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  • About the Authors

Rory Misiewicz is a PhD candidate in theology at Princeton Theological Seminary. His broad areas of interest include theological method, philosophical theology, and the pragmatic tradition (especially C. S. Peirce). His dissertation centers on the problem of theological analogy and aims to introduce a Peircean alternative in ecumenical debates on the analogia entis.

Julius Crump is a doctoral candidate at the University of Chicago Divinity School. In addition to coediting African American Theological Ethics: A Reader with Peter J. Paris, his work has been published in Black Theology: An International Journal and A Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion. His research interests are in public theology, political philosophy, African American religious thought, and issues in contemporary theory. His dissertation, “At the Limits of God-Talk: Publics, Politics, Conversations,” describes the value of public religious inquiry both within and in spite of a liberal political framework.

Scot D. Yoder is an associate professor and associate dean of students in the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities at Michigan State University. His philosophic interests range from health care and environmental ethics to American pragmatism and the philosophy of religion, especially religious naturalism. He has published articles in the Hasting Center Report; the American Journal of Bioethics; the Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture; and the American Journal of Theology and Philosophy.

Aaron Pratt Shepherd is a visiting assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. His research focuses on intersections between pragmatism, personalism, philosophy of religion, and liberal theologies in the Americas, as well as in areas of applied ethics. His recently published editorial “For Veterans, A Path to Healing ‘Moral Injury’” was featured in the New York Times Sunday Review.

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