Pictures from Google Image Search

Gabriel Marcel

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Gabriel Marcel

French philosopher Gabriel Marcel (1889-1973) described man's place in the world in terms of such fundamental human experiences as relationships, love, fidelity, hope, and faith. His brand of existentialism was said to be largely unknown in the English-speaking world, where it was mistakenly associated with that of Jean-Paul Sartre. Marcel's view of the human condition was that "beings" are beset by tension, contradiction and ambiguity. He was also interested in life's religious dimension and was considered the first French existentialist philosopher.

Gabriel Marcel was born in Paris on Dec. 7, 1889, the only child of a distinguished diplomat. His mother died when he was 4, and he was raised by an aunt whom his father married. Although he had little visual memory of his mother, Marcel described her continued "spiritual presence" during his youth as an important influence on his thoughtsgiving rise to an awareness of the "hidden polarity between the seen and the unseen." At the age of 8 he began writing plays, and as an adult he would achieve a reputation as a playwright as well as a philosopher. Marcel's plays, which flesh out the basic issues of his philosophy, were performed in the early 1920s. Starting in his youth he also displayed a keen ability to play musican avocation which would also influence his thinking.

Moved Away From Traditional Philosophy

Marcel received his degree in philosophy from the Sorbonne in 1910 and married professor Jacqueline Boegner in 1919. Together they adopted a son, Jean. Marcel lived and taught for a time in Switzerland, where he began writing his Metaphysical Journal (1927). The journal reflects a movement away from traditional academic philosophy and was influenced by Sören Kirkegaard, in whom Marcel was deeply interested. In some ways, the book is overlooked in serious examinations of Marcel. Another publication from Marcel's diaries was Being and Having (1935).

Developed "Spirit of Abstraction"

During World War I Marcel was a Red Cross official whose job was obtaining news of wounded and missing soldiers and contacting their relatives. These intensely demanding encounters with people were a living source of Marcel's highly concrete and personalistic philosophy, and of his lifelong suspicion of what he called the "spirit of abstraction."

During the war Marcel wrote his thorough study of the American philosopher Josiah Royce, Royce's Metaphysics (1956), and taught at the Lycée Condorcet in Paris. He taught philosophy at the University of Sens (1919-1923) and then returned to Paris, where he continued his philosophy research, wrote plays, and contributed to leading periodicals as both a philosopher and a theater critic.

Converted to Catholicism

Marcel's philosophy was always preoccupied with the religious dimension of life, but his upbringing had been religiously agnostic (uncertain as to whether one can really know that God exists), and he was not formally a believer. In 1929, however, an open letter from the distinguished French Catholic writer François Mauriac challenged Marcel to admit that his views suggested a belief in God. His subsequent conversion to Catholicism gave a new dimension to certain aspects of his philosophy. But he remained a strikingly independent thinker whose ideas were formed before his conversionand as such could be regarded as important indicators of certain Godly aspects of the human experience. Marcel became a leader in French Catholic intellectual circles, and his Paris home was the locale for stimulating discussion among leading European intellectuals of all persuasions.

Was Compared to Sartre

During World War II Marcel lived in Lyons. After the war he lectured in France and other countries. Following the war his "Christian existentialism" aroused sharp contrasts between his work and the atheistic existentialism of Jean-Paul Sartre. Marcel was fond of improvising at the piano throughout his adult life, but it wasn't until 1945 thatwith his wife's encouragementhe undertook to write formal compositions. His wife died in 1947. Marcel continued his creative endeavors, however, as well as teaching and traveling.

Late in life Marcel became associated with Moral Re-Armament, which he discussed in Fresh Hope for the World: Moral Re-Armament in Action (1960). Among his chief philosophical works are The Mystery of Being (1951); the Gifford Lectures for 1949-1950 at the University of Aberdeen; Homo Viator (1951); Man Against Mass Society (1951); Being and Having (1957); The Existential Background of Human Dignity (1963); and the William James Lectures at Harvard for 1961-1962.

At the Frankfort Book Fair in 1964, Marcel received major international recognition in the form of the German Peace Prize. He died in Paris on Oct. 8, 1973.

Marcel's essential dramatic and philosophical insights can be summarized in the difference between a problem and a mystery. He believed that once a problem is solved it is dismissed from consciousness, whereas a mystery always remains alive and interesting. Problems, Marcel believed, are resolved using "primary reflection"which is abstract, analytical and objective. Mysteries, on the other hand, are approached with "secondary reflection," which concerns itself with deeper personal insights.

Along with Martin Buber, Marcel is one of the founders of 20th-century dialogue-oriented I-Thou philosophy.

