Education and academia
He studied economics from 1987 to 1988 at the University of Vienna. Subsequently and until 1995, he studied philosophy, indology, German history, and philosophy of science. After three months in India, he writes a master's thesis in 1996 entitled The essence of spiritual knowledge from the Advaita Vedanta Shri Shakaracharyas, which was published by Eugen Diederichs in 1998.[5]
Between 1996 and 1999, he wrote for the Neue Südtiroler Tageszeitung in Bolzano, and worked on a "Philosophy of Astrology".[6] In 1999, he started a PhD at the State University for Design (HfG) of Karlsruhe under Peter Sloterdijk, supported by the Leopold Ziegler [de] foundation. From 2001 to 2003, he was supported by the state of Baden-Württemberg. In 2009, he obtained his PhD in philosophy and in 2011, received German citizenship.
In mid-October 2017, Jongen gave a lecture entitled “Does Democracy Need to be More Populist?” at the Hannah Arendt Center of Bard College in New York, on the occasion of the conference “Crises of Democracy: Thinking in Dark Times.” Jongen’s invitation to speak by the Hannah Arendt Center was criticized by professors in the US. The content and form of the lecture were also negatively assessed in the German press: The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung called Jongen’s remarks “philosophically weak,”[7] and Die Zeit compared them to a “beer tent speech” that consisted “solely of politically agitational claims that can be found in a similar form in the AfD party platform.”[8]