norms in
Western European Jewry. It was at this time, around 1911, that Adler broke from Freud and
developed Individual Psychology. Similar to Buber, Adler quickly found himself up against
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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powerful institutions. In this case, rather than traditional Judaism and rabbinic traditions, Adler
challenged psychoanalysis, the dominant psychotherapy of the time, and the institutions that
were embracing it - academia and modern medicine.
The project also discusses connections between the I-Thou relationship, Individual
Psychology, Judaism, and Hasidism. It is readily acknowledged that Hasidism in part forms the
central tenets of Buber’s I-Thou relationship, and there have been several comparisons of Adler’s
Individual Psychology to Jewish religious traditions. It is the contention that Individual
Psychology concepts of unity and holism, social interest and community feeling (or in the native
German gemeinschaftsfgefühl), claiming of inferiorities, movement and striving for perfection,
and the creative force resemble aspects of Buber’s spirituality in Hasidic Jewish tradition.
Buber’s religious and spiritual view of Judaism through Hasidism matured into what Kramer
(2012) identified as “dialogical spirituality” (p. xx). Throughout this project, the writer draws on
Kramer (2012) to integrate a relevant, compassionate, and contemporary perspective on Buber’s
spirituality, Hasidism, and his I-Thou relation in psychotherapy.
This project concludes with the argument that Adler and Buber’s common belief in the
uniqueness and creativity of the person and his or her connection to a spiritual source comingle
in an intersubjective encounter between therapist and client. This encounter represents an I-Thou
and I-It relational event that engages the first stage of the four-stage model of Adlerian therapy –
establishing the therapeutic relationship (Carlson, Maniacci, & Watts, 2005; Oberst & Stewart,
2003; Watts, 2014).
The I-Thou and I-It dynamic can determine the foundation for the client’s healing and
activates mutual self-discovery between client and therapist for the remaining three stages of
Alderian therapy: assessment and analysis, interpretation and insight, and re-orientation. Each
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party uses his or her subjectivity towards an innate striving to overcome in the between space of
the Thou. Both the therapist and client act as channels for the creative force and life force in the
soul healing of the client.
Part I: Background: Alfred Adler and Martin Buber
Alfred Adler and Martin Buber spent portions of their childhood in Austria and inhabited
the intellectual milieu of Austria and Germany in the first third of the 1900s. Both men were
born into Jewish families and distanced themselves from their Jewish roots with Buber coming
back to Judaism through Hasidism and Adler going on to convert to Protestantism. Both men
also confronted traditional institutions of the Enlightenment. Jääskeläinen’s (2000) brief
comparative study of Buber and Adler argued that both men were seekers with philosophical and
conceptual similarities, yet Adler was much more “concrete” (p. 142) and “straightforward”
(p. 142) than Buber. Buber might be considered more complex and intricate with a transparency
difficult at times to pinpoint. One might also add that Adler’s presentations were deceptively
simple in contrast to Buber’s work, which could come across as dense yet opaque.
Family Backgrounds and Early Childhood
Alfred Adler’s grandparents were among the first wave of Jewish immigrants who moved
from Hungary to Vienna, Austria, around the 1850s and 1860s (Hoffman, 1994). Adler was born
in 1870 in Vienna, the second son of seven children. His older brother, with whom he did not
get along, was “bright” and “domineering” (p. 4) and received the lion’s share of attention from
his parents. Adler’s father and mother, Leopold and Pauline, did not provide an intellectual
family environment. His father, who ran a grain business with the help of Alfred’s mother, had
“minimal educational and intellectual drive” (Hoffman, 1994, p. 5); however, Alder’s father
wanted him to succeed academically. Their family valued the “pragmatic” (p. 10) aspects of
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education as did most of the Jewish community in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Leopold also
had a keen interest in music that became an integral part of the family environment, and the
young Adler took to it with vigor. Adler engaged in an active social life as a child with many
friends, and Hoffman (1994) indicated that Adler believed these early childhood encounters
strongly impacted his psychological approach, impressing upon him the significance of “feeling
of solidarity with others” and “understanding of the need for cooperation” (p. 5). Adler’s desire
for connection with others and his upbeat, outgoing personality continued to serve him
throughout his adult years (Deutsch, Manaster, Overholt, & Painter, 1977; Hoffman, 1994).
Adler’s prosocial tendencies in childhood and his vitality contrast several difficult
experiences he encountered as a 4 and 5-year-old. These included his bout with rickets, the loss
of his younger brother with whom he had great affection, and his brush with death due to
pneumonia. Adler’s encounter with pneumonia motivated him to become a doctor (Adler, n.d.)
and his other near death experiences may have inspired him with the grit and determination that
led to his striving to overcome.
Like Adler, Martin Buber was also born and raised in Vienna, Austria. Buber, who was
born in 1878 (8 years later than Alder), experienced his mother’s disappearance and was sent to
live with his paternal grandparents at the age of 3 (Friedman, 1983; Kramer 2003). While
coming to terms with his mother’s loss at 4 years old, Buber was told by a girl his same age that
she was never going to come back, and at that moment Friedman (1983) contended a
“mismeeting” (p. 5) as recalled by Buber became the hallmark moment for him for the rest of his
life. The gulf he felt between himself and his mother once he met with her briefly a few years
later set him on a path of seeking divine understanding and connection. He sought to reconcile
something he perceived as part of the human condition, this being a lack of mutual interaction
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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between persons. Kramer (2003) contended the lack of mutual interaction belies “a sense of
insecurity [that] is often associated with meeting the Thou” (p. 46) coupled with a person’s
struggling with eternal loss.
Unlike Adler, Buber grew up the first 9 years of his life in relative isolation and
loneliness from peers. His grandparents raised him until he was 14 years old, and he did not
attend school until he was 10 years old. His grandparents arranged private tutors for their
grandson in lieu of a school-based education (Friedman, 1983). Both grandparents held
traditional Jewish beliefs about learning. Buber’s grandmother, Adele Buber, introduced him to
language and reading, and his grandfather, Solomon Buber, the “last great scholar of Haskalah or
the Jewish Enlightenment” (p. 11), introduced him to the virtues of scholarship. Solomon was a
high profile member of the Jewish community known across the region and revered by both
Hasidic and traditional Jewish rabbis and writers (Friedman, 1983). Buber’s grandmother was
highly educated, and her father was a disciple of a Hasidic Rabbi. She revered the spoken word.
This along with the bustling Jewish quarter where one regularly heard German, Polish, Yiddish,
and Hebrew, exposed Buber to the power of language and dialogue. His grandmother’s
reverence for the “integral unity of word and thought” (Friedman, 1983, p. 7) left an indelible
impression on the young Buber. In his isolation, he created dual language conversations and
quickly came to a revelation around the “essence of dialogical understanding not as precise
definition, technical communication, or subjective empathy, but as ‘inclusion’” (Friedman, 1983,
p. 7). Buber eventually learned to speak nine languages, among them German, Hebrew, Polish,
English, French, and Italian. He also and read Spanish, Latin, and Greek.
Comparing Buber and Adler’s early childhood, one recognizes the Jewish values of
community and education and how traumatic events in early childhood gave each the clarity and
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seeds of direction for their lives’ work. For Adler, life reflected a down-to-earth and socially
engaged experience, while for Buber, life moved him toward scholarly and religious endeavors.
For each man, a series of illnesses and death and near-death experiences early on informed
professional directions. For Adler, this included his conviction to become a physician and the
importance of social and relational connections as foundational constructs for social interest and
community feeling culminating in his later ideas of gemeinschaftsfgefühl. For Buber, the loss of
his mother and closeness to his grandmother brought about the power of language, unity of the
word, and initial dialogical encounters and relationship.
Religious and Spiritual Overview
Adler and Buber’s embrace of Jewish religious and spiritual traditions offer a differing
view. Jewish parents raised both men; however, while Adler eschewed his Jewish roots, Buber
grew more curious and gripped by them.
Martin Buber’s Hasidism and Dialogical Spirituality. Buber has been identified as a
religious existentialist and anthropological philosopher (Breslauer, 1996; Friedman, 1983;
Kramer, 2003). His philosophy of the life of dialogue out of which sprung the “I-Thou relation”
had its religious and spiritual roots in Hasidism (Breslauer, 1996; Friedman, 1983; Kramer,
2003; Kramer, 2012). A large part of Buber’s early engagement of Hasidism led him to focus on
the mystical elements of the movement. He eventually recognized these as another way to
remove one’s self from reality. Later, as he refined his understanding of Hasidism, Buber came
to a deeper understanding of Hasidism and incorporated that understanding in his formulation of
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his I-Thou relational philosophy.1 Kramer (2012) has labeled Buber’s spiritual approach as
dialogical spirituality.
According to Kramer (2012), what makes Buber’s contemporary spiritual perspectives so
unique is the centrality of “‘genuine dialogue’ – direct, honest, open, spontaneous, mutual
communication – at the center of the soul’s search for God” (p. xxvii). Genuine dialogue has its
roots in Buber’s Hasidism that was not about ritualistic, institutional, or intellectual striving but a
unique relational engagement with the world, with his or her fellow human beings, and God.
This was tied intrinsically to the “hallowing” of everyday life (Kramer, 2012, p. xx). For Buber,
every moment of life and interaction between persons and between God is sacred, and Jewish
renewal begins with the individual embedded in Hasidic community.
Buber’s religious and spiritual pedigrees began in the first 14 years of his life with his
grandfather, Solomon Buber. As noted earlier, his grandfather introduced him to the merits of
scholarship. More importantly, his grandfather gave him early exposure to traditional, rabbinic
Judaism (Friedman, 1983) as well as encounters with the Hasidic community. Because Buber’s
father was well-known and respected by traditional rabbinic and Hasidic communities, the young
Buber saw a legalistic, rabbinic, and academic Judaism formalized through intense study and
interpretation of historical and biblical texts as well as the Hasidic community’s fervent
engagement with life and community. These somewhat contradictory embraces of Jewish
religious tradition left Buber vexed and in disconnection over how to reconcile the two forms of
Judaism (Friedman, 1983; Kramer, 2012).
1 This project continues to draw on the evolution of Buber’s interpretations and presentations of
Judaism and Hasidism as they relate to Individual Psychology, Dialogical Spirituality, and the
I-Thou relational encounter in therapy.
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In his 20th year, Buber’s disconnection spurred him to voraciously study Hebrew texts
for several years. During this period, he discovered a collection of sayings from the founder of
the Hasidic movement, Israel Ben Eliezer (1700-1760). Buber was enthralled by his discovery
of this collection of sayings and legacy of oral stories passed down by Hasidism. Their focus on
the hallowing of every moment and every human encounter brought him to the realization of
“the primal human reality” of “the idea of the perfected person” (Kramer, 2012,
p. xxxiv). The perfected person came to mean how one sought unification with a spiritual force
that permeates all life rather than a force allocated to specific spheres of life such as religion or
bestowed in certain individuals. Everyone experiences the transcendent. Everyone can
experience transcendence to more fully participate in his or her life through his or her own
unique way in an ongoing becoming of his or her perfection in alignment with God.
