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The colorful and chaotic remains of a supernova explosion, with glowing gases and rapidly
FORTHCOMING

“Technology and the Super Human: Magic or Theurgy,” Embodying the Supernormal. Eds. Loriliai Biernacki and Gregory Shaw (Bloomsbury)

Becoming Human: Philosophy as Science and Religion from Plato to Posthumanism (Columbia University Press)

 
Lewis and Philosophy as a WAy of Life,” The Routledge Companion to C.S. Lewis. (Routledge)

PUBLISHED

 
The Historical Critique of Heresiology in the Seventeenth Century and the Origins of John Milton’s Arianism. Antitrinitarianism and Unitarianism in the Early Modern Period, (Eds. Kazimierz Bem and Bruce Gordon). Spring, 2024. 

Biology, the Brain, and the Meaning of Life with Philip Ball: A Conversation with Philip Ball and Iain McGilchrist. Marginalia Review of Books, 2024.

Greek Mathematics and the Origins of Science: A Conversation with Vittorio Hösle. Marginalia Review of Books​, 2024.

The Paradigm Shift: A New Vision of Science and Religion with Peter Harrison.
Marginalia Review of Books, 2023

 

“Mnemosyne and the Fate of Capital in the Digital Age: Ammon’s Law, Technology, and The

Invisible Revolution,” In Underground Theory. 105-120, 2023.


The Myth of Secular Philosophy: Philosophy of Religion’s Origin and Fate. Religions 14(3): 365, 2023.


A Quest for the Holy Grail: D.W.Pasulka’s American Cosmic: UFO’s, Religion, Technology. 
LA Review of Books

Converting the Kantian Self: Radical Evil, Agency, and Conversion in Kant’s Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason. Kant Studien 104(3)

Christianity’s Shadow Founder: Marcion, Anti-Judaism, and the Birth of Protestant Liberalism. The Marginalia Review of Books​ 

Antisemitism Is Our Problem. Marginalia Review of Books

Irony in The Age of Trump. Marginalia Review of Books

Science and Religion: An Origins Story. Zygon: A Journal of Religion & Science

Why Listen to Philosophers? A Constructive Critique of Disciplinary Philosophy. Metaphilosophy 47(1)

The Vibrant Religious Life of Silicon Valley, and Why It’s Killing the Economy: On Jaron Lanier’s Who Owns the Future? Marginalia Review of Books

Ascending to the Cloud: Art After Humanity. Red Bull Arts: Sarah Mayohas' Cloud of Petals

The Protestant Reformation as a Metaphysical Revolution
. Marginalia Review of Books

Science vs. Religion and Other Modern Myths. Marginalia Review of Books

Beyond Borders, America, Immigration, and the Future of Information. Marginalia Review of Books

Are Evangelicals the New Liberals? Marginalia Review of Books

The Therapy of Desire: Toward a Revolutionary Philosophy. LA Review of Books

Decolonizing Philosophy: An Interview with Carlos Fraenkel and Peter Adamson about Islam, Reason, and ReligionMarginalia Review of Books

German Idealism’s Long Shadow: The Fall and Divine-Human Agency in Tillich’s Systematic Theology. Neue Zeitschrift für Systematische Theologie und Religionsphilosophie 54(1)


Science and Human Values: A Conversation with Marginalia's Meanings of Science Project Co-Director, Peter Harrison. Marginalia Review of Books

German Idealism and the Critique of Autonomy in The Sickness Unto Death. Religious Studies 42(2)


Scholarship Out Of Time: Weimar’s Lost Existence.  Marginalia Review of Books

Weimar’s Lost Existence: An Introduction to Heidegger. Marginalia Review of Books

Racial Murder: American Memory, American Tragedy. Marginalia Review of Books

The Wisdom of Death: On Costica Bradatan’s Dying for Ideas: The Dangerous Lives of the Philosophers. Marginalia Review of Books

Is Philosophy Magic? The Roots of Reason in Parmenides. Marginalia Review of Books

How to Be Human in a Machine World: On Geoff Colvin’s Humans Are Underrated: What High Achievers Know That Brilliant Machines Never Will
Marginalia Review of Books

Poems of Fire: The Vision of Contemporary Artist, Makoto Fujimura. Marginalia Review of Books

In Plato’s Cave. First Things

30/30 Project, November 2019 poet, Tupelo Press 

Poetry as the Last Refuge of Metaphysical Scoundrels: A Conversation with Stevens and the Comedian C. Letters Journal

The World Spins and Staggers. Reformed Journal

The Kitchen Window. Ponder Review

Modernity and Hunger. The Windhover (print only)

Brooklyn 2015. Reformed Journal

Poetry: Politics, Religion, and Peace: An Interview with  Pádraig Ó Tuama, host of NPR's Poetry Unbound Marginalia Review of Books

For the Life of Science: Philip Ball on Quantum Physics and The Writing Life. Marginalia Review of Books

Cosmic Humility: Harvard’s Avi Loeb on Extraterrestrials and The Future of Science. Marginalia Review of Books

Does Science Need History? A Conversation with Lorraine Daston, Director Emerita of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin  Marginalia Review of Books

Science as a Human Story: The Royal Society Recognizes Philip Ball. Marginalia Review of Books
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