Michel Henry
Encyclopedia
Michel Henry was a French
philosopher and novelist. He wrote five novels and numerous philosophical works. He also lectured at universities in France, Belgium
, the United States of America, and Japan
.
, French Indochina
(now Vietnam
), and he lived in French Indochina until he was seven years old. Following the death of his father, who was an officer in the French Navy
, his mother and he settled in metropolitan France
. While studying in Paris
, he discovered a true passion for philosophy
, which led to the desire to make it his profession. From June 1943 onwards, he was committed to the French Resistance
where he joined the maquis of the Haut Jura
under the code name of Kant
. He often had to come down from the mountains in order to accomplish missions in Nazi-occupied Lyon
, an experience of clandestinity that deeply marked his philosophy.
Following the war, he passed the final part of the philosophy examination at the university and then devoted his time to the preparation of a thesis under the direction of Jean Hyppolite
, Jean Wahl
, Paul Ricoeur
, Ferdinand Alquié
, and Henri Gouhier
. His first book, which was on the philosophy and phenomenology of the body, was completed in 1950. His first significant published work was about the essence of manifestation, to which he consecrated long years of necessary research in order to surmount the main deficiency of all intellectualist philosophy, the ignorance of life as everyone experiences it.
Michel Henry was, from 1960, a professor of philosophy at the University of Montpellier
, where he patiently perfected his work, keeping himself away from philosophical fashions and far from dominant ideologies. He died in Albi, France, at the age of eighty.
The only subject of his philosophy is living subjectivity
, which is to say the real life of living individuals. This subject is found in all his work and ensures its deep unity in spite of the diversity of tackled themes. It has been suggested that he proposed the deepest theory of subjectivity in the twentieth century.
of the phenomenon
. The English/German/Latinate word "phenomenon" comes from the Greek "phainomenon" which means "that which shows itself by coming into the light". The everyday understanding of phenomenon as appearance is only possible as a negative derivation of this authentic sense of Greek self-showing. The object of phenomenology is not however something that appears, such as a particular thing or phenomena, but the act of appearing itself. Henry's thought led him to a reversal of Husserl's phenomenology, which acknowledges as phenomenon only the appearance of the world, or the exteriority. Henry counterposed this conception of phenomenality with a radical phenomenology of life.
Henry defines life from a phenomenological point of view
as what possesses "the faculty and the power to feel and to experience oneself in every point of its being
". For Henry, life is essentially force
and affect
, it is invisible by essence, it exists within a pure experience of itself which oscillates permanently between suffering
and joy
, it is an always begun again passage from suffering to joy. Thought
is for him only a mode of the life, because it is not thought which gives access to the life, but it is life that allows thought to reach itself.
According to Henry, life can never be seen from the exterior, as it never appears in the exteriority of the world. Life feels itself and experiences itself in its invisible interiority and in its radical immanence. In the world we never see life itself, but only living beings or living organisms, we cannot see life in them. It is as well impossible to see the soul of others with our eyes or to perceive it at the end of a scalpel.
Henry's philosophy goes on to aver that we undergo life in a radical passivity, we are reduced to bear it permanently as what we have not wanted, and that this radical passivity of life is the foundation and the cause of suffering. None has ever given himself life. At the same time, the simple fact of living, of being alive and of feeling oneself instead of being nothing and of not existing is already the highest joy and the greatest of the happiness. Suffering and joy belong to the essence of life, they are the two fundamental affective tonalities of its manifestation and of its "pathetic" self-revelation (from the French word pathétique which means capable of feeling something like suffering or joy).
For Henry, life is not a universal, blind, impersonal and abstract substance, it is necessarily the personal and concrete life of a living individual, it carries in it a consubstantial Ipseity which refers to the fact of being itself, to the fact of being a Self. That this life is the personal and finite life of men, or the personal and infinite life of God.
Further information on this philosophical idea of life can be found in the articles about the phenomenological life
and the philosophy of life.
, for example, are given to us from the inner in the life, which allows us, for example, to move our hand, and it appears also from the exterior as any other object that we can see in the world.
The invisible which we speak of does not correspond to that which is too small to be seen with the naked eye nor does it correspond to radiation, but rather to life, which is forever invisible because it is radically immanent and never appears in the world's exteriority. For example, no one has ever seen a force, a thought or a feeling of their inner reality appear in the world; no one has ever found them by digging into the ground.
Some of his assertions seem paradoxical and difficult to understand at first glance, not only because they are extracted from their context, but above all because of our thinking habits which lead us to reduce everything to its visible appearance in the world instead of reaching its invisible reality in the life. It is this separation between the visible appearance and the invisible reality which allows the dissimulation of our real feelings and which founds the possibility of sham and hypocrisy which are forms of lies.
Michel Henry rejects materialism, which admits only matter as reality, because the manifestation of matter itself into the transcendence of the world presupposes constantly the revelation of life itself, in order to access to it, to be able to see it or to touch it. He rejects as well idealism, which reduces being to thought and is incapable by principle to grasp the reality of being which it reduces to an unreal image, to a simple representation. For Michel Henry, the revelation of the absolute resides in affectivity and is constituted by it.
The deep originality of Michel Henry's thought and its radical novelty in relation to all anterior philosophy explains its quite limited reception, a philosophy nevertheless admirable by its rigor and by its depth. But it is a thought both difficult and demanding, even if the central and unique theme of phenomenological life which experience it tries to communicate is what is the most simple and immediate. An immediacy and an absolute transparency of life which explains the difficulty to grasp it by means of thought : it is much easier to speak of what we see than of this invisible life which escapes by principle to any external look.
His books on Christianity seem to have quite disappointed some professional theologians and catholic exegetes who have only picked out and corrected what they considered as “dogmatic errors”. His book I am the Truth. Toward a philosophy of Christianity has been the object of a pamphlet in The theological turn of the French phenomenology (Le tournant théologique de la phénoménologie française) from Dominique Janicaud who sees in the immanence of life only the affirmation of a tautological interiority. Nevertheless Antoine Vidalin has just published a book in French entitled The word of Life (La parole de la Vie) where he shows that the phenomenology of Michel Henry allows a renewed approach of all the domains of theology.