After this revelation, Buber in his early 20s withdrew for several years from public life to
immerse himself in the Hasidic culture. He reappeared to produce and publish Hasidic stories
with the collective wisdom of Hasidism as Buber came to envisioned it (Kramer, 2012). Central
to the Hasidic dialogical and spiritual encounter as Buber experienced it was the teacher-student
relationship between the Hasid and the leader of each Hasidic community, zaddik, sometimes
referred to as a helper and spiritual guide (Breslauer, 1996). Unlike the traditional Judaic
practices of pouring over religious texts as a primary way to achieve the divine connection, the
zaddik guided, channeled, and cultivated within his students spiritual teachings and connection
with God through personalized lived experiences. Through stories and relational dialogue,
zaddiks passed down Hasidic lore, traditions, and ways of unification with God (Breslauer,
1996). By his mid to late 20s, Buber’s spiritual understanding of Judaism had transformed into
the realization that the life of the Hasid (one who practices Hasidism) was directed towards
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living spiritual values in relation to the world that was “more desirable than any intellectual
achievement” (Kramer, 2012, p. xxxv). In dialogue with others in presentness and inclusion of
the Other, one brought himself or herself into “authentic (I-Thou) dialogue” (Kramer, 2012, p.
xxxv) with God. Through its practice of dialogue in community and God, Hasidism provided the
platform for Buber’s dialogical spirituality that helped him initially recast and rejuvenate
Judaism and eventually mature towards his I-Thou relational philosophy.
Kramer (2012) went on to point out two other significant aspects of Buber’s dialogical
spirituality. First, the fullness of one’s life and being are found in genuine dialogue with another
and with God. This dialogue occurs in the
insecure narrow ridge between the scared and everyday (p. xxxiv) . . . between absolute
truths, between dualisms of life and death, good and bad and God and the world (p.
xxxviii) . . . a space in which there is no certainty of expressible knowledge and where
the dialogical meeting between God and human beings occurs. (Kramer, 2012, p. xxxvi)
Buber’s spirituality seen in this vein remains dynamic and ever changing. Connection
remains tenuous, abiding, and eternal. Relationships become another expression of a divine
space that invigorates Buber’s Hasidic philosophy of “renewal and self-transformation”
(Breslauer, 1996, p. 67). Relational transcendence offers an interhuman experience of soul
connection through a wholeness of mind-body-spirit (Kramer, 2012). From an Adlerian
perspective, Buber’s narrow ridge reflects the place where striving to overcome, in this case, the
uncertainty of what one meets in another person in relationship, and what one meets in one’s self
in that encounter, engages movement from a felt minus to a perceived plus and willingness to
trust in one’s primal urges to adapt and develop within the relationship.
Alfred Adler, Jewish Roots, God, and Religion. Sources offer contradictory views on
the Jewish tradition of Adler’s immediate family. Rietveld (2004) described Adler’s parents as
“faithful, pious, but not strictly Orthodox” (p. 209). According to Rietveld, Adler disengaged
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
15
from this Jewish tradition, and at the age of 34, became a member of the Evangelic (Lutheran)
denomination and had his children baptized. In contrast, Hoffman (1994) stated that Adler’s
family had “minimal Jewish observance” and considered “Judaism irrelevant to their lives”
(p. 8). Adler’s father was “generous” and “elegant” but not a religious man (Hoffman, 1994,
p. 5). Adler had few memories of his Jewish upbringing, and those he remembered were mostly
unimpressionable. The Adler family lived four of Adler’s boyhood years in a Jewish designated
ghetto in Leopoldstadt, Vienna. Interestingly, autobiographical references by Adler never
mention this (Hoffman, 1994, p. 10). This view dovetails with Hoffman’s (1994) assertion that
Vienna’s Jewish population and their practice in Jewish tradition was waning. Most Jews saw
Judaism as a relic of the past.
In the mid-1890s, as Vienna’s Jewish community moved towards secularism and anti-
Semitism escalated, socialism began to attract many Jews who were intellectually curious about
Marx and Engels. Adler joined his fellow Jews in this movement, and Hoffman (1994) noted
that Adler at 20, the same age Buber was embarking on a quest to delve deeper into the meaning
of his Jewish heritage, was moving in the opposite direction by disconnecting from Judaism.
Hoffman (1994) intimated that Adler, like his fellow socialist contemporaries, may have
distained and rejected his Jewish roots. In contrast to Buber, where Judaism was central to all
facets of family life, Adler’s communal and familial environments deemed Judaism unnecessary
and irrelevant. Buber’s upbringing may have insulated him from the harsh effects of Jewish
assimilationist movements and anti-Semitism, while Adler’s left him directly exposed and
accelerated his break with Judaism by economic and social necessity. Buber also embraced
socialism early in life but he did so with a religious tradition steeped in Judaism. In 1904, Adler
was baptized as a Protestant, a religious conversion common for many Jews in Vienna at the
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time (Hoffman, 1994). Engagement with the wider Western culture in Vienna was much more
appealing than holding onto an inconsequential and debilitative Judaism increasingly under anti-
Semitic attack. Symbolic remnants of Adler’s Jewish heritage continued in his marriage to
Raissa and his ongoing connections with socialists.
If one looks outside of Adler’s Jewish experience, a brief commentary on his views of
organized religion, God, and spirituality suggests a spectrum from skepticism to psychological
necessity. Ansbacher and Ansbacher (1956) contended that Adler viewed God as more an “idea”
as opposed to a “reality” (p. 460). Others argue that Adler’s idea of God and even spirituality is
in part a psychological construct that could be viewed as a fiction used by an individual in his or
her striving for perfection from a felt-minus to a perceived-plus originating from a feeling of
inferiority (Ansbacher, 1978; Ansbacher & Ansbacher, 1956; Mansager, 2000; Peluso, 2012;
Watts, 2012). For many, God offers a representation of “ultimate values” in living towards self-
development and the common good in community (Mansager, 2000, p. 383; Watts, 2012). In the
process of striving for perfection in the image of God, one does so in wholeness, unity, and self-
transcendence. Later in this project, these ideas are further explored in the relationship between
one’s development of social interest and community feeling to one’s spirituality.
In Ansbacher and Ansbacher (1979), Adler prefaced his comments on religion by stating
the “human soul, as part of the movement of life” (p. 276) has the capacity towards perfection
and completion. He went on to commend characteristics of religious striving that included
“sanctification of human relations,” “unification with God – a goal setting God . . . and the goal
of redemption from all evil” (Ansbacher & Ansbacher, 1979, p. 278-279). He also attributed
God “as a gift of faith” (Ansbacher & Ansbacher, 1956, p. 277) and identified the unique ways
each person perceives their understanding of God as a reflection of their striving to develop
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(Ansbacher, 1978; Mansager, 2000; Peluso, 2012; Watts, 2012). While Adler acknowledged the
value of religious striving, he also held religion’s institutional structures with suspicion due to
their power, dogmas, and purposes.
Summary
As one ponders the Jewish upbringings of Adler and Buber, one has to marvel at the
divergent paths each man took towards his spiritual and religious traditions. Buber was steeped
in a family tradition of rabbinic Judaism with frequent exposure to vibrant Hasidic communities.
Buber went on to live a life driven by divine seeking and connection. For Adler, his family’s
distant and uninspired secular Judaism never held his attention and he eventually renounced his
Jewish tradition; however, it was his childhood hardships that formed ambitions towards the
medical profession and eventually psychology and foreshadowed his development of social
interest and community feeling. For Buber, the loss of his mother brought revelatory insight and
intensified his quest for deeper understanding of the connections between time, space, and
eternity that he eventually worked out in his I-Thou relational and dialogical philosophies. This
project continues to build on the intersections and connections between Buber and Adler. The
next section and thereafter offers a deeper unfolding and understanding of Hasidism, Judaism,
Buber’s dialogical spirituality and I-Thou relational philosophy, and Adler’s Individual
Psychology.
Part 2: Individual Psychology, Buber’s Hasidism and Judaism
Despite Adler’s formal break with Judaism, many of the core tenets of Individual
Psychology can be seen in Jewish philosophy as well as applied to the spiritual and philosophical
foundations of Buber’s Judaism as envisioned by Buber through his discovery of Hasidism. This
section of the project includes a brief survey of articles from the Adlerian community on the
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similarities between Judaism and Individual Psychology. The writer provides a more in depth
investigation of Buber’s Hasidism by integrating his early encounters with Hasidism as well as
his more mature understanding of Hasidic philosophy. It includes an analysis, from an
Individual Psychology point of view, of Buber’s re-visioned Judaism from his Hasidic
perspective in a series of speeches given between 1909 and 1918 and his other writings. Buber’s
speeches revolutionized Judaism at the time, setting a new direction for the Jewish Renaissance.
The Jewish Renaissance started at the turn of the twentieth century. It marked the beginning of
the end of the Jewish Enlightenment when institutionalized Judaism had dominated the religious
landscape. Buber’s challenge to Jewish traditionalism offered a generation of disillusioned Jews
a new way to embrace their religion with spiritually, renewed meaning, and vigor.
Buber’s language is remarkably similar to that of Individual Psychology. The dates of
Buber’s early addresses also coincided with Adler’s split from Freud in 1911. Buber, in his
discussion of Judaism, used verbatim terminology articulated by Adler in the principles and
concepts of Individual Psychology. Buber challenged the Jewish people, who at the time were
disillusioned and spiritually empty. His perspective offers a way to see how the anxiety and
neurosis of the Jewish spirit stemmed from its disconnection from the primal and ancestral roots
of Judaism.
Comparative Studies of Judaism and Individual Psychology
There are several works that compare Judaism and Jewish philosophy and Adler’s
theories of Individual Psychology. They include a spectrum from messianic Judaism to more
traditional and rabbinic Judaism. In most cases, the authors highlighted the more moral, cultural,
religious, and pragmatic constructs of Judaism and how it reflects tenets of Adlerian theory
through the tension between moral obligation of the individual and socially useful engagement in
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19
community; the individual’s right, free will, and responsibility towards moral and religious
development; and in one’s striving for perfection in right living through the God ideal where one
is part and parcel of God in unity and holism.
Kaplan and Schoeneberg (1987) investigated rabbinic tradition of Judaism from the
second to sixth centuries and personality theory in the Adlerian paradigm. Both rabbinic
tradition and Adlerian theory uphold “moral responsibility and free-will” (p. 316). In both
rabbinic tradition and Alderian theory, individuals make decisions and strive for goals in
behaviors that either enhance or diminish social interest and self-esteem. For Adler, one’s
behaviors are caused by a “mysterious creative power of life” (p. 316). Historical rabbinic
tradition asserted opposing God-like energies that harmoniously work together to pull one
towards “positive inclination . . . yetzer tov” and “negative inclination . . . yetzer rah” (p. 316).
