Gabriel Honoré Marcel (December 7, 1889 – October 8, 1973) was a philosopher and a leading Christian existentialist.
Born in Paris, France, Marcel was a devout Catholic, with an atheistic father. A gentle and flexible man, Marcel was opposed to anti-Semitism and supported closer connections to non-Catholics.
Gabriel Marcel coined the word existentialism after the First World War, while he was still an atheist. In 1929 he converted to Catholicism. His great books are Mystery of Being (1950) and Man Against Society (1955).
Marcel argued that scientific thought had squeezed the life out of human experience, by replacing the "mystery" of being with a false scenario of life composed of "problems" and "solutions." Marcel is often classified as being of the earliest existentialists, although dreaded being described as being in the same class as the atheistic Jean-Paul Sartre - he himself preferred the term "neo-Socratic". Sartre emphasized people's ability to create themselves with freedom and autonomy, which Marcel viewed as a mistake. Marcel taught that the goal of life is true communion with God, which meant opposing both modern materialism and a technologically driven society.
He died in Paris in 1973.
1889 births | 1973 deaths | 20th century philosophers | Erasmus Prize winners | Existentialists | French dramatists and playwrights | French philosophers | Roman Catholic converts | Roman Catholic philosophers
Габриел Марсел | Gabriel Marcel | Gabriel Marcel | Gabrielis Marselis | Gabriel Marcel | Gabriel Honoré Marcel | Gabriel Marcel
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Gabriel Marcel".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world