As says Alain David in an article published in the French journal Revue philosophique de la France et de l’Etranger (number 3, July - September 2001), the thought of Michel Henry seems too radical, its changes too deeply our thinking habits, its reception is quite difficult, even if all his readers say themselves impressed by its "power", by the "staggering effect" of a thought which "brushes all on its passage", which "provokes admiration", but nevertheless "doesn’t really convinces". Because we don’t know if we are confronted to "the violence of a prophetic word or to pure madness". Rolf Kühn asserts also in this same philosophical journal, in order to explain the difficult reception of Michel Henry’s work, that "if we take sides with no power of this world, we inevitably submit oneself to the silence and to the critics of all possible power, because we recall to all institution that its visible or apparent power is, in fact only powerlessness, because nobody gives himself into the absolute phenomenological life."
His books have nevertheless been translated in many languages, notably in English, German, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese and Japanese. An important number of books have been consecrated to his thought, mainly in French, but also in German, Spanish and Italian. Several seminars have also been consecrated to the thought of Michel Henry in Beirut, Cerisy, Namur, Prague and Paris. Michel Henry is considered by those who know his work and recognize its value as one of the major contemporaneous philosophers, and his phenomenology starts to "win a following". A Center of Michel Henry studies has even been created in the Saint-Joseph University of Beirut (Lebanon) under the direction of Professor Jad Hatem.
, whom he considers, paradoxically, as one of the first Christian
thinkers and as one of the most important western philosophers, because of the weight he gives in his thought to living work and to the living individual in whom he sees the foundation of economic reality. His works, however, were published too late to have large-scale influence. For example, The German Ideology appeared only in 1932. This work on Marx has been translated in English under the title Marx. A Philosophy of Human Being.
In his essay Barbarism, Michel Henry questions himself on science, which is founded on the idea of a universal and thus objective truth and which therefore leads to the elimination of sensible qualities of the world, to the elimination of sensibility and of life. The science is not bad by itself as long as it restricts to study nature, but it tends to exclude all others traditional cultures, namely art, ethic and religion. Science delivered to itself leads to the technique whose blind processes develop by themselves in a monstrous way without reference to life.
Science is a way of culture in which life denies itself and refuses itself any value, it is a practical negation of life, which goes on in a theoretical negation in the way of all the ideologies which bring back all possible knowledge to that of science, namely human sciences whose objectivity itself deprive them of their object : what is the value of statistics about suicide, what do they say about the despair it proceeds from ? These ideologies have invaded the university and throw it to its destruction by the elimination of life from its searches and from its teaching. Television is the truth of technique, it is the practice par excellence of the barbarism, it reduces all event to current events, to incoherent and insignificant facts.
This negation of life results according to Michel Henry from the "disease of life", from its secret dissatisfaction of oneself which leads it to deny itself, to run away from itself in order to escape its anguish and its own suffering. In the modern world, we are almost all condemned from our childhood to run away our anguish and our own life in the mediocrity of the media universe, an escape of oneself and a dissatisfaction which lead to violence, instead of resorting to the traditional and more elaborated forms of culture which allowed the surpassing of this suffering and its transformation into joy. Culture subsists only clandestinely and in a kind of incognito in our materialist society which is sinking into barbarism.
Communism and Capitalism are for Michel Henry the two faces of a same death, which consists in a same negation of the life. The Marxism eliminates the individual life to the benefit of universal abstractions like society, people, history or social classes. The Marxism is a way of fascism, that’s to say a doctrine which originates in the degradation of the individual whose elimination is considered as legitimate. While Capitalism substitutes economic entities such as money, profit or interest to the real needs of life. Capitalism recognizes however the life as source of value, the salary being the objective representation of the real subjective and living work. But Capitalism gives up progressively the place to the exclusion of the subjectivity by the modern technique, which replaces the living work by automated technical processes, eliminating at the same time the power of creating value and then the value itself : the possessions are produced in abundance, but the unemployment increases and money constantly lakes to buy them. These themes are developed in his book From Communism to Capitalism, Theory of a Catastrophe
The next book he began to write was entitled The Book of the Dead and was dealing with what he called the "clandestine subjectivity". A theme which evokes the condition of the life in the modern world and which is also probably an allusion to his commitment to the Resistance movement
and personal experience of clandestinity.
painting which precedes the scientism
derived figuration of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and at the same time of abstract creations resulting from an authentic spiritual quest such as those of the founder of the abstract art, the painter Wassily Kandinsky
. Michel Henry dedicated to him a book entitled Seeing the Invisible, where he describes his work. He analyses in this book the theoretical writings of Kandinsky about art and painting in their spiritual and cultural dimensions as a way of increasing oneself and refining of one's sensibility
. He explores the means of painting and their effects on the inner life of one who looks at them filled with wonder, following the rigorous and nearly phenomenological analysis proposed by Kandinsky. He explains that all forms of painting are able to rouse in us an abstract reality, that’s to say it isn't content with reproducing the world, but looks to express the invisible power and the invisible life that exists. He also evokes the great thought of Kandinsky, the synthesis of the arts, their unity in monumental art, as well as the cosmic dimension of the art.
. That’s why the Life is sacred and this is for this reason that nobody has the right to attack it or to hurt it. The problem of the evil
is that of death, that’s to say of the degeneration from this original condition of Son of God, when the life turns against itself in the hate and the resentment. Because as says John in his first epistle, anyone who does not love remains in death, whereas everyone who loves has been born of God. The commandment of love is not an ethical law, but the Life itself. Those themes are developed in his book I Am the Truth. Toward a Philosophy of Christianity.
This book proposes also a phenomenology of Christ, who is understood as the First Living. The living is just what reaches itself in this pure revelation of oneself or self-revelation that is Life. That’s in the form of an effective and singular Ipseity that Life never ceases to generate itself. It never ceases to occur in the form of a singular Self that embraces itself, experiences itself and enjoys itself, and that Michel Henry calls the First Living. Or also the Arch-Son, as he inhabits the Origin, the very Beginning, and as he is engendered in the very process whereby the Father engenders himself.
The coming of Christ into the world aims to make the true Father manifest to people, and thus to save them from the oblivion of Life where they stand. An oblivion which leads them to feel themselves falsely as being at the source of their own powers, of their own pleasures and of their own feelings, and to leave in the terrifying lack of what gives nevertheless each ego to himself. The plenitude of life and the feeling of satisfaction it brings, this must yield to the great Rift, to the Desire that no object can fulfill, to the Hunger that nothing can satisfy.
As he has said in his latest book Words of the Christ, that’s in the heart that the life speaks, in its immediate pathetic self-revelation, but this heart is blind to the Truth, it is deaf to the word of the Life, it is hard and selfish, and that’s from it that comes the evil. That’s in the violence of its silent and implacable self-revelation, who testifies against this degenerated life and against the evil that comes from it, that stands the Judgment which is identical to the coming of each Self in itself and to which nobody can escape.