These concepts go beyond their literal meaning. Like social interest, Jewish tradition holds each
person responsible for balancing yetzer tov and yetzer yah towards moral, religious, and
personality development toward socially useful engagement. When one fails to do this, feelings
of inferiority and misguided fictions decrease the likelihood of one choosing “socially useful
behaviors” (Kaplan & Schoeneberg, 1987, p. 317). Kaplan and Schoeneberg (1987) offered a
powerful argument that social interest and inferiority feelings and fictions find their roots in
Jewish traditions more than 1500 years old.
Weiss-Rosmarin (1990) presented a comparative study of Judaism and Individual
Psychology to facilitate cooperation between psychoanalysis and religion to meet the need for
“a psychology with a soul” (p. 117). Weiss-Rosmarin (1990) identified Jewish messianism as a
branch of Judaism that upholds movement from the “minus position of imperfection to the plus
position of perfection” (p. 114). Striving for perfection, holism, and unity can be seen in Jewish
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
20
messianism. This views self-transcendence without directly referring to God as the source of
transcendence but rather highlighting the upward movement of the individual. Striving for
perfection and self-transcendence were core concepts for Adler and his Individual Psychology.
For Messianism, the striving for perfection was also a striving to be “whole” (holism; p. 115).
Weiss-Rosmarin (1990) also argued that more traditional Judaism set forth the striving
for perfection with a conception of God similar to what Adler professed for Individual
Psychology. Like Adler’s own opinion, Judaism offers God with no “unilateral definition”
(p. 113). Each Jew brings his or her own unique understanding to God. For Adler, “Each person
imagines his God differently” (Watts, 2012, p. 50). In addition to individual conceptions of God,
and God as the goal of perfection, Jewish tradition similar to Individual Psychology believes
each person is a blank slate. For Individual Psychology, this appears as the creative power of the
individual’s movement and personality formation. This creative power manifested in Judaism
means “freedom of will and action as unlimited” (Weiss-Rosmarin, 1990, p. 114).
Weiss-Rosmarin (1990) defined inferiority feeling through Adler’s understanding of it as
the “axis of the soul-life” (p. 109). All people strive to overcome their felt inferiorities. Jewish
scriptures regularly set forth examples of biblical figures struggling with inferiorities from which
“strength springs from weakness” (p. 109). For Jews, feelings of inferiority have special
significance given they “have survived two millennia of dispersion and persecution” (p. 110).
For Jews, suffering had become a “badge of distinction” (p. 110) from which “blessings”
(p. 110) flow. Jewish community reflects social interest as the focal point of all Jewish life and
most human endeavors (Weiss-Rosmarin, 1990). Through its rituals and practice, Jews flourish
in community. Even in Rabbinic study, the biblical study practice occurs in community. While
Judaism upholds community, it also values balance between the community and individual. In
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
21
the same way, social feeling is a marker of wellness. It, too, is active engagement in the Jewish
community and considered the mark of Jewish vibrancy and healthy “self-interest” (Weiss-
Rosmarin, 1990, p. 112).
Shulman (2003) explored the sociopolitical implications of the Ten Commandments from
a societal and psychotherapeutic group approach. The article never references Adler or
individual psychology; however, its publication in the Journal of Individual Psychology
intimates the connections between Judaism, Individual Psychology, and the social and relational
imperative of the human condition. Shulman (2003) identified five factors significant to the
functioning of a group: a code of conduct, mutual respect, limits on competition, a feeling of
belonging, and rituals. Shulman (2003) saw the Ten Commandments as a way for the Jewish
people to prioritize these factors towards social functioning and community.
Shulman (2003) also mentioned Martin Buber and his view that the Ten Commandments
established guidelines to initially “preserve the people” and community through “common
regulation” rather than enforcing “rules of behavior” or “articles of faith” (p. 168-9). Shulman
(2003) called attention to the three Judaic principles of cooperation, democratic tradition, and the
central theme and unifying principle of God: “Humans will always construct a reference point
outside of themselves” (p. 172). Shulman (2003), through the analysis of an ancient Judaic text,
alluded to commonalities between Jewish religion tradition and Individual Psychology. More
specifically, these are humanism principles, unity, social interest, feelings of inferiority, and
striving for perfection in the ideal of God. The inclusion of Buber’s remarks on the Ten
Commandments as they relate to communal striving suggests further evidence of alignment
between Buber’s philosophies and Adler’s psychology.
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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Rietveld (2004) stressed the humanitarian aspects of Judaism and Individual Psychology.
Jewish striving for perfection is seen as a striving for the ultimate “elevation of humanity” that
occurs through one’s view of God. This includes shared principles of equality and communal
life. This striving also reflects the Jewish ethical concern for the well-being of the entire world
and one’s community as a “whole” (p. 215).
Reitveld (2004) also argued that some have viewed Adler and his psychology with a
prophetic almost religious hue. The philosophical underpinnings of social interest and striving
for perfection can be considered in an ethical, religious, and psychological context. Rietveld
(2004) asserted that gemeinschafsgefühl reflects Adler’s “optimistic portrayal of humanity”
(p. 211) and takes into account the goal of perfection towards the messianic vision of an ideal
community that “endures” (p. 212). Drawing on biblical references of “peace” and “justice,”
Rietveld (2004) argued Adler’s idea of a future community may have built into it an “expectation
of salvation” (p. 212). From here, Rietveld (2004) contended that, with his concept of
gemeinschafsgefühl, Adler exchanged Individual Psychology as a “descriptive science for a
normative science . . . in which ethical principles became of preeminent importance” (p. 212).
Adler’s ideal community and communal life can be seen as a “prophetic concept” (p. 213) and,
to many, Adler appeared a prophet. From this philosophical perspective, Individual Psychology
reflects Jewish ethical and moral codes of service towards God, thus blurring the lines between
religion and psychology.
Manaster (2004) investigated the cultural, moral, and spiritual values of Judaism and
Individual Psychology. Unlike most other psychological theories that claim to be “value-
neutral” and inculcated with “modern individualism” (p. 420), Individual Psychology offers a
moral, spiritual, and ethical context for wellness through social interaction, transcendence, and
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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community. In Judasim’s monotheism and Individual Psychology’s embrace of holism, each
person remains unique yet connected to the whole of humanity and-or God. In addition,
Manaster (2004) cited the importance of dialogue and analysis in both Individual Psychology
and Judaism (p. 421). What one concludes is not as important as engaging in the dialogue.
Manaster (2004) also took on the dispute of whether or not social interest or feelings of
inferiority were the most important ideas of Individual Psychology. Like Judaism, Individual
Psychology with its emphasis on individual rights and responsibility to pursue goals of right
living, social interest, and feelings of inferiority are not more or less important because they
work off and with each other. Anxiety increases with deeper feelings of inferiority. This
triggers striving for oneself or self-interest rather than striving for community and perfection and
for “humankind” (p. 424). Furthermore, when one is connected to his or her community with
meaning and belonging, the more one is less likely to act out of feelings of inferiority and
neurosis. With social interest, Individual Psychology aligns with many of the other “great
religious traditions” (p. 424) including Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Confucianism, and Taoism.
Summary. In summary, most if not all treatments of Judaism do so from either a
religious, moral, or ethical perspective rather than a spiritual or mystical one. From these
studies, the connections between Individual Psychology and Judaism run deep from ancient
rabbinic and messianic traditions to more modern day Jewish cultural, ethical, and moral
traditions. Building on this foundation of scholarship, this project adds Hasidism as another way
to view the Jewish relationship to Individual Psychology.
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Buber’s Early Hasidism as Jewish Spirituality
Buber’s re-visioning of Hasidism to European Jewry in a series of speeches given
between 1909 and 1918 provided a starting point for extending the connections between Buber’s
Hasidism and Judaism, and Individual Psychology in a spiritual context.
Hasidism: Historical, spiritual, religious, and cultural landscape. When Buber
introduced Hasidism to the Jewish mainstream in 1909, it was a marginalized movement held in
contempt by the dominant Jewish culture of Western Europe. Despite this resistance, Buber’s
revolutionary speeches on Judaism and Hasidism between 1909 and 1918 ignited the Jewish
Renaissance, especially in young Jews who had become disenchanted and disillusioned with
traditional Judaism (Buber, 1995; Friedman, 1983; Ratsabi, 2002). According to Buber (1995),
traditional Judaism focused too much on religious law and study of Torah and had removed the
true essence of Judaism. The “creative” element had been replaced by rigidity.
Buber’s Hasidic view of closeness with God through individual experience and
commitment to Torah study through daily lived experiences pitted him against the “educated
European” who saw Hasidism as “religious superstition and backwardness” (Friedman, 1983;
Mendes-Flohr, 1999, p. ix). Hasidism was founded in the late 18th century in rural parts of
Poland and Ukraine in reaction to the intellectualization and dominance of the “law” in European
Judaism. This went back a thousand years to the Jewish Diaspora (Breslauer, 1996). Buber
sought to revitalize a Jewish community bereft of its intrinsic spiritual experiences from ancient
Judaism (Breslauer, 1996). Kamenetz (1995) pointed out how Hasidism was perceived by many
intellectual and enlightened Jews as an affront to the more rational aspects of the at-the-time
Jewish religion because of its embrace of “magic, amulets, exorcisms, and demons and dybbuks,
and other lore of Jewish folklore” (p. vii). These Jewish intellectuals, secularized and
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assimilated, looked down on the Hasidic Jews as village peasants, even as many of them pined
for a more authentic encounter with their faith.
In his speeches and writings, Buber nimbly integrated the ancient Judaic elements of the
prophetic, mythic, and mystic with the ritualistic and legalistic framework of staid Judaism of the
time to capture the attention of the entire Jewish community, one that had become disaffected
and unmoored from its soul. Buber in his early lectures called on the spirituality of Judaism.
Buber’s task of re-introducing ancient traditions and tenets of Judaism to contemporary
audiences required the documentation of Jewish myth, folklore, and oral history in ways that
appealed to the entire Jewish collective. Buber’s appeal for a spiritual Judaism integrated an
ancient vision with a mainstream culture that was initially resistant to change. Eventually,
widespread acceptance of Buber and his understanding of Judaism at the turn of the twentieth
century exemplified a lived–experience of Adlerian social interest and community feeling.
An Adlerian response to Hasidism and Judaism. Buber, in his early speeches on
Judaism, encouraged a personal relationship with God as an integral part of the universal human
community and soul. Many of Buber’s ideas of Judaism and Hasidism mirrored Adler’s ideas of
holism, unity, psychic life, and movement. With a slightly differentiated terminology, context,
and application, Buber offered Jews a three-fold mandate of striving for unity, a commitment to
action and deeds, and development of future communities built on love, mutual understanding,
and mutual help (Buber, 1995).
Central to Buber’s mandate was the goal of unification of the soul, a never-ending
endeavor of one soul connecting with all souls to unite with God from within. This unification
brought about renewal and redemption for the Jew. For Adler, unified striving in the psychic life
also moved the individual towards a goal: “The result is that the aspiration toward this goal is
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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immanent in every part of the psychic movement; therefore the goal becomes a part of the unity”
(Duba, 2012, p. 219). Adler’s psychology incorporates the soul life as necessary to bringing the
individual into purer forms of development, adaptation, and well-being. For both Adler and
Buber, finding God is the exercise of unity.
