Jacques D'Hondt
Jacques D'Hondt was a French philosopher and Resistance fighter.
Biography
A young teacher in Chinon and a Communist sympathizer during the Second World War, Jacques D'Hondt was a member of the Combat resistance movement. A former student of Jean Hyppolite and Paul Ricœur, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Poitiers, Jacques D'Hondt founded the [Centre de recherche et de documentation sur Hegel|Centre de Recherche et de Documentation sur Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel et Karl Marx|Marx (CRDHM)] in Poitiers in 1970, which he directed until 1975. A member of the board of the Hegel-Vereinigung, he chaired the Société française de philosophie from 1981 to 1991, and the Association des sociétés de philosophie de langue française from 1988 to 1996.Jacques D'Hondt's work on Hegel, Jacques D'Hondt gained international renown by restoring a historical face to the German philosopher, while shedding light on the processes that generated the “black legends” that ran rampant against him. This extremely rigorous research culminated in the soberly titled biography Hegel. Biographie, published in 1998.
But Jacques D'Hondt's teaching, work and publications have not been devoted solely to “rehabilitating” the Hegel of his time: A participant in the philosophical recognition of Diderot and the materialist thinkers of the Enlightenment, Jacques D'Hondt is also an eminent reader of Marx and an interpreter of Marx's relationship to Hegel. A philosopher grasped by and within a continuous history, he is a critic of his contemporaries in L'Idéologie de la rupture and in many of his still dispersed publications.
He was doctoral advisor to the french philosopher Andre Doz.