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Contributor Notes S. A. Cortright is Associate Professor of Philosophy and the Integral Curriculum of Liberal Arts at Saint Mary's College of California . He serves as chair of the St. Mary's department ofphilosophy and as die founding director of die college's John F. Henning Institute , which is dedicated to die study ofdie philosophical and tiieological principles of Cadiolic social tiiought. Elizabeth Fox-Genovese teaches at Emory University. Her books include "Feminism Is Not the Story ofMy Life":How the Feminist Elite Has Lost TouchWith the Real Concerns ofWomen (Doubleday, 1 996) and FeminismWithout Illusions:A Critique ofIndividualism (Univ. ofNorth Carolina Press, 1 991). Raymond N. MacKenzie is a professor at the University of St. Thomas where he teaches courses in business communication and English. Michael J. Naughton is the director ofthe JohnA. Ryan Institute for Catholic SocialThought ofthe Center for Catholic Studies at die University ofSt.Thomas. He is also an associate professor in die tiieology department and die Graduate School ofBusiness. He has organized international conferences in die United States, Belgium, and India on die tiieme of Catholic social thought and management. He has just finished a book entitled Managing as ifFaith Matters: Christian Social Principles in the Modern Organization (Notre Dame Press, fortilcoming in die summer of 2000). logos 2:4 fall 1999 CONTRIBUTOR notes Russell Pannier is Professor of Law at die William Mitchell College of Law. He has published articles in the areas of philosophy of logic, metaphysics, etiiics, jurisprudence, and constitutional law. He is currently working on a book on St.Thomas Aquinas withThomas D. Sullivan and Jeremiah Reedy (De Ente et Essentia: An Introduction toAquinas'Basic Ontology). Corrine L. Patton received her Ph.D. in OldTestament fromYale University in 1991 , taught at Florida State University from 199 1 to 1996, and is currentlyAssociate Professor ofTheology at the University ofSt.Thomas. Her research interests are the book ofEzekial and die history ofbiblical interpretation, and she has published numerous articles on botii. Ernest S. Pierucci practices corporate law in San Francisco, California . He is a member of the Steering Committee of the John F. Henning Institute at St. Mary's College of California and a member of the Board of Visitors of the Columbus School of Law of The Catholic University of America. Mr. Pierucci has taught business law, philosophy of law, and Collegiate Seminar (Great Books Program ) at St. Mary's College. Eric Reitan earned his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University at Buffalo in 1993, anc^ currently teaches philosophy at the University of Northern Iowa. His research interests include violence and nonviolence theory, environmental philosophy, and the philosophy of religion (especially where the latter overlaps with issues in moral philosophy). He is also a lead facilitator witii the Alternatives to Violence Project, which offers conflictresolution workshops in prisons and various community settings. i84LOGOS Gerard B. Wegemer is Associate Professor of English at the University ofDallas. He has written several books onThomas More and is now working on"Shakespeare's EpicVision"in die English history plays. Archbishop Joseph M. Zycinski, Archbishop of Lublin, Poland, is a member ofthe Pontifical Council for Culture and was a principal contributor to Pope John Paul II's recent encyclical, Fides et Ratio. In addition to the work ofthe Pontifical Council,Archbishop Zycinski is also a distinguished scholar in the history ofscience and die study ofthe relationship between the natural sciences and Christian faith, a member of the Russian Academy of the Natural Sciences, and Grand Chancellor ofdie Catholic University of Lublin. ...

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