This book explores how Gabriel Marcel's religious existentialism, when coupled with Lewis Gordon's existential phenomenological account of antiblack racism, can provide valuable resources for constructing a theistic humanism that is opposed to antiblack racism.
This book explores how Gabriel Marcel's religious existentialism, when coupled with Lewis Gordon's existential phenomenological account of antiblack racism, can provide valuable resources for constructing a theistic humanism that is opposed to antiblack racism.
Dwayne Tunstall is assistant professor of philosophy and African and African American studies at Grand Valley State University. He is the author of Yes, But Not Quite: Encountering Josiah Royce's Ethico- Religious Insight (Fordham University Press, 2009) and Doing Philosophy Personally: Thinking about Metaphysics, Theism, and Antiblack Racism (Fordham University Press, 2012). He is also the author of more than ten articles and book chapters on a variety of topics, including aesthetics, Africana philosophy, pragmatism, religious ethics, and social and political philosophy. His research explores how Africana philosophy, existential phenomenology, moral philosophy, religious ethics, and classical American philosophy can complement one another when one is thinking about issues of moral agency, personal identity, race, and the legacy of Western modernity. He is currently president of the Josiah Royce Society.
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