Other philosophical writings of Gabriel Marcel include: The Philosophy of Existence (1948); The Decline of Wisdom (1955); Philosophical Fragments (1965); The Funeral Pyre (1965); Searchings (1967); Problematic Man (1967); Presence and Immortality (1967); Tragic Wisdom and Beyond; Including Conversations Between Paul Ricoeur and Gabriel Marcel (1973); and The Participant Perspective: A Gabriel Marcel Reader (published 1987).

Dramatizations include: Three Plays: (A Man of God, Ariadne,. The Votive Candle ) (1965); Double Expertise (translated to English, 1985); and Fanal: Two Plays by Gabriel Marcel (translated to English, 1988).

Further Reading

Further information on Marcel is in Vincent Miceli, Ascent to Being: Gabriel Marcel's Philosophy of Communion (Desclee, 1965); Seymour Cain, Gabriel Marcel (Hillary House, 1963); Sam Keen, Gabriel Marcel (John Knox Press, 1967); Kenneth T. Gallagher, The Philosophy of Gabriel Marcel (Fordham University Press, 1962); Clyde Pax, An Existential Approach to God: A Study of Gabriel Marcel (Martinus Nijhoff, 1972); François Lapointe, Gabriel Marcel and His Critics (Garland Pub., 1977); Hilda Lazaron, Gabriel Marcel the Dramatist (Smythe, 1978); Joe McCown, Availability: Gabriel Marcel and the Phenomenology of Human Openness (Scholars Press for the American Academy of Religion, 1978); Neil Gillman, Gabriel Marcel on Religious Knowledge (University Press of America, 1980); Pietro Prini, Gabriel Marcel (Economica, 1984); Paul Arthur Schlipp and Lewis Edwin Hahn, eds., The Philosophy of Gabriel Marcel (essays) (Open Court Publishing Co., 1984); A.J.L. Busst, ed., French Literature and the Philosophy of Consciousness: Phenomenological Essays by Ian W. Alexander (University of Wales Press, 1984); Ved Prakash Gaur, Indian Thought and Existentialism: With Special Reference to the Concept of Being in Gabriel Marcel and the Upanisads (Eastern Book Linkers, 1985); Katharine Rose Hanley, Dramatic Approaches to Creative Fidelity: A Study in the Theater and Philosophy of Gabriel Marcel (University Press of America, 1987); David Applebaum, Contact and Attention: The Anatomy of Gabriel Marcel's Metaphysical Method (Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology, 1987); Donald Traub, Toward a Fraternal Society A Study of Gabriel Marcel's Approach to Being, Technology and Intersubjectivity (P. Lang, 1988); Mary D. Howland, The Gift of the Other: Gabriel Marcel's Concept of Intersubjectivity in Walker Percy's Novels (Duquesne University Press, 1990); Denis P. Moran, Gabriel Marcel: Existentialist Philosopher, Dramatist, Educator (University Press of America, 1992); and Gerald Hanratty, Studies in Gnosticism in the Philosophy of Religion (Four Courts Press, 1997).

The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas-Austin, maintains seven boxes of archival documentation related to Marcel. They are available to researchers.

The following are scholarly articles on Gabriel Marcel: Thomas C. Anderson, "The Nature of the Human Self According to Gabriel Marcel" Philosophy Today (Winter 1985); Joseph Godfrey, "Appraising Marcel on Hope" Philosophy Today (Fall 1987); Preston Browning, "Walker Percy and Gabriel Marcel: The Dialectical Self in The Moviegoer" Renascence (Summer 1988); Thomas Michaud, "Secondary Reflection and Marcelian Anthropology" Philosophy Today (Fall 1990); and Danne W. Polk, "Gabriel Marcel's Kinship to Ecophilosophy" Environmental Ethics (Summer 1984).

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Gabriel Marcel." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 22 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Gabriel Marcel." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (November 22, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404704193.html

