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Contributors   received his Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has taught at St. Michael’s College for more than twelve years and is currently the head of the department of Classics and Philosophy. He specializes in Ancient Philosophy, the scholastic –humanist debate, Pascal, Newman, and Kierkegaard. Professor Begley is currently collaborating with Daniel Sheerin, of the University of Notre Dame, on volume seventy-nine of the Collected Works of Erasmus, a translation and annotation of two apologiae of Erasmus against the Carthusian monk and Paris theologian Pierre Cousturier.  .  is an assistant professor of history at Kean University in Union, New Jersey. He has also served as Academic Editor of Paulist Press. A former church history professor, he is the author of five books, including most recently Nicolas de Clamanges: Spirituality , personal reform, and pastoral renewal on the eve of the Reformations (Catholic University of America Press, ), Renewing Christianity: A history of Church reform from day one to Vatican II (Paulist Press, ), and The general councils: A history of the twenty-one councils from Nicaea to Vatican II (Paulist Press, ). He is also the co-editor, with Thomas M. Izbicki, of Reform and renewal in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance: Studies in honor of Louis Pascoe, S.J. (E. J. Brill, ).  .  is Associate Professor of History at Georgia Southern University and recently was Starr Visiting Research Fellow, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. He is the author of Giles of Rome’s ‘‘De regimine principum’’: Reading and writing politics at court and university, c. PAGE 197 ................. 11150$ CTRB 02-02-05 07:57:25 PS Contributors  –c.  (Cambridge University Press, ) and the editor, with David Fowler and Paul Remley, of The governance of kings and princes: John Trevisa’s middle English translation of the ‘‘De regimine principum’’ of Aegidius Romanus (Garland, ). He has also published articles both on the vernacular translation of Aristotelian moral philosophy and on the history of medieval reading and literacy. He is currently researching the role of moral philosophy in the development and popularization of academic discourse during the later Middle Ages, and preparing an edition of some Latin moral philosophical compendia, including that of Bartolomeo da San Concordio.   is currently an assistant professor in the History Department at Denison University. He received his Ph.D. in history from Princeton University in . He is currently completing a book manuscript, ‘‘Piety and discipline in thirteenth-century France: Eudes Rigaud and the politics of reform.’’  . - received her first M.A., in Bulgarian philology , in  at Sofia University and then graduated from the Central European University (Budapest) with an M.A. in Medieval Studies. She is now enrolled in the Ph.D. program of the Department of Slavic and East European Languages and Literatures at Ohio State University. In her present work she focuses on translation principles and techniques from Greek to Slavic in the fourteenth century and is compiling a list of trilingual (Greek–Slavic–English) terminology that will clarify different usages and translations of liturgical, textological, and literary terms of the Eastern manuscript tradition. Her dissertation topic involves a linguistic examination of the Greek text Thekara the Monk’s Compilation and Composition from the Dogma of St. Dionysius the Areopagite, and its Slavic translation, done in the fourteenth century and found in several manuscripts (sixteenth–seventeenth centuries ) from the Hilandar Monastery collection and other Slavic depositories .  , whose doctorate is from the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, University of Toronto (), teaches in the Theology Department at Marquette University, specializing in Roman Catholic moral theology, from the perspective of a historically based study of St. Thomas Aquinas. He is the author of more than twenty PAGE 198 ................. 11150$ CTRB 02-02-05 07:57:25 PS [3.144.124.232] Project MUSE (2024-04-25 07:19 GMT) Contributors  articles (in, for example, Theological Studies, Medieval Philosophy and Theology, Recherches de théologie ancienne et médiévale, The Thomist). Currently he is preparing a critical edition of the early Dominican Paul of Hungary’s Summa de penitentia, as part of a larger study into the historical context, particularly the pastoral context, of Thomas’s moral teaching in the Secunda pars of his Summa theologiae; this research will result in a monograph to be entitled The Moral Universe of St. Thomas Aquinas.  . , .., whose degrees include a Ph.D. from St. Louis University and an S.T.L. from the Weston School of Theology, is chair of the Philosophy Department at Fordham University and Editor-in...

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