"An individual is just a certain uniqueness of a human being. And it can develop just by developing with uniqueness. This is what Jung calls individuation. He may become more and more an individual without becoming more and more human. I know many examples of man having become very, very individual, very distinct from others, very developed in their such-and-suchness without being at all what I would like to call a man. The individual is just this uniqueness; being able to be developed thus and thus. But a person, I would say, is an individual living really with the world. And with the world, I don't mean in the world - just in real contact, in real reciprocity with the world in all points in which the world can meet man. I don't say only with man, because sometimes we meet the world in other shapes that in that of man. But this is what I would call a person and if I may say expressly Yes and No to certain phenomena, I'm against individuals and for persons."
-Martin Buber
The Knowledge of Man, 174