In the striving for unification with God, Buber also argued that the Jews’ historical
struggle was unifying his or her primal duality (Buber, 1995). Binaries of good and evil, one
God and many Gods, God above and God below, and prophetic experience and priestly authority
reflected the split nature not only of the Jewish primal experience of duality, but the primal
duality of humankind (Buber, 1995). In his lecture entitled, Judaism and Mankind (1911), Buber
offered a holistic, spiritual, and communal solution to Jewish primal dualism:
Striving to evolve unity out of division of I, he conceived the idea of the unitary God.
Striving to evolve unity out of the division of the human community, he conceived the
idea of universal justice. . . . The Jew’s creative forces are set aflame by his striving for
unity. . . . The creative Jews are the conquerors of duality, its positive overcoming.
(Buber, 1995, p. 28-29)
Here, one notices a striking similarity to Adler’s language in form and content.
Individual Psychology attributes an individual’s striving to overcome to the creative power of the
child. For Adler:
There is a creative force at hand in the psychic life which is identical to the life force
itself. . . The goal of a creative force must be formed from the stress of the overcoming of
social difficulties that place themselves in opposition to movement. (Peluso, 2012, p. 62)
Adler, like Buber, mentions not only striving to overcome as a goal, but also a striving
propelled by a creative force. Adler emphasized the creative power of the child as well as human
creativity (Moore, 2012). This paralleled Buber’s focus on the creativity of the Jews. In
addition to a creative force and creativity, Adler shared Buber’s belief in an individual
experience of God and spirituality, especially in his ideas of striving for perfection. In his 1933
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lecture, On the Origin of the Striving for Superiority and of Social Interest, Adler asserted “each
person imagines his God differently” and goes on to speak of the “psychic life” as a window into
the divine (Watts, p. 50, 2012). For Buber, in his early interpretations of Hasidic Judaism, he
described how each “man finds God on all ways and all ways are full of unification” (p. 19). It
was this type of spiritual and soul-calling Buber adroitly imbued in his Jewish counterparts to
inspire cooperation and harmony within the whole of Jewish community.
Buber’s engagement with Judaism and Hasidism. In an inadvertent nod to Adlerian
psychotherapy, Kamenetz (1995) described how at the time of Buber’s early speeches, he
“captured in his [Hasidic] stories the anxious social and psychological state” of his audience
(p. viii). Many were stricken with an inner tension from the conflict between what the Western
European Jew desired from within, a more authentic connection to the Jewish spirit, and what he
or she felt was expected of him or her from without, a more ritualistic yet empty experience.
This circumstance reflected a vertical striving of superiority that required the “educated” Jews to
maintain a one-up one-down relationship between their contemporary, superficial view of
Judaism and what Buber was advocating, a more substantive spiritual return in Hasidism.
As Buber continued to argue for a more authentic Judaism, he expounded on the ways the
Jews had protected or removed themselves from this authenticity in remarkable Adlerian
terminology of safeguards and fictions. According to Buber (1995), the Jewish experience had
become “merely ritual,” “intellectual,” and “noncommittal,” and this disconnection was for all
intents and purposes an “evasion” that the people kept as a “carefully guarded fiction” (p. 194).
In the “Holy Way,” one of Buber’s early speeches from 1918, Buber described the phenomena
where political and business agendas infected Judaism and Hasidim as “a repellent example of
safeguarding by adaptation” (Buber, 1923/1995, p. 132). For the Jews, a history of exile and
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Diaspora and what might be labeled early recollections of long-term persecution created
collective shocks. In response to these shocks, the Jewish people became distrustful of and even
rejected God’s benevolence and questioned God’s presence.
The German Jews, who eventually came under Buber’s spell, shared cultural, social, and
political ideas as well as views of traditional Judaism. Driven by anxiety and neurosis, Jews
invented mistaken convictions of their unworthiness and lowliness protected by fallacious
safeguards and insincere strivings. Buber demanded of the Jews what Adlerians might demand
of their clients – the claiming and owning of their inferiorities in order to claim mental health
and authentic living.
In their striving for security, significance, and belonging, Jews became preoccupied with
a striving for intellectuality, material acquisition, and assimilation. Their vacant practice of
Judaism had become a safeguarding mechanism to avoid disclosure, exposure, persecution,
prejudice, and racism. They established within themselves the superiority of their views and
ideas: “It is the nature of faith to strive above reality and shape it according to a system of values
anchored to a structure of ideas that deviates from reality and rises above it” (Ritsabi, 2003).
Adler (2011) termed pathological striving for superiority as a complex when the striving is used
to escape the difficulties in life in response to feelings of inferiority that have made the
individual “depressed and incapable of development” (p. 97). In one’s striving for superiority
one gains a “false success” (p. 97). Movement occurs on a vertical axis of self-interest rather
than social interest. Over time, this happened to the Jews and as a consequence had pushed true
community to the background.
Buber’s reorientation of Hasidism and Judaism. Buber created life-affirming
convictions for the Jewish people. Rather than disparaging exile and dispersion, Buber reframed
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them as pathways to unity, redemption, and renewal by a God who never abandons despite
feelings of shame and degradation (Buber, 1995). The history of Jewish exile and wandering
served as a metaphor for the growth of the Jewish people and the individual. Exile from one’s
self expanded and returned them to self-acceptance and an authentic Jewish identity, purpose,
and meaning – a Jewish healing through transcendence. Buber’s claiming of this Jewish legacy
and feelings of inferiority became a part of communal transcendence and a useful striving for
superiority.
Buber’s efforts not only redefined the story of the Jewish people and instilled new hope
for Jews; he charged them with three courses of action: striving for unity of the Jewish soul not
only in the individual but also in the universal community of humankind; action in the form of
deeds and doing; and the building of a future community with guiding principles of universal
justice, diversity, and humanity. Buber saw the creativity of Jewish people and the everyday
lived individual experience of God as anchors for change. Channeling the creative power of the
Jews in acknowledgement of and towards unity, deed doing, and the well-being of future
generations are congruent with Individual Psychology’s holism, movement, social interest, and
the creative power of the child.
Adler also took the psychic life a step further by including humankind. Adler discussed
civilization’s eternal movement to adapt and develop in the world (Watts, 2012). This Jewish
messianic message appears in the writing of Adler in his discussion about striving for superiority
and social interest: “the striving for perfection must contain the goal of an ideal community”
(Watts, 2012, p. 5). Societies striving for superiority and community have been an ongoing
enterprise since the beginning of time. For Adler, religion and conceptions of a Creator offered
one way for humans to strive towards betterment and harmony (Moore, 2012). Adler’s
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psychology has been likened to Confucianism, Catholicism, Protestantism, Buddhism, Judaism
and Native American spiritual and religious traditions (Mansager, 2000). In the striving for
truth, justice and being, Buber (1995) mentioned the Chinese principle of tao, the Indo-Aryan
rita, Iranian urta, Israel’s zedek, and the Greek dike (p. 192). In line with other religious
traditions, Adler and Buber conceived universal humanity as an ideal community yet to be
realized, but one that required individual responsibility in actions of communal and relational
cooperation.
Thus, a striving for unification of the soul became an overriding imperative for the Jew,
but it also became a striving for the soul of all people. More importantly, Buber (1995)
confirmed one of the deepest conflicts facing the Jew and each human being – the balance
“between the objectives of society and the task of releasing his or her own potential” (p. 19).
Humanity is best expressed and recognized when in direct relationship with another human
being. Spirituality becomes a path to social bonding.
Buber’s Early Hasidism and Adler’s Individual Psychology - Primal and Subjective
In addition to the philosophical and pragmatic similarities, Buber’s take on Judaism
through Hasidism and Adler’s Individual Psychology embraced the subjective and primal. When
Buber went public in 1909 and put forth his vision of Judaism as he perceived it through
Hasidism: “He read Hasidism with unabashed subjectivity, for his goal was not scholarship but
inspiration. He understood that interpretation, not translation was required” (Kamanetz, 1995).
Through his speeches, Buber’s interpretations singlehandedly rejuvenated Judaism at the turn of
the twentieth century.
In the words of Buber, in Hasidism “the primally Jewish opened to me” (Friedman, 1983,
p. 35). Buber, through his subjectivity, encountered the transcendent. The perfected Jew’s
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striving for unification of one’s soul and all souls towards God also entailed a striving for unity
from a primal dualism within. This revelation reconfigured Buber’s perspective and changed
forever his spiritual, personal, and professional striving. Buber’s primal connections transpired
in dialogue with Hasidic stories and Hasidic spirituality. These connections eventually matured
into his I-Thou philosophy and dialogical spirituality where “real awakening takes place not as a
result of reading scripture or taking up a solitary practice, but in a living response to being
challenged at the core of one’s being” (Kramer, 2012, p. xxxv). To be challenged at the core of
one’s being is the essence of transcendence. Buber and Adler also saw this as the primal struggle
of the human condition. The primal subjectivity of Buber’s Hasidism aligns with Adler’s
philosophy of Individual Psychology that establishes another spiritual conduit between the two.
Individual Psychology is a subjective psychology of which perception remains a key
ingredient (Ansbacher & Ansbacher, 1956; Moore, 2012). Ansbacher and Ansbacher (1956)
took this a step further by stating the “Objective corresponds to the psyche as seen from without,
by the observer, and subjective corresponds to the psyche seen from within, by the subject
himself” (p. 5). Not only does Adler’s psychology and Buber’s Hasidism draw on the soul, but
also on the individual’s power of meaning making. Alder individuals through their subjective
capacity to perceive, interpret, and make meaning. Adler declared that “the mark of all true
‘meanings of life’ is that they are common meanings” (Ansbacher & Ansbacher, 1956, p. 253).
Buber’s early meanings of Hasidism gave renewed meaning to a generation of Jews who had
been disconnected from meaning in their practice of traditional Judaism. Buber’s transcendence
and primal Hasidic exhortations call into discussion Adler’s primal and evolutionary references
to the human condition through Individual Psychology.
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Adler’s focus on the primal and primordial takes on greater urgency in later translations
of his later lectures and writings. In these translations, a shift occurs from “creative endeavors,”
“creative power,” and the “creative self “to “psychic life,” “God,” “creative force,” and “life
force.” These translations identify the “primordial” or “primal” for Adler (Watts, 2012, p. 50).
Adler added to this the transcendent and discussions of evolutionary principles and human
striving. He stressed human goals of self-preservation, procreation, mastering, or becoming
“victorious” over the environment and “ever better adaptation” so one may not “perish” (Bitter,
2012, p. 49; Eckstein, 2012; Rasmussen & Dover 2006; Watts, 2012). Adler’s primal goals
deepened the meaning of his psychology – one of raw power and energy in keeping with Adler’s
personality and his approach to work and social relations. His primal goals resonate with a
psychology of the soul in contrast to more popularized Adlerian goals of security, belonging, and
significance. In an ironic twist, the contrasting essence between the primal Adler and the
popularized Adler suggests Individual Psychology’s primal dualism and struggle for unification
of its own soul. For Buber and Adler, the primal and subjective cut to the core of one’s spiritual
essence, being, and healing.
