Maxence Caron

Maxence Caron

Maxence Caron
Born 1976
Marseille, France
Occupation Writer, poet, philosopher, musicologist
Nationality French
Subject Literature, Philosophy, poetry, Theology Classical Music, History of Philosophy
Website
maxencecaron.fr

Maxence Caron (born in 1976) is a French writer, poet, philosopher and musicologist.

Biography

He is agrégé in Philosophy (in 1999), docteur ès Lettres (at Sorbonne in 2003 with Rémi Brague as a thesis director. Director at the Publishing firm les Éditions du Cerf, he manages the collection Les Cahiers d'Histoire de la Philosophie ("The History Notebooks of Philosophy") that he has founded, and to which Jean-Luc Marion, Rémi Brague, Joseph Ratzinger, among others, have contributed.

Maxence Caron is the author of literary texts and poems and of several works about German thinking (Martin Heidegger, Emmanuel Kant, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel) and about saint Augustine. He wants his philosophic system to reconcile, in its content as well as in its writing, philosophy and literature.[1]

Pianist, musicologist, Maxence Caron graduated with honours from the Conservatoire National de Paris in 1990.[2]

He has been awarded the Prix Biguet of the Académie française.

Works

See also

Notes

  1. See this weblink
  2. See here
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.