His inaugural research focuses on the philosophical affinities between Blaise Pascal and Søren Kierkegaard, highlighting a sense of unity presented as an Antiphilosophy of Christianity.
Drawing on various sources of continental philosophy his work highlights the fact that ethics in business cannot be taught or understood as any other management "knowledge".
[9] From an interpretation of Blaise Pascal and Paul Ricoeur’s analysis of power, he suggests new concepts to discuss the question of leadership responsibility, rethinking the usual way of considering it : practical wisdom,[10] skeptical humanism or "double thought".
[11] It leads him to show that power cannot be separated from a dialectic of abilities and disabilities; this approach is at the root of several contributions about the strategic "vision" and gender issues using the works of Henri Bergson and Gilles Deleuze,[12] and about the beau geste as a critical behavior in organizations.
He also explores the connections between this position and more recent currents of thought, with particular reference to John Caputo, Gianni Vattimo and Michel Henry.