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  • Contributor Notes

Andrew Cummings received his PhD from the University of Leuven, Belgium, and teaches philosophy at Mount Angel Seminary, Oregon. His research centers on topics in philosophical theology, metaphysics, and the history of ideas.

Adam Glover is assistant professor of Spanish at Winthrop University (Rock Hill, SC), where he teaches courses in Latin American literature and culture. He has special interests in Latin American poetry and the relationship between poetry and theology.

Nathan Lefler is associate professor of theology in the department of Theology/Religious Studies at the University of Scranton. He has published articles on Augustine, Aquinas, Shakespeare, Balthasar, and Catholic liturgy, and in 2014 he published his first monograph, Theologizing Friendship: How Amicitia in the Thought of Aelred and Aquinas Inscribes the Scholastic Turn. He is currently working on a project pertaining to chapter 64 of the Rule of St. Benedict.

Susan C. Selner-Wright teaches philosophy at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary, where she currently holds the Charles J. Chaput Chair. Her most important scholarly work is a translation of the Leonine edition of St. Thomas’s De potentia Dei, Q. 3, published [End Page 168] by Catholic University of America Press under the title On Creation. She is also the author of a two-part study guide for small groups studying St. Thomas called Aquinas for Beginners, published by Endow. She lives in Denver with her husband, Terrence Wright, and their two children.

Fr. Bruno M. Shah, OP, is a Dominican friar of the Province of St. Joseph (Northeast, USA). He is currently a doctoral student in theology at the University of Notre Dame. He works in philosophical theology and is interested in the boundaries/junctures between theory and practice, and aesthetics and justice in a variety of twentieth-century Catholic authors and contexts.

William B. Stevenson is assistant professor of dogmatic theology at the St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity in St. Paul, Minnesota. In addition to theology, he teaches courses in philosophy and Latin. He received his PhD in theology and political philosophy from Boston College, where he was a Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation Fellow for the Study of Religion and Public Life. He is currently working on a study of the place of metaphysics in Al-Ghazali’s quarrel with the philosophers.

Terrence C. Wright is an associate professor of philosophy and director of the pre-theology program at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver. His academic interests include phenomenology and personalism, particularly the work of Edith Stein and Emmanuel Mounier. He is the author of Dorothy Day: Servant of God (Ignatius Press). He has also published on the relationship between philosophy and literature. He lives in Denver with his wife, Susan Selner-Wright, and their two children. [End Page 169]

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