Robert Misrahi

Robert Misrahi (French: [miz.ʁa.i]; born 3 January 1926) is a French philosopher who specialises in Spinoza.

Biography

Born in Paris to Turkish-Jewish immigrants, Misrahi studied at the University of Paris (Sorbonne), where he became a protege of Jean-Paul Sartre. He is currently the emeritus professor of ethical philosophy at the Université de Paris I (Sorbonne), he has published a number of works on Spinoza and published the essentials of his work on the question of happiness. He has published a number of works in publications including Les Temps modernes, Encyclopædia Universalis, Le Dictionnaire des philosophies "PUF", but also Libération and le Nouvel Observateur.

In November 2002, he published a polemic in the columns of Charlie Hebdo, regarding a book by controversial Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci, la Rage et l'Orgueil.

During his studies at the Sorbonne, Misrahi also became involved with the militant Zionist group Lehi, which was then conducting an insurgency in Palestine against the British. Misrahi was recruited to carry out an attack on British soil. During a March 1947 visit to London, Misrahi placed a bomb in the Colonial Club, a recreational facility for students and soldiers from British colonies in Africa and the West Indies. The bomb, which detonated on March 7, 1947, blew out the facility's doors and windows and seriously injured several soldiers.[1][2]

Works

Participation

Bibliography

External links

Notes and references

  1. Cesarani, David: Major Farrans Hat: The Untold Story of the Struggle to Establish the Jewish State, p. 117-118
  2. Eliav, Yaakov: Wanted
  3. Sartre : 1905-1980, Annie COHEN-SOLAL Gallimard - Folio Essais, 1999, ISBN 978-2070411054
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