In his book Incarnation, a philosophy of the flesh, Michel Henry starts with the opposition of the sensible and living flesh, as we experience it permanently from the inside, to our inert and material body, as we can see it from the outside, similar to the other objects we can find in the world. The flesh doesn’t fit at all in his terminology with the soft part of our material and objective body, by opposition to the bones for example, but to what he called in his previous books our subjective body. For Michel Henry, an object doesn’t possess interiority, it is not living, it doesn’t feel itself and doesn’t feel that it is touched, it doesn’t do the subjective experience of being touched.
After having placed the difficult problem of the incarnation in a historical perspective going back to the thought of the Fathers of the Church, he makes in this book a critical review of the phenomenological tradition that leads to the reversal of phenomenology. He then proposes to elaborate a phenomenology of the flesh which leads to the notion of a not constituted original flesh given in the "Arch-revelation" of Life, as well as a phenomenology of Incarnation.
Although the flesh is traditionally understood as the place of sin, it is also in Christianity the place of salvation, which consists in the deification of man, that’s to say in the fact of becoming Son of God, to come back to the eternal and absolute Life we had forgotten getting lost in the world, caring only about things and ourselves. In the fault, we make the tragic experience of our powerlessness to do the good we would like to do and of our inability to avoid the evil. In this way in front of the magic body of the other, that’s the anguished desire to meet the life in it that leads to the fault. In the night of the lovers, the sexual act couples two impulsive movements, but the erotic desire fails to reach the pleasure of the other where it is experienced, in a total loving fusion. The erotic relation is however doubled by a pure affective relation, foreign to the carnal coupling, a relation made of mutual gratitude or of love. That’s this affective dimension that is denied in this way of violence that is pornography, which extracts the erotic relation from the pathos of life to abandon it to the world, and which consists in a real profanation of life.
France
The French Republic , The French Republic , The French Republic , (commonly known as France , is a unitary semi-presidential republic in Western Europe with several overseas territories and islands located on other continents and in the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic oceans. Metropolitan France...
philosopher and novelist. He wrote five novels and numerous philosophical works. He also lectured at universities in France, Belgium
Belgium
Belgium , officially the Kingdom of Belgium, is a federal state in Western Europe. It is a founding member of the European Union and hosts the EU's headquarters, and those of several other major international organisations such as NATO.Belgium is also a member of, or affiliated to, many...
, the United States of America, and Japan
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...
.
Biography
Michel Henry was born in HaiphongHaiphong
, also Haiphong, is the third most populous city in Vietnam. The name means, "coastal defence".-History:Hai Phong was originally founded by Lê Chân, the female general of a Vietnamese revolution against the Chinese led by the Trưng Sisters in the year 43 C.E.The area which is now known as Duong...
, French Indochina
French Indochina
French Indochina was part of the French colonial empire in southeast Asia. A federation of the three Vietnamese regions, Tonkin , Annam , and Cochinchina , as well as Cambodia, was formed in 1887....
(now Vietnam
Vietnam
Vietnam – sometimes spelled Viet Nam , officially the Socialist Republic of Vietnam – is the easternmost country on the Indochina Peninsula in Southeast Asia. It is bordered by China to the north, Laos to the northwest, Cambodia to the southwest, and the South China Sea –...
), and he lived in French Indochina until he was seven years old. Following the death of his father, who was an officer in the French Navy
French Navy
The French Navy, officially the Marine nationale and often called La Royale is the maritime arm of the French military. It includes a full range of fighting vessels, from patrol boats to a nuclear powered aircraft carrier and 10 nuclear-powered submarines, four of which are capable of launching...
, his mother and he settled in metropolitan France
Metropolitan France
Metropolitan France is the part of France located in Europe. It can also be described as mainland France or as the French mainland and the island of Corsica...
. While studying in Paris
Paris
Paris is the capital and largest city in France, situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the Île-de-France region...
, he discovered a true passion for philosophy
Philosophy
Philosophy is the study of general and fundamental problems, such as those connected with existence, knowledge, values, reason, mind, and language. Philosophy is distinguished from other ways of addressing such problems by its critical, generally systematic approach and its reliance on rational...
, which led to the desire to make it his profession. From June 1943 onwards, he was committed to the French Resistance
French Resistance
The French Resistance is the name used to denote the collection of French resistance movements that fought against the Nazi German occupation of France and against the collaborationist Vichy régime during World War II...
where he joined the maquis of the Haut Jura
Jura mountains
The Jura Mountains are a small mountain range located north of the Alps, separating the Rhine and Rhone rivers and forming part of the watershed of each...
under the code name of Kant
KANT
KANT is a computer algebra system for mathematicians interested in algebraic number theory, performing sophisticated computations in algebraic number fields, in global function fields, and in local fields. KASH is the associated command line interface...
. He often had to come down from the mountains in order to accomplish missions in Nazi-occupied Lyon
Lyon
Lyon , is a city in east-central France in the Rhône-Alpes region, situated between Paris and Marseille. Lyon is located at from Paris, from Marseille, from Geneva, from Turin, and from Barcelona. The residents of the city are called Lyonnais....
, an experience of clandestinity that deeply marked his philosophy.
Following the war, he passed the final part of the philosophy examination at the university and then devoted his time to the preparation of a thesis under the direction of Jean Hyppolite
Jean Hyppolite
Jean Hyppolite was a French philosopher known for championing the work of Hegel, and other German philosophers, and educating some of France's most prominent post-war thinkers....
, Jean Wahl
Jean Wahl
Jean André Wahl was a French philosopher.-Early career:He was professor at the Sorbonne from 1936 to 1967, broken by World War II. He was in the U.S...
, Paul Ricoeur
Paul Ricoeur
Paul Ricœur was a French philosopher best known for combining phenomenological description with hermeneutic interpretation...
, Ferdinand Alquié
Ferdinand Alquié
Ferdinand Alquié was a French philosopher and member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques.He taught at the lycée Louis-le-Grand and at the Sorbonne university. He was an instructor of Gilles Deleuze, who, according to Michael Hardt, charged him of drawing on biology, psychology, and...
, and Henri Gouhier
Henri Gouhier
Henri Gouhier was a French philosopher, a historian of philosophy, and a literary critic.Born in Auxerre, Yonne, his educational studies led to a doctorate in 1926...
. His first book, which was on the philosophy and phenomenology of the body, was completed in 1950. His first significant published work was about the essence of manifestation, to which he consecrated long years of necessary research in order to surmount the main deficiency of all intellectualist philosophy, the ignorance of life as everyone experiences it.
