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Southern Illinois University Carbondale

Rocco Sacconaghi, Jacquelyn Ann K. Kegley, Ithamar Teodor, Ewa Smołka, Sławomir Gacka, James McLachlan, Antoni Magdoń, Eugene Korn, Stanisław Kolbusz, Daryl Hale, Piotr Goliszek, Bogumił Gacka, Robert F. DeVall, Jr., Diana Prokofyeva, Colin Patterson, Randall Auxier, and Juan Manuel Burgos
Personalist thought offers fundamental perspectives which are able to shape the broader fields of philosophy, theology, and related areas of study. Familiarity with the scope of its recent developments is valuable not only for personalist scholars but also for those interested in non-materialist thought and especially the problems and questions of the person in various aspects. This work, bringing together papers from a 2019 conference, aims to serve these readerships. It will also provide an archival record of the state of the field at this point in Western intellectual history. In terms of content, the work addresses four general themes: personalist thought as it is encountered in the writings of particular scholars; the place of personalism within broader philosophical thought; personalist engagement with major religious traditions; and the application of personalist modes of thinking to a range of real-world questions. The book is unique in that it brings together multiple strands of personalist thought, demonstrating its breadth and depth and its ability to engage in wider contemporary philosophical and cultural debates.

Carlo Vinti, Elisabeth M. Yang, Xiaoxi Wu, Mateo Scozia, Peter Reynaert, Spartaco Pupo, Laura J. Mueller, Yong Lu, Grzegorz Holub, Bianca Bellini, Marc Djaballah, James Beauregard, Randall Auxier, Endre Nagy, Moeller Carol, R. T. Allen, Claudia Stancati, and Giusy Gallo
‘The Person at the Crossroads: A Philosophical Approach’ brings together scholars from around the world who share a common interest in the nature and activity of the human person. Personhood is examined from a variety of perspectives, both philosophical and theological, drawing on the rich traditions of both Western and Eastern thought. Readers will find themselves on a journey through the works of past and current scholars including, Confucius, Augustine, David Hume, Immanuel Kant, Horace Bushnell, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Michael Polanyi, Rudolf Carnap, Karol Wojtyla, Erazim Kohak, and many other authors who touch upon the personalist tradition and the human person. This volume will be of particular interest to readers interested in the nature of the human person, as well as philosophy and theology undergraduate and graduate students and professors teaching in these areas.

Essays in Honor of Thomas O. Buford
James M. McLachlan, James Beauregard, Eugene Long, John Scott Gray, Mason Marshall, Thomas O. Buford, Randall Auxier, Nathan Riley, J.Aaron Simmons, and Richard Prust
The papers presented in this volume honor Thomas O. Buford. Buford is Professor Emeritus in Philosophy at Furman University where he taught for more than forty years. Several of the papers in this volume are from former students. But Professor Buford is also a pre-eminent voice of fourth generation Personalism, and Boston Personalism in particular. Personalism is a school of philosophical and theological thought which holds that the ideas of “person” and “personality” are indispensable to an adequate understanding of all metaphysical and epistemological problems, as well as are keys to an adequate theory of ethical and political human interaction. Most personalists assert that personality is an irreducible fact found in all existence, as well as in all interpretation of the meaning of existence and the truth about experience. Anything that seems to exist impersonally, such as inanimate matter, nevertheless can exist and have meaning only as related to some personal being. The Boston Personalist tradition was inaugurated by Borden Parker Bowne and continued by Edgar S. Brightman, Peter Bertocci, John Lavely, Carol Robb, and Martin Luther King, Jr.