Does not require a specific educational background but nor does it provide voting privileges.
This subscription will renew yearly. Please register through the form below:
Does not require a specific educational background but nor does it provide voting privileges.
This subscription will renew yearly. Please register through the form below:
This subscription will renew yearly. Please register through the form below:
Must be an enrolled student, regardless of status or institution. Does not have voting privileges.
This subscription will expire in 365 days. Please register through the form below:
Please register through the form below:
In addition to dozens of sessions on individual paper presentations at the annual meeting, come enjoy several EPS interested discussions throughout EPS and ETS programming. Consider joining the following sessions:
Join the EPS membership today for as low as $25/yr and receive an annual subscription to the Society’s peer-reviewed journal, Philosophia Christi.
In June 2024, Pickwick Publications released the notable volume, Taking Persons Seriously: Where Philosophy and Bioethics Intersect, co-edited by EPS members and Philosophia Christi contributors, Mihretu P. Guta and Scott B. Rae.
From the publisher’s description:
This volume attempts to show why ontology matters for a proper grasp of issues in bioethics. Contemporary discussions on bioethics often focus on seeking solutions for a wide range of issues that revolve around persons. The issues in question are multi-layered, involving such diverse aspects as the metaphysical/ontological, personal, medical, moral, legal, cultural, social, political, religious, and environmental. In navigating through such a complex web of issues, it has been said that the central problems philosophers and bioethicists face are ethical in nature. In this regard, biomedical sciences and technological breakthroughs take a leading role in terms of shaping the sorts of questions that give rise to ethical problems. For example, is it ethical to keep terminally ill patients alive on dialysis machines or artificial ventilators? Is it ethical to take someone’s vital organs upon death and transplant them into another person’s body without any prior consent from the deceased person? Reproductive techniques also raise complicated ethical issues involving in vitro fertilization, contraceptives, prenatal testing, abortions, and genetic enhancements. Moreover, biomedical issues raise ethical problems regarding research on human subjects, stem cell research, and enhancement biotechnology. The beginning and end of life issues bring up their own complicated ethical conundrums involving, among other things, terminating life support and euthanasia. This book approaches such complex bioethical questions by engaging in ground-level debates about the ontology of persons. This is a nonnegotiable first step in taking steps forward in seeking a plausible solution(s) for the complex ethical problems in bioethics.
Current EPS President, Michael Austin, says of the book, “To reach sound conclusions about bioethical issues, we need a proper understanding of the nature of human persons. This collection of essays will be helpful to anyone who wants to deepen their understanding of what human persons are, why they matter, and the ways such an understanding should guide our approach to theory and practice in bioethics.”
Gupta currently teaches philosophy at Biola University and Azusa Pacific University. He is an associate fellow of the Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity at Trinity International University. Rae is senior advisor to the president at Biola University, dean of faculty, and professor of Christian ethics at Talbot School of Theology, Biola University. He is a fellow of the Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity and the Wilberforce Forum.
Join the EPS membership today for as low as $25/yr and receive an annual subscription to the Society’s peer-reviewed journal, Philosophia Christi.
Enjoy immediate digital access to the very next issue of Philosophia Christi (vol. 26, no. 1) by subscribing today via the Philosophy Documentation Center.
In fact, for as low as $25/yr, your digital only subscription to the journal includes the ‘current issue‘ and the entire archive of Philosophia Christi articles, philosophical notes, and book reviews since 1999 (over 1150 items to search, browse, and access)!
The Summer 2024 issue showcases important discussions at the intersections of philosophical Christology, anthropology, and historical theology with contributions from Steven Nemes, Scott M. Williams, and Jon Kelly, along with articles that address objections to Intelligent Design (Robert Larmer) and the evidential problem of evil (Rad Miksa). Additionally, this journal issue tackles questions of meta-ethics (Martin Jakobsen), the ethic of divine forgiveness (Gregory Bock), and reflections on when ‘code switching’ is duplicitous (Sabrina Little). Along with various book reviews related to philosophy of religion and philosophical theology, the Summer issue will be one of the biggest issues in recent years.
For as low as $25 a year, you can sign-up for EPS membership (includes print copies of the journal, access to annual and regional meetings, opportunities to present conference papers, and more).
The Rutgers Analytic Theology Seminar solicits abstracts for papers in analytic theology, for a conference to be held June 8-10, 2025, at Rutgers University’s New Brunswick campus. Papers are welcome in all areas of analytic theology, including analytical historical theology.
RATS is an interfaith conference. Abstracts will be blind-reviewed; they should be a maximum of 500 words in length, and should be anonymized for blind review. Those sending abstracts should specify whether the final paper will be colloquium (3000 word) or symposium (4-5000 word) length. At most one paper will be accepted for a submitted symposium; some who send an abstract for a symposium slot may be offered a colloquium slot instead. Some whose papers are not accepted may be offered commentator slots. All sessions will be single-reader; there will be no “panels.”
Abstracts are due by October 15, to frederick.choo@rutgers.edu. Decisions will be announced by December 1, 2024.
Keynote and symposium sessions will be read-ahead, with commentators. Colloquium papers will be read out, and may or may not have commentators. Keynote and symposium sessions may last 90 minutes or two hours; colloquium sessions will be 60 or 75 mins. Keynote speakers will be Oliver Crisp (St. Andrews), Katherin Rogers (U of Delaware), and Timothy Pawl (U of St Thomas).
Further information on the conference will be forthcoming.
The Evangelical Philosophical Society is now accepting proposals for EPS sessions at the American Academy of Religion (AAR) and Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA, November 20-22.
EPS members are welcome to propose panels devoted to a theme or book. Please consider proposals that would be on topics of interest not only to EPS members, but also to other philosophers, religious studies members, and theologians of AAR & SBL.
Your proposal should include:
Deadline: June 1. Please send your proposal as text typed into an e-mail to Scott Smith (scott.smith@biola.edu). Dr. William Lane Craig will review the proposals.
For more information pertaining to the National Annual Meeting of the EPS, click here.
Note: all presenters will need to register and pay the fee for the AAR/SBL annual meeting. Check the AAR or SBL website for options. This fee is distinct from the registration for the national ETS/EPS national conference.
© 2025 Evangelical Philosophical Society. All Rights Reserved.