. . . "Maritain was born in Paris, the son of Paul Maritain, who was a lawyer, and his wife Genevi\u00E8ve Favre, the daughter of Jules Favre, and was reared in a liberal Protestant milieu. He was sent to the Lyc\u00E9e Henri IV. Later, he attended the Sorbonne, studying the natural sciences; chemistry, biology and physics. At the Sorbonne, he met Ra\u00EFssa Oumancoff, a Russian Jewish \u00E9migr\u00E9. They married in 1904. Furthermore, she, a noted poet and mystic, was his intellectual partner who participated with his search for truth. Raissa's sister, Vera Oumancoff, lived with Jacques and Raissa for almost all their married life. Soon, he became disenchanted with scientism at the Sorbonne, for it could not, for him, address the larger existential issues of life. In light of this disillusionment Jacques and Ra\u00EFssa made a pact to commit suicide together if they could not discover some deeper meaning to life within a year. Happily they were spared from following through on this because, at the urging of Charles P\u00E9guy, they attended the lectures of Henri Bergson at the Coll\u00E8ge de France. Along with his deconstructionism of scientism, Bergson instilled in them \"the sense of the absolute.\" Then, through the influence of L\u00E9on Bloy, they converted to the Roman Catholic faith in 1906. In the fall of 1907 the Maritains moved to Heidelberg, where Jacques studied biology under Hans Driesch. Hans Driesch\u2019s theory of neo-vitalism attracted Jacques because of its affinity with Henri Bergson. During this time, Ra\u00EFssa fell ill, and during her convalescence, their spiritual advisor, a Dominican friar named Fr. Humbert Cl\u00E9rissac, introduced her to the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas. So enthusiastic, she, in turn, exhorted her husband to examine the saint\u2019s writings. In Thomas, he found a number of insights and ideas that he had believed all along, he wrote: \"Thenceforth, in affirming to myself, without chicanery or dimunition, the authentic value of the reality of our human instruments of knowledge, I was already a Thomist without knowing it\u2026When several months later I came to the Summa Theologiae, I would construct no impediment to its luminous flood.\" From the Angelic Doctor (the honorary title of St. Aquinas), he was led to \"The Philosopher\" as St. Thomas christened him, Aristotle. Still later to further his intellectual development, he read the neo-scholastics. Beginning in 1912, Maritain taught at the Coll\u00E8ge Stanislas and later moved to the Institut Catholique de Paris. For the 1916\u20131917 academic year, he taught at the Petit S\u00E9minaire de Versailles. In 1933, he gave his first lectures in North America in Toronto at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. He also taught at Columbia University; at the Committee on Social Thought, University of Chicago; at the University of Notre Dame, and at Princeton University. From 1945 to 1948, he was the French ambassador to the Vatican. Afterwards, he returned to Princeton University where he achieved the \"Elysian status\" (as he puts it) as a professor emeritus in 1956. Raissa Maritain died in 1960. After her death, Jacques published her journal under the title \"Raissa's Journal.\" From 1961, Maritain lived with the Little Brothers of Jesus in Toulouse, France. He had had an influence in the order since its foundation in 1933. He became a Little Brother in 1970. Learning the death of his friend Maritain, Pope Paul VI cried. Jacques and Ra\u00EFssa Maritain are buried in the cemetery of Kolbsheim, a little French village where he had spent many summers at the estate of his friends, Antoinette and Alexander Grunelius."@en . . . . . . . . "Maritain was born in Paris, the son of Paul Maritain, who was a lawyer, and his wife Genevi\u00E8ve Favre, the daughter of Jules Favre, and was reared in a liberal Protestant milieu. He was sent to the Lyc\u00E9e Henri IV. Later, he attended the Sorbonne, studying the natural sciences; chemistry, biology and physics. From the Angelic Doctor (the honorary title of St. Aquinas), he was led to \"The Philosopher\" as St. Thomas christened him, Aristotle. Still later to further his intellectual development, he read the neo-scholastics. From 1945 to 1948, he was the French ambassador to the Vatican."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Jacques Maritain"@en . . .