The applause shook the marble. Not for a Nobel laureate. Not for a billionaire donor. For an aging actor with a trembling hand and an unshakable smile.
Columbia University has done the unthinkable: it has turned “hope” into an academic weapon — and handed Michael J. Fox the trigger. What happens when lived exp…
What Columbia has created in the Professor of Optimism and Resilience is less a ceremonial chair and more a quiet revolution. By fusing Michael J.
Fox’s lived experience with Parkinson’s, his decades of advocacy, and the university’s neuroscience expertise, the role challenges a core academic assumption: that the most valuable knowledge is only produced in labs and libraries.
Here, the curriculum is a life, rigorously examined. Hope is treated not as naïve positivity, but as a trainable mental habit grounded in neuroplasticity, discipline, and choice.
The Fox Fellows program and his over-enrolled lecture series will turn campus into a testing ground for a different kind of intelligence: the capacity to face brutal facts without surrendering the future.
In that sense, Fox’s greatest work may no longer be on film or in fundraising, but in the students he sends into the world convinced that resilience is not a personality trait, but a practice.
Columbia is betting that this belief can be taught. Fox is betting his life that it must be.