Michel Henry was, from 1960, a professor of philosophy at the University of Montpellier
University of Montpellier
The University of Montpellier was a French university in Montpellier in the Languedoc-Roussillon région of the south of France. Its present-day successor universities are the University of Montpellier 1, Montpellier 2 University and Paul Valéry University, Montpellier III.-History:The university...
, where he patiently perfected his work, keeping himself away from philosophical fashions and far from dominant ideologies. He died in Albi, France, at the age of eighty.
The only subject of his philosophy is living subjectivity
Subjectivity
Subjectivity refers to the subject and his or her perspective, feelings, beliefs, and desires. In philosophy, the term is usually contrasted with objectivity.-Qualia:...
, which is to say the real life of living individuals. This subject is found in all his work and ensures its deep unity in spite of the diversity of tackled themes. It has been suggested that he proposed the deepest theory of subjectivity in the twentieth century.
A phenomenology of life
The work of Michel Henry is based on phenomenology, which is the scienceScience
Science is a systematic enterprise that builds and organizes knowledge in the form of testable explanations and predictions about the universe...
of the phenomenon
Phenomenon
A phenomenon , plural phenomena, is any observable occurrence. Phenomena are often, but not always, understood as 'appearances' or 'experiences'...
. The English/German/Latinate word "phenomenon" comes from the Greek "phainomenon" which means "that which shows itself by coming into the light". The everyday understanding of phenomenon as appearance is only possible as a negative derivation of this authentic sense of Greek self-showing. The object of phenomenology is not however something that appears, such as a particular thing or phenomena, but the act of appearing itself. Henry's thought led him to a reversal of Husserl's phenomenology, which acknowledges as phenomenon only the appearance of the world, or the exteriority. Henry counterposed this conception of phenomenality with a radical phenomenology of life.
Henry defines life from a phenomenological point of view
Perspective (cognitive)
Perspective in theory of cognition is the choice of a context or a reference from which to sense, categorize, measure or codify experience, cohesively forming a coherent belief, typically for comparing with another...
as what possesses "the faculty and the power to feel and to experience oneself in every point of its being
Being
Being , is an English word used for conceptualizing subjective and objective aspects of reality, including those fundamental to the self —related to and somewhat interchangeable with terms like "existence" and "living".In its objective usage —as in "a being," or "[a] human being" —it...
". For Henry, life is essentially force
Force
In physics, a force is any influence that causes an object to undergo a change in speed, a change in direction, or a change in shape. In other words, a force is that which can cause an object with mass to change its velocity , i.e., to accelerate, or which can cause a flexible object to deform...
and affect
Affect (philosophy)
Affect is a concept used in the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza and elaborated by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari...
, it is invisible by essence, it exists within a pure experience of itself which oscillates permanently between suffering
Suffering
Suffering, or pain in a broad sense, is an individual's basic affective experience of unpleasantness and aversion associated with harm or threat of harm. Suffering may be qualified as physical or mental. It may come in all degrees of intensity, from mild to intolerable. Factors of duration and...
and joy
Happiness
Happiness is a mental state of well-being characterized by positive emotions ranging from contentment to intense joy. A variety of biological, psychological, religious, and philosophical approaches have striven to define happiness and identify its sources....
, it is an always begun again passage from suffering to joy. Thought
Thought
"Thought" generally refers to any mental or intellectual activity involving an individual's subjective consciousness. It can refer either to the act of thinking or the resulting ideas or arrangements of ideas. Similar concepts include cognition, sentience, consciousness, and imagination...
is for him only a mode of the life, because it is not thought which gives access to the life, but it is life that allows thought to reach itself.
According to Henry, life can never be seen from the exterior, as it never appears in the exteriority of the world. Life feels itself and experiences itself in its invisible interiority and in its radical immanence. In the world we never see life itself, but only living beings or living organisms, we cannot see life in them. It is as well impossible to see the soul of others with our eyes or to perceive it at the end of a scalpel.
Henry's philosophy goes on to aver that we undergo life in a radical passivity, we are reduced to bear it permanently as what we have not wanted, and that this radical passivity of life is the foundation and the cause of suffering. None has ever given himself life. At the same time, the simple fact of living, of being alive and of feeling oneself instead of being nothing and of not existing is already the highest joy and the greatest of the happiness. Suffering and joy belong to the essence of life, they are the two fundamental affective tonalities of its manifestation and of its "pathetic" self-revelation (from the French word pathétique which means capable of feeling something like suffering or joy).
For Henry, life is not a universal, blind, impersonal and abstract substance, it is necessarily the personal and concrete life of a living individual, it carries in it a consubstantial Ipseity which refers to the fact of being itself, to the fact of being a Self. That this life is the personal and finite life of men, or the personal and infinite life of God.
Further information on this philosophical idea of life can be found in the articles about the phenomenological life
Phenomenological life
Phenomenological life is life considered from a philosophical and rigorously phenomenological point of view.- Phenomenological definition of life :...
and the philosophy of life.
Two modes of manifestation
Two modes of manifestation of phenomena exist which are two ways of appearing: "exteriority" which is the mode of manifestation of the visible world, and phenomenological "interiority" which is the mode of manifestation of the invisible life. Our bodiesBody
With regard to living things, a body is the physical body of an individual. "Body" often is used in connection with appearance, health issues and death...
, for example, are given to us from the inner in the life, which allows us, for example, to move our hand, and it appears also from the exterior as any other object that we can see in the world.
The invisible which we speak of does not correspond to that which is too small to be seen with the naked eye nor does it correspond to radiation, but rather to life, which is forever invisible because it is radically immanent and never appears in the world's exteriority. For example, no one has ever seen a force, a thought or a feeling of their inner reality appear in the world; no one has ever found them by digging into the ground.
Some of his assertions seem paradoxical and difficult to understand at first glance, not only because they are extracted from their context, but above all because of our thinking habits which lead us to reduce everything to its visible appearance in the world instead of reaching its invisible reality in the life. It is this separation between the visible appearance and the invisible reality which allows the dissimulation of our real feelings and which founds the possibility of sham and hypocrisy which are forms of lies.
