Open Journals at Memorial University
Not a member yet
1472 research outputs found
Sort by
Daring to Stretch toward the Ultimate Consummation: A Tribute to Philip McShane
Daniel A. Helminiak is Emeritus Professor of Psychology, University of West Georgia. He holds PhDs in theology and psychology and has published widely in these fields and their applications to spirituality and sexuality. Among his ten books are The Human Core of Spirituality, Religion and the Human Sciences, Spirituality for our Global Community, the international bestseller What the Bible Really Says about Homosexuality and, most recently, the comprehensive Brain, Consciousness, and God: A Lonerganian Integration
A Tribute to Philip McShane
Robert Henman lectured in philosophy, ethics, Child Studies, and Peace Studies at Mount St. Vincent University, Halifax, Canada for 35 years. He is the author of The Child as Quest (University Press of America, 1984), Global Collaboration: Neuroscience as Paradigmatic (Axial Publishing, 2016) and Reorienting Education and the Social Sciences: Transitioning Towards the Positive Anthropocene, (Amazon, 2019)
Remembering Philip McShane
Michael Vertin is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Study of Religion, and Theology at St. Michael’s College in the University of Toronto. He is a longtime student of Lonergan’s work and has edited four volumes of studies by Frederick Crowe, Lonergan’s well-known intellectual biographer
Functional Specialization and the Future of the Love of Wisdom
Paul St. Amour is currently an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Saint Joseph’s University, in Philadelphia. He received his Ph.D in philosophy from Fordham University and has published articles in The Thomist, Analecta Hermeneutica: International Institute for Hermeneutics, Lonergan Workshop, Method: Journal of Lonergan Studies, The Lonergan Review, Theoforum, Contemporary Philosophy, and Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association. He can be reached at [email protected]
One Wild and Precious Life: Remembering Phil McShane
James Duffy received his Ph.D. from Fordham University. Currently he teaches English as a second language at the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey in Mexico. He is also coordinating a series of ongoing dialectic exercises. He wrote “Fratelli Tutti and Colorful Fruit to Be Borne,” (Divyadaan 32/2-3 [2021]), edited “Religious Faith Seeding the Positive Anthropocene Age” (Divyadaan 30/1 [2019]), and co-edited (with Patrick Brown) Seeding Global Collaboration (Vancouver: Axial Publishing, 2016)
Metaphysics as a Fundamental Poise
Francisco Vicente Galán Vélez is a full-time professor in the philosophy department at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City. He oversaw the translation of Insight: Estudio sobre la comprensión humana, trad. Francisco Quijano (Salamanca: Universidad Iberoamericana-Sígueme, 1999), and he is a cofounder of Lonergan en Latinoamericana
Experiencing McShane’s Haunting Questions
Sean McNelis is a housing researcher at the Centre for Urban Transitions, Swinburne University of Technology. He has over 40 years’ experience in housing management, research, policy and advocacy. He writes on functional collaboration and Lonergan’s economics as they relate to housing research. He can be reached at [email protected], and his personal website is http://artfulhousing.com.au
Assembling Functional Specialties
Bruce Anderson’s research and writing has been concerned with legal decision-making, economic theory, and contemporary sculpture. His work draws on the writings of Philip McShane and Bernard Lonergan. It includes ‘Discovery’ in Legal Decision Making and Beyond Establishment Economics (with P. McShane). He is Professor of Law at Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
My Own Modest Exercise in Dialectic
Cyril Orji is professor of theology and Core Integrated Study. He is the author of numerous books, including Unmasking the African Ghost (2022), A Semiotic Christology (2021), and A Science–Theology Rapprochement (2018). His research applies the thought of Bernard Lonergan, C. S. Peirce, and Wolfhart Pannenberg to questions of enculturation, systematic theology, natural science, and World Christianity