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  • About the Authors

Brandon Daniel-Hughes, PhD, teaches religion and philosophy at John Abbott College in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec. His current research focuses on the work of Charles Sanders Peirce and the American pragmatist tradition, with a special focus on sentiment and instinct as well as Peirce’s creative appropriation of commonsense realism. He also grows vegetables and speaks terrible French.

Catherine Keller, PhD, is a professor of constructive theology at the Theological School and the Graduate School of Religion at Drew University. A revered teacher and cofounder of the Transdisciplinary Theological Colloquia, she is the author of six books, most recently, Cloud of the Impossible: Negative Theology and Planetary Entanglement (2014). She gave the 2014 AJTP annual lecture.

Christian Polke, PhD, is a postdoctoral research assistant in systematic theology at the Department of Protestant Theology, University of Hamburg (Germany). He is currently completing his second book, tentatively titled, Expressive Theism: Re-considering the Question of a Personal God.

Angela Roothaan, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of philosophy at VU University Amsterdam. Her research probes the interfaces of ethics, spirituality, science, and politics. In addition to numerous articles in several languages, she has also published five books in Dutch.

David Rohr is a PhD candidate at Boston University’s Graduate Department of Religious Studies in the science, philosophy, and religion track. His research interests include religious naturalism, American pragmatism, and biosemiotics, and his long-term goal is to construct a theological anthropology that is consistent with evolutionary biology and the neurosciences. [End Page 190]

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