Originality of Henry's thought
Western philosophy as a whole since its Greek origins recognizes only the visible world and exteriority as the single mode of manifestation, it is trapped into what Michel Henry calls in The Essence of Manifestation the "ontological monism", it ignores completely the invisible interiority of life, its radical immanence and its original revelation mode which is irreducible to any form of transcendence and to any exteriority. When it is a question of subjectivity or of life, they are never grasped in their purity, they are always reduced to biological life, to their external link to the world, or as in Husserl to an intentionality, that’s to say an orientation of consciousness to an external object.Michel Henry rejects materialism, which admits only matter as reality, because the manifestation of matter itself into the transcendence of the world presupposes constantly the revelation of life itself, in order to access to it, to be able to see it or to touch it. He rejects as well idealism, which reduces being to thought and is incapable by principle to grasp the reality of being which it reduces to an unreal image, to a simple representation. For Michel Henry, the revelation of the absolute resides in affectivity and is constituted by it.
The deep originality of Michel Henry's thought and its radical novelty in relation to all anterior philosophy explains its quite limited reception, a philosophy nevertheless admirable by its rigor and by its depth. But it is a thought both difficult and demanding, even if the central and unique theme of phenomenological life which experience it tries to communicate is what is the most simple and immediate. An immediacy and an absolute transparency of life which explains the difficulty to grasp it by means of thought : it is much easier to speak of what we see than of this invisible life which escapes by principle to any external look.
Reception of Henry's philosophy
His thesis on The Essence of Manifestation has been welcomed warmly by the members of the jury who have recognized the intellectual value and the seriousness of its author, nevertheless this thesis did not have any influence on their later works. His prophetic book on Marx has been rejected by Marxists who were harshly criticized, as well as by those who refused to see in Marx a philosopher and who reduced him to an ideologue responsible from Marxism. His book on The barbarism has been considered by some people as a quite simplistic and too sharp anti-scientific discourse. Nevertheless technique continues its blind and without limit development too often in the contempt of life.His books on Christianity seem to have quite disappointed some professional theologians and catholic exegetes who have only picked out and corrected what they considered as “dogmatic errors”. His book I am the Truth. Toward a philosophy of Christianity has been the object of a pamphlet in The theological turn of the French phenomenology (Le tournant théologique de la phénoménologie française) from Dominique Janicaud who sees in the immanence of life only the affirmation of a tautological interiority. Nevertheless Antoine Vidalin has just published a book in French entitled The word of Life (La parole de la Vie) where he shows that the phenomenology of Michel Henry allows a renewed approach of all the domains of theology.
As says Alain David in an article published in the French journal Revue philosophique de la France et de l’Etranger (number 3, July - September 2001), the thought of Michel Henry seems too radical, its changes too deeply our thinking habits, its reception is quite difficult, even if all his readers say themselves impressed by its "power", by the "staggering effect" of a thought which "brushes all on its passage", which "provokes admiration", but nevertheless "doesn’t really convinces". Because we don’t know if we are confronted to "the violence of a prophetic word or to pure madness". Rolf Kühn asserts also in this same philosophical journal, in order to explain the difficult reception of Michel Henry’s work, that "if we take sides with no power of this world, we inevitably submit oneself to the silence and to the critics of all possible power, because we recall to all institution that its visible or apparent power is, in fact only powerlessness, because nobody gives himself into the absolute phenomenological life."
His books have nevertheless been translated in many languages, notably in English, German, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese and Japanese. An important number of books have been consecrated to his thought, mainly in French, but also in German, Spanish and Italian. Several seminars have also been consecrated to the thought of Michel Henry in Beirut, Cerisy, Namur, Prague and Paris. Michel Henry is considered by those who know his work and recognize its value as one of the major contemporaneous philosophers, and his phenomenology starts to "win a following". A Center of Michel Henry studies has even been created in the Saint-Joseph University of Beirut (Lebanon) under the direction of Professor Jad Hatem.
On the problems of society
Michel Henry wrote an important work on Karl MarxKarl Marx
Karl Heinrich Marx was a German philosopher, economist, sociologist, historian, journalist, and revolutionary socialist. His ideas played a significant role in the development of social science and the socialist political movement...
, whom he considers, paradoxically, as one of the first Christian
Christian
A Christian is a person who adheres to Christianity, an Abrahamic, monotheistic religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus of Nazareth as recorded in the Canonical gospels and the letters of the New Testament...
thinkers and as one of the most important western philosophers, because of the weight he gives in his thought to living work and to the living individual in whom he sees the foundation of economic reality. His works, however, were published too late to have large-scale influence. For example, The German Ideology appeared only in 1932. This work on Marx has been translated in English under the title Marx. A Philosophy of Human Being.
In his essay Barbarism, Michel Henry questions himself on science, which is founded on the idea of a universal and thus objective truth and which therefore leads to the elimination of sensible qualities of the world, to the elimination of sensibility and of life. The science is not bad by itself as long as it restricts to study nature, but it tends to exclude all others traditional cultures, namely art, ethic and religion. Science delivered to itself leads to the technique whose blind processes develop by themselves in a monstrous way without reference to life.
Science is a way of culture in which life denies itself and refuses itself any value, it is a practical negation of life, which goes on in a theoretical negation in the way of all the ideologies which bring back all possible knowledge to that of science, namely human sciences whose objectivity itself deprive them of their object : what is the value of statistics about suicide, what do they say about the despair it proceeds from ? These ideologies have invaded the university and throw it to its destruction by the elimination of life from its searches and from its teaching. Television is the truth of technique, it is the practice par excellence of the barbarism, it reduces all event to current events, to incoherent and insignificant facts.
This negation of life results according to Michel Henry from the "disease of life", from its secret dissatisfaction of oneself which leads it to deny itself, to run away from itself in order to escape its anguish and its own suffering. In the modern world, we are almost all condemned from our childhood to run away our anguish and our own life in the mediocrity of the media universe, an escape of oneself and a dissatisfaction which lead to violence, instead of resorting to the traditional and more elaborated forms of culture which allowed the surpassing of this suffering and its transformation into joy. Culture subsists only clandestinely and in a kind of incognito in our materialist society which is sinking into barbarism.
Communism and Capitalism are for Michel Henry the two faces of a same death, which consists in a same negation of the life. The Marxism eliminates the individual life to the benefit of universal abstractions like society, people, history or social classes. The Marxism is a way of fascism, that’s to say a doctrine which originates in the degradation of the individual whose elimination is considered as legitimate. While Capitalism substitutes economic entities such as money, profit or interest to the real needs of life. Capitalism recognizes however the life as source of value, the salary being the objective representation of the real subjective and living work. But Capitalism gives up progressively the place to the exclusion of the subjectivity by the modern technique, which replaces the living work by automated technical processes, eliminating at the same time the power of creating value and then the value itself : the possessions are produced in abundance, but the unemployment increases and money constantly lakes to buy them. These themes are developed in his book From Communism to Capitalism, Theory of a Catastrophe
The next book he began to write was entitled The Book of the Dead and was dealing with what he called the "clandestine subjectivity". A theme which evokes the condition of the life in the modern world and which is also probably an allusion to his commitment to the Resistance movement
Resistance movement
A resistance movement is a group or collection of individual groups, dedicated to opposing an invader in an occupied country or the government of a sovereign state. It may seek to achieve its objects through either the use of nonviolent resistance or the use of armed force...
and personal experience of clandestinity.
