Graduate Student, School of Religion
Thesis Title: Event Horizons: On the Dis-Connection Between Being and God
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Ingolf Dalferth
Philip Clayton Anselm Min |
About
Richard T. Livingston is a Ph.D. candidate, studying Philosophy of Religion and Theology at Claremont Graduate University's School of Religion, as well as a part-time instructor in the Department of Comparative Religion at California State University, Fullerton. Most broadly construed, his academic interests are located in the complex interstices between religion and philosophy, theology and metaphysics, and, peripherally, their points of contact with scientific inquiry. His general areas of research include philosophy of religion, philosophical theology, phenomenology, ontology, and metaphysics. More specifically, he is interested in onto-theology, process-relational thought, speculative realism, object-oriented ontology, and open and relational theologies. He holds a Master's Degree in Theology from the University of Chicago Divinity School (2005), and a Bachelor's Degree in Near Eastern Studies from Brigham Young University (2001).
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