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  • About The Authors

Stephan F. Steiner works at the Center for Literary and Cultural Research in Berlin, Germany. His research interests include European and American intellectual history, philosophy of nature, political philosophy, philosophy of religion, and pragmatism. He is the author of Weimar in America: Leo Strauss’s Political Philosophy (2013; published in German). His current project investigates the sacralization of nature in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Jeffrey Stout is professor of religion at Princeton University, where he has taught since 1975. His most recent books are Democracy and Tradition and Blessed Are the Organized: Grassroots Democracy in America. He served as president of the American Academy of Religion in 2007, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

William W. Young III is associate professor of humanities at Endicott College in Beverly, MA. He is the author of two books: The Politics of Praise: Naming God and Friendship in Aquinas and Derrida and Uncommon Friendships: An Amicable History of Western Religious Thought. His current research project is a philosophical ethnography of religious practices of listening and their implications for civic and democratic reflection.

Ulf Zackariasson is associate professor of philosophy of religion at Uppsala University, Sweden. He has published one book (Forces by Which We Live: Religion and Religious Experience from the Perspective of a Pragmatic Philosophical Anthropology) and a number of articles on pragmatic philosophy of religion and, more particularly, on the relevance of a pragmatic philosophical anthropology for a fruitful pragmatic conception of religion. [End Page 76]

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