Marc Crépon

Marc Crépon

Marc Crépon at Paris Book Fair in March 2010
Born (1962-03-30) 30 March 1962
Occupation Academic and philosopher
Nationality French
Alma mater Ecole Normale Superieure
Subject Leadership
Notable awards Winner of the Bronze medal at the CNRS (2001)

Marc Crépon (born 30 March 1962) is a French philosopher and academic who writes on the subject of languages and communities in the French and German philosophies and contemporary political and moral philosophy.[1] He has also translated works by philosophers such as Nietzsche, Franz Rosenzweig and Leibzig.

He is chair of Philosophy at the Ecole Normale Superieure and director of research at the Archives Husserl, National Center for Scientific Research.[2]

Early life

He was born in Decize, Nievre in 1962. After high school, Crépon completed a preparatory course at Lycee Condorcet in Paris.[3] He then attended the Ecole Normale Superieure and passed the agrégation in 1986, a French civil service exam for positions in public education.

The topic of his dissertation (written in French) was The problem of human diversity: survey on the characterization of the people and the constitution of geographies of spirit from Leibniz to Hegel (1995).[4]

Career

Crépon's first academic position was teaching philosophy at Nanterre University. Shortly after this, he moved to Moldova for a period and credits living and working in the USSR with developing many of his attitudes and pedagogical methods.[3] At this time, he also developed an interest in the relationship between political and linguistic communities, which he would go on to research in greater detail.[5]

He has traveled and lectured at American universities, including University of California, Irvine[6] and Rice University.[7] Crépon also taught classes while in residence at Northwestern University in Chicago in 2006 and in 2008.[8]

Marc Crépon was the co-founder (along with Bernard Stiegler) of the association Ars Industrialis.

Publications

Marc Crépon has written 16 books in French, the most notable of which are listed below.

References

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