Birth Date: | 21 November 1950[1] |
Birth Place: | Porto Alegre, Brazil |
School Tradition: | Hegelianism Objectivism |
Main Interests: | Political philosophy, democracy, politics, public affairs, politics, ethics[2] |
Institutions: | National Autonomous University of Mexico Pantheon-Sorbonne University |
Influences: | Ayn Rand |
Denis Lerrer Rosenfield is a Brazilian writer and columnist. Along with Patrícia Carlos de Andrade, Rosenfield has co-founded the Millennium Institute in 2005.[3]
Rosenfield has a degree in philosophy from the National Autonomous University of Mexico, and in 1982 he earned a doctorate in philosophy from Université Paris 1 .[1] In 1999, he obtained a post-doctorate at the École Normale Supérieure Lettres et Sciences Humaines (Fontenay/St Cloud).[4]
He is Professor of Philosophy at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul.[2]
A defender of individual liberties[5] and of the right to private property,[6] Rosenfield has positioned himself against state interference in citizens' lives.[7] In an interview to Veja's magazine in 2011, he characterized ANVISA, a Brazilian government agency akin to the US' Food and Drug Administration, as "the great tutor of the Brazilian citizen, one who knows everything and to whom we owe blind obedience." According to Rosenfield, the ANVISA Agency was being run by "schizophrenics" whose sole purpose has been to meddle in the lives of the Brazilians.[8]
Rosenfield sees no problem in being called a "rightist", since it means "the defense of personal freedom, of the state and of the property rights."[8]