"Gabriel Marcel." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved November 22, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404704193.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Plasma total homocyst(e)ine may not be the most appropriate index for cardiovascular disease risk
Magazine article from: The Journal of Nutrition; 10/1/1999; ; 700+ words ; 2 Abbreviations used: Hcy, homocyst(e)ine; Lp(a), lipoprotein (a); 5-MTHF, 5-methyltetrahydrofolate...methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase; tHcy, total homocyst(e)ine. OVERVIEW OF HOMOCYST(E)INE METABOLISM Homocyst(e)ine (Hcy)2 is a naturally...
Petroceltic Drills INE-2 in Algeria's Isarene Block to Total Depth.
Newspaper article from: UMCI News (Potomac Falls, VA); 6/22/2009; 493 words ; ...Petroceltic International announced that well INE-2, the first operated well in the current...Petroceltic International announced that well INE-2, the first operated well in the current...on location around June 20, 2009. The INE-2 well is planned to be tested after testing...
Relationship among homocyst(e)ine, vitamin B-12 and cardiac disease in the elderly
Magazine article from: The Journal of Nutrition; 4/1/1996; ; 700+ words ; ...and premature death. Blood homocyst(e)ine levels are extremely elevated in homocystinuria...inemia, characterized by homocyst(e)ine levels in the range of 14 or 16-30 nmol...Research Committee. Plasma homocyst(e)ine levels, which include free and protein...
Spain GDP down by 4.1% Y/Y Q2 '09 - INE.
News Wire article from: ADP News Spain; 8/14/2009; 379 words ; ...official data of the statistics institute INE showed today. This was the biggest annual...decrease for three months since 1970, when INE started to elaborate statistics on the GDP...quarter-on-quarter, according to INE. Spain's GDP was down 0.7% year...
'Ur-ine the know'
Magazine article from: DVM; 5/1/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...One of our favorite topics falls under the theme called"ur-ine the know," phonetically translated as "you're in the know." To the readers of this month's Diagnote, I say, "ur-ine" store for some fascinating knowledge about the mark urine has...
Lintner, Ine Donald
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 8/25/2007; 366 words ; Lintner, Ine Donald Age 97, of Dousman, formerly of Wauwatosa, Thursday, August 23...friend of Viola (nee Krause). Dear father of Marna (William) Lindroth and INe Don (Becky Jorgenson) Lintner. Fond grandfather of Erica (Justin Payne...
Carmen Alcaide, presidenta del INE: La estadística rebajará el paro.(España)(TT: Carmen Alcaide, President of the National Institute of Statistics.)(TA: Spain)(Entrevista)
Magazine article from: Epoca; 12/10/2000; ; 700+ words ; ...del ICO. El da 1 de julio de 2000 fue nombrada presidenta del INE. -.En qu va a cambiar la Encuesta de Poblacin Activa a partir...cuestionarios a travs de Internet. -Se habla de la dependencia del INE del Ministerio de Economa y de las posibles presiones que pudieran...
INE reports drop on oil production.
Newspaper article from: South American Business Information; 4/16/2003; 356 words ; Bolivia, Apr 15, 2003 (La Razon/SABI via COMTEX) The Bolivian national statistics institute INE reports a 0,75% drop on the condensate oil production in 2002 to 11.34mil barrels, from 11.42mil produced in2001. Production...
INE BLUFF 1 0 0 0 6
News Wire article from: United Press International; 9/8/1998; 700+ words ; United Press International 09-08-1998 ine Bluff 1 0 0 0 6 6 Demarcus Peterson, Prairie View 1 0 0 0 6 6 Marcus Ballard, Prairie View 1 0 0 0 6 6 Marc Turner, Alabama...
INE 6
News Wire article from: United Press International; 10/17/1999; 700+ words ; United Press International 10-17-1999 ine 6 6 Peter Carbonara, New Hampshire 5 6 Ryan Szczesniak, Rhode Island 5 8 Garon Sizemore, Delaware 3 8 Joe Connolly, Northeastern...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Sláine
Book article from: A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Sláine 1. Sláinge , Slangia [Ir. sláine ]. Son of Partholón in the pseudo-history...was thought to have come ashore at Inber Sláine, now the mouth of the Slaney River at Wexford Harbour...
Cnoc Áine
Book article from: A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Cnoc Áine [Ir., hill of Áine]. A hill, its name anglicized as Knockainy, 3.5 miles E...thought to be a dwelling-place of the fairy queen Áine (1) ; nearby is a village of the same name. It is 7 miles...
Cnoc Gréine
Book article from: A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Cnoc Gréine, Cnoc Gréne [Ir., hill of Grian]. A hill in eastern Co. Limerick near Pallas Grean, thought...known as Cnoc na gCuradh, ‘Hill of the Heroes’. It is 7 miles from Cnoc Áine .
Mac Gréine
Book article from: A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology Mac Gréine, Mac Gréne [Ir., son of the sun]. Sometimes also Cethor. King/warrior of the Tuatha Dé Danann who...
-ine
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology -ine5 suffix of chem. terms, in origin a variation of -INE4, in such names as gelatine (now superseded by gelatin exc. in pop. use), and those of the four elements bromine , chlorine , fluorine , iodine .

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: