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  • Contributor Notes

Patricia Camarero is dean of academic affairs and professor of philosophy at Mater Ecclesiae College, a liberal arts college dedicated to the education of the consecrated women of Regnum Christi. She completed her graduate studies in philosophy at the University of Navarra, Spain, and the Athenaeum Pontificium Regina Apostolorum, Rome. Her doctoral work centered on the doctrine of human love in the thought of Thomas Aquinas and Edith Stein.

Thomas G. Guarino is professor of systematic theology in the School of Theology of Seton Hall University. He is the author of Revelation and Truth (University of Scranton, 1993), Foundations of Systematic Theology (T. & T. Clark, 2005) and Vattimo and Theology (T. & T. Clark, 2009). He has published scores of articles and reviews in theological and philosophical journals in North America and Europe. For the last decade, he has been a member of the bilateral ecumenical initiative Evangelicals and Catholics Together. In 2003, he was named a fellow of the Center of Theological Inquiry in Princeton, NJ. For this article, he gratefully acknowledges the support of the Alberto Italian Studies Institute of Seton Hall University. [End Page 163]

Scott G. Hefelfinger is adjunct professor of philosophy at the International Theological Institute (ITI) in Trumau, Austria. He has also taught for Franciscan University of Steubenville. After completing a degree in music composition and writing a number of musical works, he earned a master of sacred theology degree from ITI. He is currently completing his licentiate of sacred theology focusing on the nature of theology and its relation to mission in the thought of Thomas Aquinas and Joseph Ratzinger. He has lectured in both Europe and America and his recent work has appeared in Letter & Spirit and Antiphon: A Journal for Liturgical Renewal.

H. Wendell Howard is professor emeritus of English at St. John Fisher College in Rochester, New York. He is also retired as a choral conductor, a forty-year career that he began after receiving a diploma in voice from the Juilliard School of Music. He earned his PhD in English and music from the University of Minnesota. He has published over 150 articles, poems, and chapters in books, and his work has appeared many times in the pages of Logos.

Kevin Majeres is a board-certified psychiatrist in private practice in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and is clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. His practice specializes in the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder, and he is a member of the Academy of Cognitive Therapy. He has published on pharmacotherapy for bipolar disorder and on the philosophical anthropology of Walker Percy.

Stephen McInerney is lecturer in literature at Campion College, Sydney. His essay "'Art With Its Largesse and Its Own Restraint': The Sacramental Poetics of Elizabeth Jennings and Les Murray" appears in Mary Reichardt's Between Human and Divine: The Catholic Vision in Contemporary Literature (Catholic University of America Press, 2009). His poetry has appeared in numerous publications, including the anthologies 100 Australian Poems You Need to Know (Hardie [End Page 164] Grant, 2008), 100 Australian Poems of Love and Loss (Hardie Grant, 2011), and Australian Poetry Since 1788 (University of New South Wales Press, 2011).

Edward J. O'Boyle, is senior research associate affiliated with Mayo Research Institute. He specializes in research that centers attention on persons as economic agents in which he replaces the individual and individualism of mainstream economics that are rooted in the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Enlightenment and the script stage of human communication with person and personalism that spring from the electronic stage of human communication. He refers to this different way of thinking about economic affairs as personalist economics. He has published most recently in the Journal of Markets and Morality, International Journal of Social Economics, Review of Social Economy, Forum for Social Economics, and American Review of Political Economy. He is past president of the Association for Social Economics.

Thomas W. Stanford III is associate professor and chairman of the department of English language and literature at Christendom College in Front Royal, Virginia. He received his doctorate from the Catholic University of America in Washington, DC. He is past editor of Faith & Reason, the academic journal...

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