Summary
Comparisons of Judaism and Individual Psychology offer a view of the remarkable
similarities in philosophical, ethical, and practical approaches of the Jewish religion and Adler’s
psychology. An analysis of Buber’s interpretations of Judaism through Hasidism viewed
through an Adlerian lens further elucidates Individual Psychology’s kinship to the Jewish spirit
and provides a lived experience, on the macro-level, of Adlerian theory in the Jewish spirit
world. In the end, this investigation furthers the argument that Adler’s psychology and Buber’s
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Hasidism intersected at the soul. This offers a spiritual essence from which to draw in the
therapeutic setting.
Part 3: Therapeutic Implications: Buber’s I-Thou and Adlerian Therapy
As time went on, Buber’s early Hasidism evolved into a more mature Hasidism beyond
mystical interpretations. Along the way, Buber developed his I-Thou relations that became the
basis for his philosophy of dialogue to create what Kramer (2012) identified as dialogical
spirituality.
The final section of this project moves the discussion to a brief literature survey of
spirituality in the Adlerian community, an entry point of connection between Adler and Buber.
This is constructed through the ideas of gemeinschaftsfgefühl by German sociologist, Fernand
Tonnies. From there, the project tackles striving to overcome, creative force, and baseline
definitions of spirituality from the writer’s perspective; Buber’s dialogical spirituality as
informed by I and Thou; I and Thou and its therapeutic applications; and intersubjectivity. The
section concludes by synthesizing the four-stage process of Adlerian therapy with Buber’s I-thou
relational philosophy and dialogue and the spiritual space created for client therapist self-
discovery, healing, and change.
Adlerian Community and Spirituality – Brief Literature Survey
This survey of Adlerian literature around spirituality does not claim to be an all-
encompassing review. It moves the project’s conversation beyond Adler’s Individual
Psychology and Buber’s Hasidism and Judaism to conversations around spirituality within the
Adlerian community and, eventually, to Buber’s I-Thou relationship and philosophy of dialogue.
Mansager (2000) examined Adlerian theory as a way to understand religion and
spirituality from four perspectives: striving, integration, self-transcendence, and ultimate value.
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Mansager (2000) argued that Individual Psychology considers “striving to be the essence of life”
where “movement constitutes life” (p. 380). This movement consists of striving to “belong” and
striving for “perfection.” (p. 381). With regard to integration, Adlerians embrace the philosophy
of holism originally developed by Jan C. Smuts. This consists of an “understanding the
complexity of life without reducing it to opposites” (Mansager, 2000, p. 381) and considers
human beings already a unity as whole beings. Mansager (2000) compared the developing child
who uses “dualistic” (p. 382) constructs to move through life as opposed to the well-adjusted
adult who finds integrative constructs to move through life. Individual Psychology’s take on
holism is reflected in its both-and rather than either-or mode. Adlerians believe dualistic
thinking leads to lower well-being. It goes so far as to suggest this mode of thinking results in
prejudice, racism, sexism, and bigotry. For Mansager (2000), spirituality encompasses “social
embeddedness” (p. 383) as a way to derive meaning. Contributing to the community in useful
ways brings about transcendence in the individual with movement towards gemeinschaftsfgefühl.
Gold and Mansager (2000a) argued against Dreikurs and Mosak’s conception of
spirituality as a fifth task. They concluded that, despite Adler’s “deep appreciation for human
transcendence and the mystery of life” (p. 275), his psychology did not intend to view living in
terms of religious and spiritual striving per se but rather in terms of “social feeling” and terms of
better “adaption to life” (p. 275). In this way, Gold and Mansager (2000a) drew a distinct line
between Individual Psychology and spirituality.
Cheston (2000) viewed encouragement as another way to view spirituality from the
Adlerian point of view. Encouragement, of primary importance in Adlerian psychology, must be
engaged by and with others. In this way, Cheston (2000) stressed relationship as a key
ingredient to encouragement and not only a temporary but an enduring relationship: “The idea
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that spirituality is a relationship is a model of Adler’s premise that humans are naturally social
beings who need to be understood within that context” (p. 301). Cheston (2000) refocused ideas
of social interest, community feeling, and meaning from the social to the interpersonal.
Powers (2003), in his brief comments on religion and spirituality, suggested Individual
Psychology viewed one’s subjectivity through creativity where fictions provide the impetus for
perception and understanding. Using this construct, Powers (2003) named the two Adlerian
primary feelings embodied in social embeddedness to be “inferiority feeling” and “community
feelings” (p. 84). Rather than viewing these feelings as part of the human “subjective,” they are
basic features of the “primal” human condition and its movement (p. 84), weaving a “double
helix . . . of all religious feeling” (p. 85). Powers’s (2003) remarks invoked the primal Adler as
an integral component of spirituality.
In an effort to rekindle Adler’s psychology of the soul, O’Connell (1997) argued for an
Adlerian inspired psychospirituality that juxtapositioned “self-esteem and social interest” with
“spirit and soul” (p. 39). O’Connell (1997) challenged modern healthcare institutions as part and
parcel of an ego driven society, its preoccupation with competition, and its dualisms. Individual
Psychology, with its integrity of soul and spirit, offers a way to promote personal innate
worthiness and love through “compassion” and “wisdom” (p. 37). O’Connell (1997) extoled the
virtues of Adlerian psychology and its humanitarian stance as holistic, whole, and holy.
Adlerians can provide a counterforce to the institutionalization of contemporary living that
wishes to divide and conquer the human soul.
Polanski (2002) acknowledged growing interest in the links between spirituality and
counseling and psychotherapy. Spirituality is “subjective,” “personal,” and “transcendental” and
the institution of religion is a religious expression of spirituality (p. 127). Polanski (2002)
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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discussed the movement of an individual from compensatory behaviors and overcoming of organ
inferiorities to striving for superiority and the “desire to belong” through social interest to a
desire for meaning in which, “Feelings of inferiority become the impetus for developmental
movement or the origin of all striving” (p. 131). The individual strives in a unified fashion
through “thinking, feeling, willing, and acting” (p. 46). One of the more noteworthy points
Polanski (2002) made was “the propensity of the individual from the first moments of life to
establish contact with another individual” (p. 133). From this point of view, all human life from
its inception seeks relationship in a striving to overcome feelings of inferiority.
And finally, Leak (2006) offered an empirical study on the connections between social
interest and spirituality. Topics included self-transcendence; the relationship between personal,
religious, and psychological lives; and the expression of community feeling. Leak (2006)
confirmed spirituality as broad and open in contrast to religion’s rigid and narrow ideological
confines. Spirituality rather than religion encouraged increased community feeling and social
interest. These in turn established greater life meaning and increased “subject well-being”
(p. 63).
Within the modern day Adlerian community, Individual Psychology and its applications
for spirituality in therapy confirm the relevancy of Adler’s psychology. Furthermore, many of
the concepts and ideas around spirituality will be seen in Buber’s I-Thou Philosophy. These
include striving, movement, subjectivity, meaning, innate social embeddedness, desire for
relational connection, wholeness, creativity, community and transcendence; however, there still
needs be an entry point at which Adler’s psychology of the soul and striving to overcome meets
Buber’s I-Thou philosophy.
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Adler and Buber Meeting Through Ferdinand Tonnies and Gemeinschaftsgefühl
This project chooses as the entry point to pull together striving to overcome and the
I-Thou relationship in the work of Ferdinand Tonnies, a German sociologist from the late 1880s.
Tonnies’s work with gemeinschaftsgefühl influenced Adler’s conception of community feeling
and social interest and Buber’s vision of Jewish community and I-Thou philosophy.
Buber came under the sway of Tonnies’s ideas in 1909, a few years earlier than Adler.
Tonnies became popular among young Jews before and after World War I in their attempts to
rebuild community (Zank & Braiterman, 2014). He focused on the changing social landscapes
of Germany in the late 1800s from agrarian communities to complex modern industrial states and
wanted to know how to preserve community feeling in the face of modernity. Buber reworked
Tonnies’s ideas into his political, psychological, and social philosophies. To many, Tonnies’s
ideas not only addressed community and the impersonal, but also spoke of Geselleschaft and
Gmeinschaft as respectfully “the substitution of institutional ties for organic ties” (Meyer, 2001,
p. 259). Buber reinterpreted Gemeinschaft’s community feeling as a religious quality. In 1919,
he wrote, “A great yearning for Gemenschaft courses through souls of soulful people at this
life-moment in Western culture” (Meyer, 2001, p. 259). Tonnies’s influence on Buber found its
way into the I-Thou philosophy of dialogue (Silberstein, 1990) as well as his ideas of community
feeling and wholeness for the Jewish community.
Like Buber, Tonnies’s ideas are reflected in Adler’s concept of gemeinschaftsfgefühl.
Angioli and Kruger (2015) described how Tonnies published his first book in the late 1880s
titled Gemeinshaft und Gesellschaft, translated as Community and Civil Society. In his book,
Tonnies analyzed Gemeinschaft, “community feeling,” and its opposite, Gesellschaft,
“impersonal, transactional relationships” (p. 244). Tonnies’s early works failed to gain notoriety
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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until 1912, the same year Adler came to gemeinschaftsfgefühl. It is unclear if Adler had read
Tonnies, for no mention is made of him.
For several years, Adler worked with the concept gemeinschaftsgefühl until he introduced
it as the primary measurement of well-being for his Individual Psychology. According to
Angioli and Kruger (2015), after World War I, Adler, captivated by the “critical healing force”
(p. 244) of community then recognized social interest as an eternal “striving for a community”
(p. 245).
The synthetic outcome that envisages a kind of coexistence of gemeinschaft and
gesellshaft in the modern industrial state is perhaps the most important implication for
understanding the context and climate of Adler’s development . . . Adler had viewed
social feeling as a kind of limiting force that restricted or counterbalanced the more
primal Will to Power – the force that lay behind the phenomenology of growth, striving,
and purpose. (Angioli & Kruger, 2015, pp. 243-244)
With Adler’s elevation of gemeinschaftsfgefühl after World War I, he confirmed his conviction
that psychology was in fact the study of the soul in community feeling. Adler further refined the
relationship between striving and community feeling.
Community feeling as a counterweight to Adler’s primal striving intersects with Buber’s
primal I-It and the divine I-Thou relationship. More importantly, Angioli and Kruger (2015)
indicated that Adler, in speeches from 1913, stated “unequivocally the socially embedded nature
of upward striving and subordination of that striving to the feeling of community” (p. 248). With
this statement, Adler implicitly lays out a construct similar to Buber’s I-Thou. Striving to
overcome may be viewed in Adlerian terms as the primal force behind the I-It relationship.