On art and painting
Michel Henry was a great admirer and connoisseur of ancient art, of the great classicalClassicism
Classicism, in the arts, refers generally to a high regard for classical antiquity, as setting standards for taste which the classicists seek to emulate. The art of classicism typically seeks to be formal and restrained: of the Discobolus Sir Kenneth Clark observed, "if we object to his restraint...
painting which precedes the scientism
Scientism
Scientism refers to a belief in the universal applicability of the systematic methods and approach of science, especially the view that empirical science constitutes the most authoritative worldview or most valuable part of human learning to the exclusion of other viewpoints...
derived figuration of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and at the same time of abstract creations resulting from an authentic spiritual quest such as those of the founder of the abstract art, the painter Wassily Kandinsky
Wassily Kandinsky
Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky was an influential Russian painter and art theorist. He is credited with painting the first purely-abstract works. Born in Moscow, Kandinsky spent his childhood in Odessa. He enrolled at the University of Moscow, studying law and economics...
. Michel Henry dedicated to him a book entitled Seeing the Invisible, where he describes his work. He analyses in this book the theoretical writings of Kandinsky about art and painting in their spiritual and cultural dimensions as a way of increasing oneself and refining of one's sensibility
Sensibility
Sensibility refers to an acute perception of or responsiveness toward something, such as the emotions of another. This concept emerged in eighteenth-century Britain, and was closely associated with studies of sense perception as the means through which knowledge is gathered...
. He explores the means of painting and their effects on the inner life of one who looks at them filled with wonder, following the rigorous and nearly phenomenological analysis proposed by Kandinsky. He explains that all forms of painting are able to rouse in us an abstract reality, that’s to say it isn't content with reproducing the world, but looks to express the invisible power and the invisible life that exists. He also evokes the great thought of Kandinsky, the synthesis of the arts, their unity in monumental art, as well as the cosmic dimension of the art.
On Christianity
Life loves itself in an infinite love and never stops to generate itself, it never stops to generate each one of us as its beloved son or daughter in the eternal present of the life. The Life is nothing but this absolute of love that the religion calls GodGod
God is the English name given to a singular being in theistic and deistic religions who is either the sole deity in monotheism, or a single deity in polytheism....
. That’s why the Life is sacred and this is for this reason that nobody has the right to attack it or to hurt it. The problem of the evil
Evil
Evil is the violation of, or intent to violate, some moral code. Evil is usually seen as the dualistic opposite of good. Definitions of evil vary along with analysis of its root motive causes, however general actions commonly considered evil include: conscious and deliberate wrongdoing,...
is that of death, that’s to say of the degeneration from this original condition of Son of God, when the life turns against itself in the hate and the resentment. Because as says John in his first epistle, anyone who does not love remains in death, whereas everyone who loves has been born of God. The commandment of love is not an ethical law, but the Life itself. Those themes are developed in his book I Am the Truth. Toward a Philosophy of Christianity.
This book proposes also a phenomenology of Christ, who is understood as the First Living. The living is just what reaches itself in this pure revelation of oneself or self-revelation that is Life. That’s in the form of an effective and singular Ipseity that Life never ceases to generate itself. It never ceases to occur in the form of a singular Self that embraces itself, experiences itself and enjoys itself, and that Michel Henry calls the First Living. Or also the Arch-Son, as he inhabits the Origin, the very Beginning, and as he is engendered in the very process whereby the Father engenders himself.
The coming of Christ into the world aims to make the true Father manifest to people, and thus to save them from the oblivion of Life where they stand. An oblivion which leads them to feel themselves falsely as being at the source of their own powers, of their own pleasures and of their own feelings, and to leave in the terrifying lack of what gives nevertheless each ego to himself. The plenitude of life and the feeling of satisfaction it brings, this must yield to the great Rift, to the Desire that no object can fulfill, to the Hunger that nothing can satisfy.
As he has said in his latest book Words of the Christ, that’s in the heart that the life speaks, in its immediate pathetic self-revelation, but this heart is blind to the Truth, it is deaf to the word of the Life, it is hard and selfish, and that’s from it that comes the evil. That’s in the violence of its silent and implacable self-revelation, who testifies against this degenerated life and against the evil that comes from it, that stands the Judgment which is identical to the coming of each Self in itself and to which nobody can escape.
In his book Incarnation, a philosophy of the flesh, Michel Henry starts with the opposition of the sensible and living flesh, as we experience it permanently from the inside, to our inert and material body, as we can see it from the outside, similar to the other objects we can find in the world. The flesh doesn’t fit at all in his terminology with the soft part of our material and objective body, by opposition to the bones for example, but to what he called in his previous books our subjective body. For Michel Henry, an object doesn’t possess interiority, it is not living, it doesn’t feel itself and doesn’t feel that it is touched, it doesn’t do the subjective experience of being touched.
After having placed the difficult problem of the incarnation in a historical perspective going back to the thought of the Fathers of the Church, he makes in this book a critical review of the phenomenological tradition that leads to the reversal of phenomenology. He then proposes to elaborate a phenomenology of the flesh which leads to the notion of a not constituted original flesh given in the "Arch-revelation" of Life, as well as a phenomenology of Incarnation.
Although the flesh is traditionally understood as the place of sin, it is also in Christianity the place of salvation, which consists in the deification of man, that’s to say in the fact of becoming Son of God, to come back to the eternal and absolute Life we had forgotten getting lost in the world, caring only about things and ourselves. In the fault, we make the tragic experience of our powerlessness to do the good we would like to do and of our inability to avoid the evil. In this way in front of the magic body of the other, that’s the anguished desire to meet the life in it that leads to the fault. In the night of the lovers, the sexual act couples two impulsive movements, but the erotic desire fails to reach the pleasure of the other where it is experienced, in a total loving fusion. The erotic relation is however doubled by a pure affective relation, foreign to the carnal coupling, a relation made of mutual gratitude or of love. That’s this affective dimension that is denied in this way of violence that is pornography, which extracts the erotic relation from the pathos of life to abandon it to the world, and which consists in a real profanation of life.
