13 Facts About Jean-Luc Marion

1.

Jean-Luc Marion was born on 3 July 1946 and is a French philosopher and Roman Catholic theologian.

2.

God Without Being, for example, is concerned predominantly with an analysis of idolatry, a theme strongly linked in Jean-Luc Marion's work with love and the gift, which is a concept explored at length by Derrida.

3.

Jean-Luc Marion was born in Meudon, Hauts-de-Seine, on 3 July 1946.

4.

Jean-Luc Marion studied at the University of Nanterre and the Sorbonne and then did graduate work in philosophy from the Ecole normale superieure in Paris from 1967 to 1971, where he was taught by Jacques Derrida, Louis Althusser and Gilles Deleuze.

5.

Jean-Luc Marion became a visiting professor at the University of Chicago Divinity School in 1994.

6.

Jean-Luc Marion was then appointed the John Nuveen Professor of the Philosophy of Religion and Theology there in 2004, a position he held until 2010.

7.

On 6 November 2008, Jean-Luc Marion was elected as an immortel by the Academie Francaise.

8.

Jean-Luc Marion now occupies seat 4, an office previously held by Cardinal Lustiger.

9.

Jean-Luc Marion radicalizes this argument in the formulation, "As much reduction, as much givenness", and offers this as a new first principle of phenomenology, building on and challenging prior formulae of Husserl and Heidegger.

10.

The formulation common to both, Jean-Luc Marion argues, "So much appearance, so much Being", adopted from Johann Friedrich Herbart, erroneously elevates appearing to the status of the "sole face of Being".

11.

Jean-Luc Marion calls the formulation the last principle, equal to the first, that of the appearing itself.

12.

Jean-Luc Marion defines "saturated phenomena," which contradicts the Kantian claim that phenomena can only occur if they are congruent with the a priori knowledge upon which an observer's cognitive function is founded.

13.

Jean-Luc Marion defines another by its invisibility; one can see objects through intentionality, but in the invisibility of the other, one is seen.