Community feeling then becomes the creative force behind the I-Thou relationship. Striving to
overcome can be viewed as an I-It construct that may also include the I-Thou since striving to
overcome in socially useful ways does not always engage the I-Thou relationship.
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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Tonnies provided a bridge connecting Adler and Buber through gemeinschaftsfgefühl.
With Tonnies, Adler and Buber met philosophically on common ground in their quest to
understand social relations. Whereas Adler applied Tonnies to a soul-centered psychology of
striving to overcome and gemeinschaftsfgefühl in the social realm, Buber applied Tonnies’s ideas
of community to the personal realm of religion and spirituality in the I-Thou relationship.
Taking this connection between the two men to the next level, this project proposes the only
extensive Adlerian analysis of Adler and Buber.
Adler and Buber Meeting Through Jääskeläinen (2000)
At this point, it is important to acknowledge Jääskeläinen (2000), the only extensive
scholarly comparison of Adler and Buber and the inclusion of two noteworthy and rare instances
of Adler (1930) and Ansbacher (1978) mentioning the I-It and I-Thou relationship in Individual
Psychology. The mention of I-Thou by Adler (1970) was an inadvertent nod to a spiritual
element implicit in Individual Psychology. Jääskeläinen (2000) compared Individual
Psychology to Buberian philosophy, a large part of which covers Buber’s concept of I-Thou.
Jääskeläinen (2000) considered Adler’s gemeinschaftsfgefühl and Buber’s I-Thou as
companionable ideas for explaining human relations. For Jääskeläinen (2000), the I-Thou
relationship entailed the I-It and I-Thou of which the I-It is “detachment,” “objectivity,” and
“observation” (p. 144) and love serves as the “primal paradigm” for the I-Thou. Adler viewed
love from a different perspective, but his understanding was for all intents and purposes similar
to Buber’s. Social interest intersects with the I-Thou since both concepts prioritize human
relationships (Jääskeläinen, 2000). Jääskeläinen (2000) also reviewed Adler and Buber’s
connection to Tonnies as a way to illustrate the alignment between social interest and I-Thou,
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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and then followed with a brief discussion of the intersubjective nature of the I-thou, tying it to
Adlerian notions of empathy and understanding.
From here, Jääskeläinen (2000), discussed Buber’s dialogue in a similar vein to Adler’s
ideas of cooperation, taking into account that Individual Psychology is “a psychology based on
values” (p. 149) that must include an I-It relationship and I-thou dialogue. Jääskeläinen (2000)
identified the similarity between Buber’s I-Thou and Adler’s community feeling through
meaning and transcendence and the metaphor of “feeling at home,” such that social interest goes
beyond “individuality. . . to a feeling with the whole” (Jääskeläinen, 2000, p. 150). For Buber,
this also included an “inborn drive for social contact” (p. 145) and relationship.
At this point, Jääskeläinen (2000) mentioned a paper published in 1930 in which Adler,
in a rare instance, mentioned the I-Thou relationship in his discussion of the fundamentals of
Individual Psychology: “the I-Thou relationship, the productivity for the community and the
relationship of the sexes are never private matters but problems of the community” (p. 37).
Jääskeläinen, (2000) contended that Buber would have taken issue with Adler’s assertion of the
I-Thou not being a private matter but one solely of community. In addition to citing Adler
(1930), Jääskeläinen, (2000) included a reference by Ansbacher (1978) that suggested Buber’s
I-Thou relationship rather than the I-It relation fits into the category of social interest.
In analyzing the therapeutic implications, Jääskeläinen, (2000) asserted that Adler and
Buber concurred on the “primordial importance” (p. 150) of relationship and social connection;
therefore, therapeutic techniques turn out to be secondary to the therapist and client relationship.
For Buber, the I-Thou was an unworkable paradigm in therapy because the relationship is not
mutual. For Adlerians, Jääskeläinen (2000) contended the client-therapist relationship can
realize an I-Thou relationship through “cooperation” and “collaboration” (p. 151).
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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In conclusion, Jääskeläinen (2000) saw Adler and Buber emphasizing relationship over
technique and I-Thou as social interest and the differences between the men in I-Thou vs the
human community, social interest vs. personal existence, and social and cosmic life vs individual
and God.
As a point of clarity, Jääskeläinen (2000) focused on a broad range of topics, which this
project also considers tangentially. This project now turns its attention to the creative force,
striving to overcome, the I-Thou relationship, and the spiritual space created between the
therapist and client to facilitate the client healing in the four stages of Adlerian therapy.
Adler’s Striving to Overcome and Creative Force and Spirituality
As this project progresses, Adler’s striving to overcome in upward striving for
superiority, completion, and-or perfection towards community feeling will be seen in alignment
with Buber’s I and Thou philosophy of human movement towards “expansion” and “connexion”
in his I-It and I-Thou paradigms for relations (Buber, 1937/1958, p. 110). This project also
recognizes the innateness of striving to overcome as a goal in accordance with Adler’s beliefs
(Duba, 2012). For Adler, overcoming covered a broad spectrum of strivings towards a goal that
encourages positive actions and behaviors as well as those “to overcome imperfections and
achieve completion [and] the urge toward perfection” (Duba, 2012, p. 220; McBrien, 2012).
Striving to overcome is considered in the I-It relation in part because overcoming may not occur
in socially useful ways that encompass the I-Thou relationship. One instance may be a neurotic
pattern of striving that results in a superiority complex.
Initially, Adler mentioned upward striving in the context of power. In his 1932 lecture
“Personality as a Self-Consistent Unity,” Adler contended that overcoming had been
misunderstood with striving for power, the latter a more “concrete formulation,” while the
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
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former is a “madness” (p. 63) in individuals, not in Individual Psychology. In this regard,
community feeling acts as a bulwark against striving to overcome as a striving for power gone
awry in the neurotic and-or psychotic. In this phenomenon, the therapist must identify the
movement and direction of the individual in concert with his or her goal as useful or useless,
normal or neurotic, and self-interested or socially interested. For Buber’s I-Thou relationship,
movement and direction also become important landmarks for interhuman, human, and divine
connection.
In addition to movement and direction, it is essential to understand the primal importance
of striving to overcome. Adler infused Individual Psychology with consequence and immediacy
and called upon the perilous and precious nature of human life. He regarded evolutionary goals
of self-preservation and life development as primary to the human condition in a continuous
striving to overcome in which “there hangs also the threat of damage, of listlessness – of death”
(Peluso, 2012, p. 63; Watts, 2012). With Adler’s social Darwinism in mind, one can extend
these goals to continuous active adaptation, procreation, and victorious contact with the external
world (Watts, 2012). These goals reflected the temperament of Adler’s psychological approach
informed by Adler’s childhood struggles, vigor and resilience, and pragmatic outlook. Like
Adler, Buber’s personal and professional struggles and strivings led him to savor the primal in
life. He fearlessly searched for the consequences of human social and spiritual interactions that
challenged and elevated the core of one’s being.
Striving to overcome is a response to an inferiority feeling and overcoming social
difficulties in movement from a felt-minus to a felt-plus (Duba, 2012). According to Adler, this
minus-plus movement occurs “simultaneously” in goal directed behavior at the behest of the
individual’s creative force: “the creative force at hand in the psychic life which is identical to
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the life force . . . arranges: it has the ability to look ahead and see what it must do” (Peluso, 2012,
p. 63). Not only does the psychic life include the creative force of the life force, it also includes
the ego, thoughts, feelings, and actions that originate from “psychic impulses” (p. 62). The
coupling of striving to overcome with a creative force and its ability to discern or intuit a future
path bespeak of spiritual and transcendent qualities. By lumping together the creative force, life
force, and ego under the umbrella of the psychic life that Adler considered “the whole of the
individual,” (p. 227) Adler remained unclear if he was building towards a matrix for not only a
psychological and social force, but of a spiritual force as well (Duba, 2012; Peluso, 2012). In
addition, Adler’s reference to the wholeness of the individual is a critical concept in Buber’s
I-Thou relationship where the I-Thou as opposed to the I-It relationship occurs with persons who
bring the wholeness of their being into dialogue.
Although the conversation about whether or not Adler considered spirituality a life task
or imbued his psychology with spiritual elements has been debated vigorously in the Adlerian
community, it remains an issue not resolved (Gold & Mansager, 2000a; Mansager & Gold,
2000b, Mansager et al., 2000; Reardon, 2014). For the purposes of this project, the tripartite
concepts of creative force, life force, and striving to overcome will be considered spiritual
corollaries to be drawn upon by clients and Alderian therapists in the healing encounter of the
I-Thou relationship.
Definitions of spirituality. In light of Adler’s life force and creative force as spiritual
corollaries, the writer builds on these concepts and sets forth definitions of spirituality. Going
forward, this is inclusive of but not limited to something ineffable that encompasses a personal
connection to a universal source, creator, or spirit through which one recognizes his or her innate
self-worth and a sense of grounding, beliefs, values, meaning, purpose, and connection to the
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world and his or her immediate community. Religion offers a dogma and structure through
which one practices spirituality. Spiritual practices cultivate within a person an internal and
external transcendence to a force or persona or power beyond his or herself. Faith in a power
greater than one’s self provides direction and grace. Spirituality and faith may show up in
sudden and unannounced intuitive thoughts, urges, hunches, revelations, or shifts of perspective.
This definition also draws on Kramer (2012) and his definition of Buber’s Hasidic
spirituality, one that encompasses Buber’s dialogical spirituality and I-Thou philosophy: “the
profound reciprocity between the human spirit and the divine spirit. Spirituality involves an
ongoing partnership with the invisible, unprovable, insubstantial yet creatively revealing and
redeeming spirit who penetrates into our lives” (p. xix). For Buber, God always enters and
continuously shapes interhuman relationships.
In terms of Individual Psychology, Mansager (2000) offered a definition of healthy
spirituality:
Spirituality is the individual’s conscious movement from a felt-minus to that of a
fictional-plus, holistically experienced as a unifying factor not rooted in self-boundedness
but in community feeling aimed at full participation in an apperceived perfect
community. (p. 385)
This definition of Adlerian spirituality prioritizes movement, unity, community, and striving as
central features of spirituality. Individual Psychology empowers clients to become active agents
in their own lives in concert with a personal understanding of a spiritual presence.
With an introduction to the creative force, life force, and striving to overcome and a
context for a personal, dialogical, and Adlerian notion of spirituality, this project moves on to the
I-Thou relationship and its implications for the four stages of Adlerian therapy.