On psychoanalysis
Michel Henry has done a study of the historical and philosophical genesis of the psychoanalysis in the light of the phenomenology of the life in his book Genealogy of the psychoanalysis, the lost beginning, in which he shows that the Freudian notion of unconscious results from the incapacity of Freud, its founder, to think the essence of the life in its purity. The repressed representation is not unconscious, it is only not formed : the unconscious is only an empty representation, it doesn’t exists, or rather the real unconscious, that’s the life itself in its pathetic reality. And that’s not the repression that provokes the anguish, whose existence is only due to the fact to be able to act, but the unused psychic energy or libido. As for the notion of consciousness, it simply means the power of seeing, it is only a consciousness of object which leads to an empty subjectivity.On affectivity
- "That which is felt without the intermediary of any sense whatsoever is in its essence affectivity." (The Essence of Manifestation, § 52)
- "Affectivity has ever accomplished its work when the world rises." (The Essence of Manifestation, § 54)
- "The suffering makes up the tissue of the existence, it is the place where the life becomes living, the reality and the phenomenological effectivity of this gradual change." (The Essence of Manifestation, § 70)
- "The power of the feeling is the gathering which edifies, the being seized by oneself, its blazing up, its fulguration, is the becoming of the being, the triumphant sudden appearance of the revelation. What becomes of, in the triumph of this sudden appearance, in the fulguration of the presence, in the Parousia and, lastly, when there is something instead of nothing, that’s the joy." (The Essence of Manifestation, § 70)
- "But the joy is nothing about which it may be joyful. Far to come after the coming of the being and to marvel in front of it, the joy is consubstantial with the being, the joy founds it and forms it." (The Essence of Manifestation, § 70)
- "The community is a subterranean affective water table and each one drinks the same water at this source and at this well that he is." (Material Phenomenology)
On the problems of society
- "The Marxism is the whole of the misinterpretations that have been done about Marx." (Marx, a Philosophy of Human Being)
- "The culture is the whole of the enterprises and of the practices in which the abundance of life expresses itself, they all have as motivation the « load », the « over » which disposes inwardly the living subjectivity as a force ready to give unstintingly itself and constraint, under the load, to do it." (The Barbarism)
- "The barbarism is an unused energy." (The Barbarism)
- "So it's not the self-realization that the media existence proposes to the life, it's the escape, the opportunity for all those whose laziness, repressing their energy, make them forever dissatisfied of themselves to forget this dissatisfaction." (The Barbarism)
- "No abstraction, no ideality has never been neither in position to produce a real action nor, by consequence, what only represents it." (From Communism to Capitalism)
- "When what feels nothing and doesn't feel oneself, has no desire and no love, is put at the principle of the organization of the world, it's the time of madness that comes, because the madness has all lost except the reason." (From Communism to Capitalism)
On art and painting
- "The spectacle of the beauty which embodies itself in a living being is infinitely more touching than that of the work the more grandiose." (Love with Closed Eyes)
- "The one who will want to represent this force will represent a column, the heavy blocs of stone of the pediment and of the roof – he will represent the temple, represent the world. Briesen draws the force of the music, the original force of the Suffering and of the Life : he draws nothing." (Article « Drawing the music, theory for the art of Briesen », in Phénoménologie de la vie, tome III)
- "We look at petrified, motionless them also or evolving slowly on the background of a nocturnal firmament, the hieroglyphs of the invisible. We look at them : forces that lay dormant in us and waited since millenniums, since the beginning, obstinately, patiently, forces that explode in the violence and the gleam of the colors, which unroll the spaces and generate the forms of the worlds, forces of the cosmos have raised themselves in us, they carry us along out of the time in the round dance of their jubilation and do not give us up, they don’t stop – because even them did not think it was possible to reach « such an happiness ». The art is the resurrection of the eternal life." (Seeing the invisible, about Kandinsky)
On Christianity
- "I hear for ever the noise of my birth." (I Am the Truth. Toward a philosophy of Christianity)
- "To be born is not to come into the world. To be born is to come into life." (I Am the Truth. Toward a Philosophy of Christianity)
- "But then, when and why is this emotional upheaval produced, which opens a person to his own essence ? Nobody knows. The emotional opening of the person to his own essence can only be born of the will of life itself, as this rebirth that lets him suddenly experience his eternal birth. The Spirit blows where it wills." (I Am the Truth. Toward a Philosophy of Christianity)
- "No object has ever done the experience of being touched." (Incarnation. A Philosophy of the Flesh)
- "So my flesh is not only the principle of the constitution of my objective body, it hides in it its invisible substance. Such is the strange condition of this object that we call a body : it doesn’t consist at all in the visible appearance to which we reduce it since forever ; in its reality precisely it is invisible. Nobody has ever seen a man, but nobody has ever seen his body as well, if by « body » we understand his real body." (Incarnation. A Philosophy of the Flesh)
- "Our flesh caries in it the principle of its manifestation, and this manifestation is not the appearing of the world. In its pathetic self-impressionality, in its flesh itself, given to itself in the Arch-passibility of the absolute Life, it reveals this one which reveals it to itself, it is in its pathos the Arch-revelation of Life, the Parousia of the absolute. On the bottom of its Night, our flesh is God." (Incarnation. A Philosophy of the Flesh)
- "Life is uncreated. Foreign to creation, foreign to the world, every process conferring Life is a process of generation." (Words of Christ)
On the problems of society
- La barbarie (Barbarism): The culture, which is the self-development of the life, is threatened in our society by the barbarism of the monstrous objectivity of the technoscience, whose ideologies reject all form of subjectivity, while the life is condemned to escape his anguish in the media universe.
- Du communisme au capitalisme, théorie d'une catastrophe (From Communism to Capitalism, Theory of a Catastrophe): The collapse of the eastern communist systems corresponds to the failure of a system that pretended to deny the reality of life to the benefit of abstractions wrongly universals. But the death is also to the appointment in the empire of the capitalism and of the modern technique.
On art and painting
- Voir l'invisible, sur Kandinsky (Seeing the Invisible, about Kandinsky): The art can save from his confusion the abandoned man of our technical civilization. This is this quest that has led Kandinsky to the creation of the abstract painting. This is no longer a matter to represent the world but our inner life, with lines and colors that correspond to forces and inner sonorities.
