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  • About the Authors

Matthew Bagger teaches in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Alabama. He is the author of Religious Experience, Justification, and History (Cambridge University Press, 1999) and The Uses of Paradox: Religion, Self-Transformation, and the Absurd (Columbia University Press, 2007), and editor of Pragmatism, Naturalism, and Religion (Columbia University Press, forthcoming).

G. Scott Davis is the Lewis T. Booker Professor of Religion and Ethics at the University of Richmond. He is the author of Warcraft and the Fragility of Virtue (University of Idaho Press, 1992; Wipf and Stock, 2011) and Believing and Acting: The Pragmatic Turn in Comparative Religion & Ethics (Oxford University Press, 2012), as well as numerous essays in ethics and philosophy of religion.

Daniel A. Dombrowski is professor of philosophy at Seattle University. He is the author of seventeen books including, most recently, Rethinking the Ontological Argument: A Neoclassical Theistic Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2006); Contemporary Athletics and Ancient Greek Ideals (University of Chicago Press, 2009); and Rawlsian Reflections in Religion and Applied Philosophy (Pennsylvania State University Press, 2011). He is the editor of the journal Process Studies.

Gary Dorrien teaches at Union Theological Seminary and Columbia University. His book Kantian Reason and Hegelian Spirit: The Idealistic Logic of Modern Theology (Wiley-Blackwell, 2015) won the Association of American Publishers’ PROSE Award, and he recently published The New Abolition: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Black Social Gospel (Yale University Press, 2015).

Robert Smid is assistant professor of philosophy and religious studies at Curry College in Milton, MA. His research interests include the metaphysics of Peirce and Whitehead, methodological issues in comparative philosophy, and political philosophy insofar as it pertains to theories of democracy. His most recent book is Methodologies of Comparative Philosophy: the Pragmatist and Process Traditions (State University of New York Press, 2009).

James Wetzel is the Augustinian Endowed Chair Professor of Philosophy at Villanova University. He is the author of three books—Augustine and the Limits [End Page 84] of Virtue (Cambridge University Press, 1992), Augustine: A Guide for the Perplexed (Bloomsbury, 2010), and Parting Knowledge (Cascade, 2013)—and editor of The Cambridge Critical Guide to Augustine’s City of God (Cambridge University Press, 2012). [End Page 85]

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