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Buber’s I and Thou2
Buber’s most influential work of I and Thou (1937/1958)3 laid out a construct for
dialogue and relationship between three entities: I, the Other, and the Eternal Thou. Friedman
(1960), Friedman (1983), Kramer (2003), Kramer (2012), Potok (1991), Scott (n.d.), and Zank
and Braiterman (2014) offered insights to the following summary of Buber I and Thou. Buber
saw his work as a primal imperative of human relationship and being. Buber’s early translations
of the legendary leader of the Hasidic movement, the Bal Shem Tov, provided the “seeds”
(p.112) of the dialogue between the “I” and “the eternal Thou”: “The legend is the myth of I and
Thou, of the caller and the called, the finite which enters into the infinite and the infinite which
has need of the finite” (Friedman, 1983, p. 112). God needs humans as much as humans need
God remains a foundational tenet of Judaism (Friedman, 1983). For Buber, finite humans need
infinite God in a movement from primal dualism to unified whole being and connection with
Him. Buber also asserted “the free will of the whole man in dialogue and the arbitrariness of the
man who does not stand in living mutuality” (Friedman, 1983, p. 114). Here Buber drew a
contrast between those who brought to the dialogue their whole being as opposed to those who
brought only the intellect.
The I-It and the I-Thou reduced existence to three relational domains: persons, nature,
(i.e., trees, animals), and the divine. In the I-Thou domain, the relationship between persons,
2 From this point forward, this project italicizes the words It and Thou when mentioned apart
from the two words I-It and I-Thou to preserve the artistic and spiritual integrity of Buber’s
original printing and recognition of the word as the divine, higher power, God, creator, etc. 3 Buber originally published I and Thou in German in 1923. Ronald Gregory Smith first
translated Buber’s work into English in 1937. Buber published a second edition in 1958 with a
series of translation corrections and a postscript. Walter Kaufman also completed a translation
of I and Thou into English in 1970. This project draws on the 1958 edition of I and Thou as
translated by Ronald Gregory Smith.
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between person and animate object, or between person and God encounters “one whole unique
entity with another . . . such that it is known without being subsumed by another” (Scott, n. d.,
para. 22). The I-Thou centers on presence and confirmation of each participant by the other in
dialogue and meets in unity, wholeness, and mutuality. The I-It uses, categorizes, classifies,
experiences, observes, manipulates, institutionalizes, and objectifies the other in the dialogue. In
I-It, the person not only turns away from the other, he or she turns away from his or herself.
Humans move between the two positions of I-It and I-Thou. Buber stated that everyone must
encounter the I-It and I-Thou. One cannot live in I-It or I-Thou exclusively nor would it be
desirable. One must complete life tasks that in many cases require engagement with people,
nature, and things in I-It relations.
In the I-Thou relationship, Buber identified relationship between persons and between
“an ‘I’ engaging a ‘Thou’ – [as] a unity achieved though the meeting of man and God in
relation . . . man in full relation to another” where each gives to the essential being of the other
with “compassion,” “trust,” “respect,” and “love” (Potok, 1991, p. xii). In I-It relations, the
encounter occurred between individuals. Person, to Buber, connoted the divine and human
uniqueness and wholeness of a person whose uniqueness and wholeness is only realized in the
mutual meeting of another’s uniqueness and wholeness in true dialogue. The Thou (aka God) is
realized in the between space of the meeting between two persons in their wholeness and
uniqueness. The I-Thou also requires a mutual concern for the other. For Buber, the teacher-
student relationship could not engage in true I-Thou relationship. The student would have to be
equally invested or concerned about the teacher in a mutual way that the teacher holds concern
and investment in the student. In this example, the student-teacher relationship extends into the
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I-It relational construct where one is using or experiencing the other rather than being in
presence of the other.
In later essays, Buber expanded his I-Thou dialogical relationships to encompass
movement and direction. Two persons bring their wholeness into the I-Thou relationship and,
through distance and movement, maintain their individuated presence while at the same time
developing a fuller wholeness in contact with the other. One is only truly whole in the presence
of another. One becomes more of his or herself in dialogue with the uniqueness and wholeness
of the other. The dynamic is mutual and reciprocal.
The Thou. The I-Thou resides in dialogue between person and person, and person and
spirit, and extends to animals and artistic endeavors whenever the dialogue encompasses the
mutuality and inclusion of the uniqueness and wholeness of the other. Under this umbrella,
Buber included areas of study and investigation, when mutual dialogue occurs with a living text
such as scripture.
In dialogue with spirit, Buber offered a number ways for the Thou to appear in what he
termed the “primal phenomenon” (Scott, n. d., p. 104). In connection with the Thou “every
ought vanishes in unconditioned being. . . Duty and obligation are rendered only to the stranger;
we are drawn to and full of love for the intimate person” (Buber, 1937/1958, p. 103). At this
point, such things as judgment, laws, rules, and dictates no longer hold sway over the person, but
the person resides in pure being. At times, in the moment of the Thou, humans take in the Thou
as a “breath” as in a “wrestling bout” in which “it happens” (p. 104). On the other side of the
happening, the man or woman has grown beyond his or her previous self; he or she “no longer
questions the meaning of life” nor does it require an uncovering of the meaning and he or she
becomes a more realized being (Buber, 1937/1958).
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I-thou relationship and therapy. Nanda (2006) contended that therapy in the I-Thou
relationship engages the therapist in presence and in the confirmation and inclusion of the
uniqueness and wholeness of the client. At the same time, the I-Thou requires an element of
mutuality and reciprocity. Under these conditions, the client’s “self emerges in ‘dialogue’ with
the other where the focus is not on technique [or the ends] . . . but, rather what takes place
between the therapist and the client” (p. 345). In the process, the client not only changes, but so
does the therapist. The authentic I-Thou encounter realizes “fluidity” (p. 349) in the exchange
between therapist and client and the unlimited possibilities for the becoming of more whole for
both.
As noted by Nanda (2006), Buber challenged the claim that an authentic I-Thou
relationship can occur in therapy. Nanda (2006), drawing from others in the psychotherapy field,
asserted that therapist self-disclosure done with attention to the client’s needs and preferences,
stage of therapy, and status of the client-therapist relationship offered a way to move towards the
mutuality and reciprocity of the I-Thou relationship.
If therapy does not extend beyond an exploration of the social self of the client to the
uniqueness of the client, the therapy may remain in the I-It relation never engaging the I-Thou
dynamic of “direct, mutual, present, and open” dialogue (Nanda, 2006, p. 345). Furthermore, in
therapy, the therapist need not lose his or her sense of self and separateness in the I-Thou
relationship as long as the distance between the therapist and client is still “maintained” (p. 345).
In mutual relation, attunement ensues allowing the client to more easily respond to the other with
an unfolding of his or her true self. This type of therapist-client interaction runs counter to the
medical model of psychiatric-patient relationship.
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Therapist training, technical skill, knowledge, experience and observation, and analytical
and assessment abilities remain integral to achieve client goals; however, these are the I-It of the
therapy encounter. When the therapist responds to the client with preconceived categories,
groupings, classes, types, and classifications, again he or she has accessed the I-It of therapy
(Mutter & Neves, 2010). As Buber indicated, one cannot inhabit only I-Thou or I-It relations.
We move between and unify the two into our being through the Thou; however, it is the I-Thou
relationship that establishes the grounds of trust and safety between client and therapist that in
turn open the way for I-It interventions.
Intersubjectivity, I-thou, and therapy. The I and Thou engages the interhuman
encounter of intersubjectivity and mutuality in the two word pairs I-It and I-Thou. I-Thou
relations are dialogical and I-It relations are monological. According to Mutter and Neves
(2010), intersubjectivity occurs when client and therapist call on their subjectivities in an
interplay that becomes another resource for therapy. The I-Thou and I-It relationship subsumes
one’s subject and subjectivity and becomes another way to develop dialogue of mutuality and
reciprocity between the therapist and client.
Unlike other traditional therapy modes, intersubjectivity does not discount the therapist’s
subjectivity nor discourages its use. It aligns with Buber’s differentiation of I-It and I-Thou
relations towards genuine meeting. In I-Thou relationship, meeting between persons transcends
subject-subject relations: "In subjectivity the spiritual substance of the person matures . . . in
solidarity of connexion and of separation . . . the fuller its sharing the more real it becomes"
(Buber, 1937/1958, p. 67-68). With subjectivity, a therapist distinguishes where he or she begins
and ends in kind with the client. Keeping this in mind allows a therapist with continuous self-
awareness and ongoing work on himself or herself to happen upon subjectivity combined with
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his or her professional and personal experience during moments of therapy. Mutter and Neves
(2010) and Reardon (n.d.) argued that the subjectivities of therapist and client interact with each
other making it impossible to engage in objective forms of therapy; however, Buber might
contend an I-It relationship does exactly this; however, acknowledging that the therapist and
client enter into dialogue with separate subjectivities permits subject-subject relations to surface.
This taps into Buber’s I-Thou (Mutter & Neves, 2010).
Reardon (n.d.) asserted subjectivity consists of a therapist’s claiming and understanding
his or her feelings of inferiority as a way to a fuller understanding and acceptance of self. The
ability to more fully tap into who one is as a person allows a therapist to be more fully real with
clients. Subjectivity and feelings of inferiority include, but are not limited to, one’s mistaken
convictions, biases, judgments, private logic, assumptions, feelings, meaning, thoughts, values,
beliefs, etc. (Reardon, n.d.). Attention to one’s subjectivity as it unfolds in therapy allows the
therapist to draw on the raw material of his or her human wholeness as part of the I-Thou I-It
towards client healing and realization via the between space of genuine Thou dialogue.
Adlerian Therapy Meets I-Thou Relationship
“God dwells wherever man lets him in” (Buber, 1947/2006, p. 38).
The therapist who encounters the I-Thou and creative force, in the overcoming of the
client’s anxiety and neurosis, engages in continuous inviting and letting in of the Thou. One is
called to a continuous surrendering of the therapist self to the between space of the Thou as it
shows up in therapy. It requires a turning towards the client and the Thou that situates itself
“over against” 4 one’s self. At times, this occurs in the depths of one’s being in the unknown,
4 Buber used the word pair “over against” throughout I and Thou. It appeared in his descriptions
of the newborn child reaching out for relation – a necessary movement to “develop out of the
primal world” (Buber, 1958/2006, p. 38-39). The writer contends that this word pair defined by
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
51
insecure, eternal, and transcendent space of being. This “being” in mutual dialogue is with
another: the client.
In the “inborn Thou” of the child, relation precedes perception where relation is “mould
for the soul . . . and development of the soul . . . is inextricably bound up with that of longing for
the Thou” (Buber, 1937/1958, p. 39). In the mature Thou, I-It relations evolve into I-Thou
relationships. In Individual Psychology and Adlerian therapy, perception and inferiority feelings
precede community feeling. In therapy, the client and therapist enter into the primal struggle of
overcoming what is over against them in perception. The goal of true relationship of I-Thou sets
the direction and movement of the client and therapist. A striving to overcome brings about
movement from the I-It relations of self-interest to the I-Thou relationship of social interest.
Finite self-striving of I-It bounded by and against others yields to infinite self-striving of I-Thou
unbounded for and with others.
In the Thou, the creative momentum of the life force fashions the pattern of striving to
overcome in the service of the goal. In community, the client and therapist realize movement
from object-object and object-subject of I-It relations to subject-subject, intersubjectivity, and
interhuman of I-Thou relationship. The unified striving of two souls meets with all souls. In the
between space of the Thou, client and therapist’s mutual striving for community feeling confirms
the risk that each takes in that “the primary word [Thou] can only be spoken with the whole
being. “He who gives himself to it may withhold nothing of himself” (Buber, 1937/1958, p. 25).