On Christianity
- (I am the Truth: Toward a Philosophy of Christianity): This book explains the kind of truth that Christianity tries to transmit to men. The Christianity opposes to the truth of the world the Truth of Life, according to which the man is the Son of God. The self-revelation of the Life who experience itself in its invisible interiority is the essence of God that founds any individual. In the world, Jesus has the appearance of a man, but that’s in the Truth of the Life that he is the Christ, the First Living.
- Incarnation, une philosophie de la chair (Incarnation, a Philosophy of the Flesh): The living flesh opposes radically to the material body. Because this is the flesh which, experiencing oneself, enjoying of oneself according to always reviving impressions, is able to feel the body which is exterior to it, to touch it and to be touched by it. That's the flesh which allows us to know the body. The fundamental word of the prologue to John’s Gospel, who says that the Word became flesh, asserts this improbable thesis that God has embodied in a mortal flesh like ours, it asserts the unity of the Word and the flesh in Christ. What is the flesh to be the place of God’s revelation, and in what consists in this revelation ?
- Paroles du Christ (Words of Christ): Can the man understand in his own language the word of God, a word that speaks in another language ? The words of the Christ seem to many people of an immoderate claim because they do not only claim to transmit the truth or a divine revelation, but to be itself this Revelation and this Truth, the Word of God himself, of this God that the Christ says to be himself.
Literary works
- Le jeune officier (The Young Officer): This first novel evokes the struggle of a young officer against the evil embodied by rats on a ship.
- L'amour les yeux fermés (Love With Closed Eyes): This novel which won the Renaudot Prize is the account of the destruction of a city arrived at the top of its development and of its refinement and which is suffering from an insidious evil.
- Le fils du roi (The Son of the King): This book is the story of the life locked up in a psychiatric hospital and confronted to the rationality of the psychiatrists.
- Le cadavre indiscret (The Indiscreet Corpse): This novel tells us the anxiety of the assassins of the too honest occult treasurer of a political party which finance an investigation to know what is really known about then and to reassure themselves.
Philosophical works
- L’Essence de la manifestation (1963)
- Philosophie et Phénoménologie du corps (1965)
- Marx:
- I. Une philosophie de la réalité (1976)
- II. Une philosophie de l’économie (1976)
- Généalogie de la psychanalyse. Le commencement perdu (1985)
- La Barbarie (1987)
- Voir l’invisible, sur Kandinsky (1988)
- Phénoménologie matérielle (1990)
- Du communisme au capitalisme. Théorie d'une catastrophe (1990)
- (1996)
- Incarnation. Une philosophie de la chair (2000)
- Paroles du Christ (2002)
Posthumous works
- Auto-donation. Entretiens et conférences (2002)
- Le bonheur de Spinoza (2003)
- Phénoménologie de la vie:
- Tome I. De la phénoménologie (2003)
- Tome II. De la subjectivité (2003)
- Tome III. De l’art et du politique (2003)
- Tome IV. Sur l’éthique et la religion (2004)
- Entretiens (2005)
Literary works
- Le jeune officier (1954)
- L’Amour les yeux fermés (1976)
- Le Fils du roi (1981)
- Le cadavre indiscret (1996)
Books in English
- Michael O'Sullivan : Michel Henry: Incarnation, Barbarism and Belief - An Introduction to the work of Michel Henry (2006)
Monographs in French
- Gabrielle Dufour-Kowalska : Michel Henry, un philosophe de la vie et de la praxis (1980)
- Dominique Janicaud : Le tournant théologique de la phénoménologie française (1991)
- Gabrielle Dufour-Kowalska : L’Art et la sensibilité. De Kant à Michel Henry (1996)
- Jad Hatem : Critique et affectivité. Rencontre de Michel Henry et de l’orient (2001)
- Gabrielle Dufour-Kowalska : Michel Henry, passion et magnificence de la vie (2003)
- Jad Hatem : Michel Henry, la parole de vie (2003)
- Rolf Kühn : Radicalité et passibilité. Pour une phénoménologie pratique (2004)
- Philippe Capelle : Phénoménologie et Christianisme chez Michel Henry (2004)
- Jad Hatem : Le sauveur et les viscères de l’être. Sur le gnosticisme et Michel Henry (2004)
- Jad Hatem : Christ et intersubjectivité chez Marcel, Stein, Wojtyla et Henry (2004)
- Sébastien Laoureux : L'immanence à la limite. Recherches sur la phénoménologie de Michel Henry (2005)
- Antoine Vidalin : La parole de la vie. La phénoménologie de Michel Henry et l’intelligence chrétienne des Ecritures (2006)
- Paul Audi : Michel Henry : Une trajectoire philosophique (2006)
- Raphaël Gély : Rôles, action sociale et vie subjective. Recherches à partir de la phénoménologie de Michel Henry (2007)
Collective books in French
- Jean-Michel Longneaux (éd.) : Retrouver la vie oubliée. Critiques et perspectives de la philosophie de Michel Henry, Presses Universitaires de Namur, 2000
- Alain David et Jean Greisch (Actes du Colloque de Cerisy 1996) : Michel Henry, l’épreuve de la vie, Editions du Cerf, 2001
- Philippe Capelle (éd.) : Phénoménologie et Christianisme chez Michel Henry, Editions du Cerf, 2004
- Collectif (Colloque international de Montpellier 2003) : Michel Henry. Pensée de la vie et culture contemporaine, Beauchesne, 2006
- Jean-Marie Brohm et Jean Leclercq (conception et direction du dossier) : Michel Henry, Les Dossiers H, Editions l'Age d'Homme, 2009
Books in other languages
- Rolf Kühn : Leiblichkeit als Lebendigkeit. Michel Henry Lebensphänomenologie absoluter Subjektivität als Affectivität (1992)
- Rolf Kühn, Stefan Nowotny : Michel Henry. Zur Selbstenfaltung des Lebens und der Kultur (2002)
- Mario Lipsitz : Eros y Nacimiento fuera de la ontología griega : Emmanuel Levinas y Michel Henry (2004)
- Molteni Gioacchino : Introduzione a Michel Henry. La svolta della fenomenologia (2005)
- Marini Emanuele : Vita, corpo e affettività nella fenomenologia di Michel Henry (2005)
External links
- An exhaustive biography as well as a complete summary of most of his books can be found on the French web site (Author: Jean Leclercq and Anne Henry): http://www.michelhenry.org
- International Michel Henry Society web site (in French): http://societemichelhenry.free.fr
- A website of a German research group (Author: Marco A. Sorace and Rolf Kühn): http://www.lebensphaenomenologie.de