Miklós Vető Explained

Miklós Vető (22 August 1936 – 8 January 2020) was a Hungarian-born French philosopher. A historian of German Idealism, especially Schelling, he lived in Paris. As an author, many of his works were collected by libraries.[1] [2]

Biography

Vető was born in Budapest, and studied law at the University of Szeged. Because of his participation in the Revolution of 1956 he had to flee Hungary. As a refugee he was admitted to France in 1957. He studied philosophy first at the Sorbonne and then Oxford.[3] [4] He taught at Marquette and Yale Universities in the United States, the University of Abidjan in the Ivory Coast and Rennes and Poitiers Universities in France. He was made Professor Emeritus in 2005.[5]

Vető was an external member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences,[6] and a member of the Catholic Academy of France[7] and the Academy of Messina. He was awarded a Doctorate Honoris Causa by the Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Budapest[8] and the University of Szeged. He was Honorary Professor at the Australian Catholic University, Melbourne[9] and an officer of the National Order of the Ivory Coast. He died in Paris.

Philosophy

Vető's philosophy is coordinated along three interrelated foci:[10]

  1. The history of philosophy. This is the central thread of Vető's philosophical research: as well as German Idealism (Kant, Hegel, Schelling), he has written on the thought of Alfred North Whitehead and Jean-Luc Marion.
  2. The philosophy of religion, understood as the philosophical investigation of the intelligibility of Christian spirituality and theology. Vető has written on the religious thought of Simone Weil, Jonathan Edwards, Gabriel Marcel and Pierre de Bérulle.
  3. A constructive metaphysics, concerned with the "enlargement" of philosophical reflection by intercourse with themes drawn from religion, art and ordinary experience.

Foci 1 and 2 have involved parallel developments through his career, whereas focus 3 has appeared central in publications since 2002.[11]

Publications

Also over 400 other publications: articles, prefaces, book reviews.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vetö, Miklós . November 9, 2016 . worldcat.org.
  2. https://ppke.hu/aktualis/aktualitasok/elhunyt-veto-miklos Elhunyt Vető Miklós
  3. Vetö, Miklos. "Jalons et moments" Iris : Annales de la philosophie 27 (2006)
  4. Ficklen . Ellen . 3 November 2006 . A Scholar Deepens His Understanding of Faith . The Chronicle of Higher Education . 53 . 11 . A47–A48 . .
  5. Vetö, Miklos. "Jalons et moments" Iris : Annales de la philosophie 27 (2006).
  6. Hungarian Academy of Sciences. "Vető Miklós" http://mta.hu/members_of_has?PersonId=19624. Accessed 25 September 2015.
  7. Academie catholique de France. "M. le Professeur Miklos Vetö." http://www.academiecatholiquedefrance.fr/index.php/qui-sommes-nous/membressocietaires-individuels/133-m-le-professeur-miklos-vetoe. Accessed 25 September 2015.
  8. Pazmany Peter Catholic University, "PPCU Laureates Miklos Vetö." Press Release: 16 December 2010. https://btk.ppke.hu/en/about/news/ppcu-laureates-miklos-veto.
  9. Australian Catholic University, Faculty of Theology and Philosophy. "Honorary Appointments" http://www.acu.edu.au/about_acu/faculties,_institutes_and_centres/theology_and_philosophy/faculty_staff/philosophy_staff/honorary_appointments. Accessed September 25, 2015
  10. Puente . Fernando Rey . 2006 . L'Historiographie philosophique d'après Miklos Vetö . Iris: Annales de philosophie . 27 . 14–34.
  11. See https://miklosveto.wordpress.com for a comparable summary presentation of his research.