Genuine dialogue confirms the mutual exploration of a shared safe place in the unfolding of
intimacy, well-being, and undeveloped potential.
Merriam-Webster (n. d.) “as opposed to,” and “in contrast to” offers a practical understanding of
what Buber considered the spiritual forces a person confronts that fosters movement and growth
in the person and his or her striving to overcome towards I-Thou relationships.
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
52
In the midst of the Thou, “how can we know the dancer from the dance?”5 Buber’s spirit
finds Adler’s soul. Buber’s I and Thou meets Adler’s psychology of the soul.
Therapy in Meeting
For the purposes of this project, the four stage process for Adlerian therapy include
forming the relationship,
assessment-insight,
interpretation-analysis-intuition, and
re-orientation (Watts, 2014).
When used as a process for interventions and techniques, the Adlerian stages reside in the
I-It relational realm. With Adler’s ideas of the individual as both artist and picture, an I-Thou
relationship becomes a creative meeting between therapist and the four stages of Adlerian
therapy. Lyon (1971) argued that, for Buber, moving towards “being” as person is an “artistic”
striving with another through the “act of speech” (p. 110). In dialogue with the four stages, a
therapist finds him or herself inspired and directed in the presence of the Thou and creative force.
The spirit and soul of the therapist reside in the Thou and creative force in a striving to overcome
what sets itself over against the other.
In the Adlerian four stage process of therapy, the mark of well-being is two-fold: a) the
client’s claiming of his or her inferiorities, and; b) cultivation of community feeling and social
interest. For Adlerians, the client’s healthy development strives for a goal of community feeling
and social interest in socially useful behavior in adapting to his or her external world and life
5 From Butler, W. B. (1996). Among school children. In R. J. Finneran (Ed.) The collected
poems of W.B. Yeats (p. 215). New York: Simon & Schuster.
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
53
tasks. Buber’s I-Thou relationship clarifies the goal of overcoming for the therapist in this
endeavor:
True community does not arise through peoples having feelings for one another (though
indeed not without it), but through, first, their taking a stand in living mutual relation with
a living Centre, and second, their being in living mutual relation with one another.
(Buber, 1937/1958, pp. 53-54)
In contrast to Adler, Buber asserted a spiritual living center in community through a
personal connection with that center. For Adler, striving to overcome culminated in community
feeling and may or may not include the idea of a God. Adler stressed the social, cosmic, and
transcendental aspects of striving to overcome. This can also occur through a fictional goal of
God.
Despite this distinction, Adler’s community feeling and striving still echoes Buber’s
Hasidic infused I-Thou precept: “no soul has as its object its own salvation” (Kramer, 2012,
p. 84). In I-It relation, the individual sees himself as the “starting point” (Buber, 1937/1958,
p. 58). In the therapy encounter, Adler’s striving to overcome in community concurs at its
primal base Buber’s primal seeking of relationship.
Forming the relationship. In the first stage of therapy, the therapist establishes the
relationship with the client. For Adlerians, Carlson, Watts, and Maniacci (2005) set forth
characteristics necessary for the therapeutic relationship by calling on conditions one finds in
social interest and include, but are not limited to, collaboration, empathy, cooperation,
understanding, appreciation, tolerance, egalitarianism, equality, congruence, caring, compassion,
honesty, humility, benevolence, and altruism. Kramer (2012) stated qualities necessary for
genuine dialogue as directness, honesty, openness, spontaneity, mutuality, presence,
confirmation, affirmation. yielding, timeless, betweenness, happening, addressing, turning, and
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
54
responding. These two sets of conditions highlight the social and ethical context of Adlerian
social interest and striving as juxta positioned to the Buber’s more personal and spiritual I-Thou.
In I and Thou, Buber presents a three-fold matrix for language and relations in the I-Thou
between humans and nature, between human and human, and between humans and “spiritual
beings” (Buber, 1937/1958, p. 98). The first relation verges on speech. The second takes on the
shape of speech. The third moves beyond speech. In each “sphere” (p. 98), the ever present
“eternal” (p. 98) Thou breathes life.6
In therapy, the therapist and client encounter all three relations. Buber’s relationship and
“becoming” (Buber, 1937/1958, p. 98) occurs through language and dialogue, as it is in therapy.
In the initial forming of the client-therapist relationship through the ensuing three stages, the
Adlerian therapist moves fluidly between the three spheres, conscious of the presence that is
verily spoken, directly spoken, and not spoken, all in the I and Thou the language of “give-and-
talk” (p. 99). Mutual trust and safety and meeting of subject-subject and subjectivities realizes
an interhuman meeting that unifies I-It and I-Thou relations. Therapist and client encounter
initial overcoming in the presence of the Thou and creative force. A striving to overcome from
inferiority feelings of vulnerability and disclosure, to the intimate meeting of community and
relationship, establish the conditions of going forward for both therapist and client.
Assessment, analysis, and re-orientation. The conditions set forth in the first stage of
Adlerian therapy establishes the apriori of the I-Thou relationship with the creative force.
Connection and movement occurs in the presence of the Thou. The spirit meets soul. In
assessment, analysis, and re-orientation, these phases occupy the I-It relations of using and
6 The Latin origin of "spirit" is spiritus, of breath and wind (Online Etymology Dictionary, n.d.).
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
55
experiencing the unity of the client to determine his or her movement towards his or her fictive
goals. In the fluid movement between I-It relations and the I-Thou relationship, client and
therapist movement dwells between dialogue and use. The between space of the Thou and the
directives of the creative force are continually called upon in surrender. In wholeness and
uniqueness, the therapist and client wrestle in the depths of wholeness and uniqueness in mutual
dialogue, confirmation, and address. A primal struggle to unbound oneself from the anxiety and
neurosis that threatens to tyrannize therapy appears in an I-It complex.
The client’s fictive goals, mistaken beliefs, private logic, and patterns of striving to
overcome occur in the socially useful striving on the horizontal plane or in socially useless
striving on the vertical plane of social intersect. These are assessed with Adlerian tools of life
style assessment, early recollections, and family constellation. Analysis, interpretation, and re-
orientation call on techniques and interventions. These activities occur in the secure, safe, finite,
and comfortable confounds of the I-It against the insecure, infinite, and unknownness of the
I-Thou relationship.
In these stages, therapist and client engage in the I-It moments of analysis, self-
awareness, self-insight, and confrontation. A vortex of feelings of inferiority and striving for
community feeling intensifies the struggle to overcome. At times, suddenly encouraged, the
striving to overcome in the engagement of subjectivities, flashes of I-Thou present in instances
and happenings for therapist and client of unexplainable insight, intuition, knowing, and being.
The language of nature, human, and the spirit unspoken, directly spoken, and grasping for
spoken languish and vibrate between. Adler and Buber unified with all souls.
Then, something sparks and settles. A soul moment of mutuality brings about an
authentic turning away from self and turning towards others. The work of looking inward now
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
56
moves outward. Client and therapist sense the way. A new resolve follows. The psychic life of
mutuality yields a turning away from self and turning towards others. One stands where one is,
in more full uniqueness and wholeness. A striving to overcome in client and therapist is realized
in a common striving for community in the therapy realm. An all-inclusive world reigns anew in
the therapeutic dialogue of the betweenness in the I-Thou relationship. The creative force moves
on. For the client and therapist, in the encounter with the other, they find renewed meaning and
realization of their wholeness and uniqueness, as separate yet one.
And the overcoming begins again.
Conclusion
This project is an homage to Alfred Adler and Martin Buber. There is no record of Buber
and Adler meeting. Friedman (1960) in his biography of Buber devoted an entire chapter to how
Buber’s view of Hasidism and his I-Thou relationship incorporated elements of psychoanalysis
and engaged in discourse in the work of Erich Fromm, Carl Jung, Carl Rogers, Sigmund Freud,
and several other European psychologists of the time. As one reads this list, it is interesting to
note the absence of Alfred Adler; however, Buber inadvertently distinguished Adler in his
landmark essay “Healing Through Meeting” written in 1951, as a tribute to his mentor and
German psychoanalystic therapist Hans Trüb. This essay refined his I and Thou philosophy and
philosophy of dialogue. In the essay, Buber told a story to highlight the everyday psychoanalyst
who is called by economic and professional necessity to address a situation with no access to his
extensive training, skill, experience, and objectivity and superiority. The moment is fraught with
terror,
but is graced with the humble power of wrestling and overcoming, and is thus ready to
wrest and overcome ever anew. . . will return from the crisis to his habitual method, but
as a changed person in a changed situation. He returns to it as one to whom the necessity
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
57
of genuine personal meetings in the abyss of human existence between the one in need of
help and the helper is revealed. (Buber, 1951/1999, p. 19)
In this passage, Buber channeled Alfred Adler. The men shared embodied spiritedness,
grit, passion, and forcefulness while being known for their gentleness, kindness, and generosity.
Adler honored the human struggle to adapt and overcome the “abyss” of inferiority feelings. Out
of this came gemeinschaftsfgefühl. Buber’s found realization in Hasidism out of which came
I and Thou and philosophy of dialogue.
This project investigated Adler’s soul in search of Buber’s spirit. It argued for the
intersection of spirituality and subjectivity and a striving to overcome in tandem with the I-Thou
relationship as significant ingredients in the therapeutic healing process of a client whose
neurosis and anxiety have impaired social development and relational capacities. It was posited
that mutual self-discovery of the therapist and client in dialogue and movement in a mutual
striving to overcome resulted in a more expansive uniqueness and wholeness of personality and
humanity towards the goal of well-being and community.
Adler and Buber grew up in differing Jewish milieus. Buber came from a religious
background, was disillusioned early on, and chose a path of Jewish spiritual seeking in Hasidism.
Adler came from an assimilationist and secular upbringing that was disconnected from his
Jewish roots and sought a path of social and soul striving. Childhood traumas shaped their
characters and professional strivings and each man became a pioneer and a leader in his fields of
psychology, religion, theology, and philosophy. Their subjective and humanitarian
psychological approaches challenged the Enlightenment institutions of their time in academia,
traditional religion, and medicine. They became both ostracized and popularized. In the process,
they founded vibrant and organic movements that celebrated the human spirit in healing and
redemption.
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
58
Buber’s concepts and ideas of Hasidism reflected the concepts and ideas of Adler’s
Individual Psychology. Their approaches agreed on the individual as unique and whole and
personally connected to a creative force in a striving for ideal communities of cooperation,
redemption, and service. For Buber, overcoming was a struggle of the spiritual with the primal
Thou. For Adler, overcoming was the struggle of the social in the primal soul for survival. In
religion, Adler saw an idea. In spirituality, Buber saw true reality. Each man identified well-
being as a transcendent connection to personal meaning in useful action towards social and
interpersonal relations and community.
TELLING THE DANCER FROM THE DANCE
59
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