Alexandre JollienBorn with cerebral palsy, Alexandre Jollien grew up in a home for the severely disabled, where, as he laconically notes, rolling cigars was his professional horizon. But then, completely by chance, he discovered philosophy, and his life was changed frever. Against all odds, he succeeded in completing secondary education and enrolled at the Université de Fribourg. While studying abroad at Trinity College, Dublin, he met his future wife, with whom he has three children. He published his first book--IN PRAISE OF WEAKNESS--at the age of twenty-two, and has since established himself as a profound and compelling moral thinker and spiritual teacher. Not only is he the first and only congenitally severely disabled thinker in the history of philosophy, but he is also the first original philosopher to have consistently reflected on what it means to be born and live with disability not as an insurmountable obstacle but as a source of strength and creative energy. Read More Read Less
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