What is Trinity's address?
6601 West College Drive, Palos Heights, IL 60463.
How do I get from O'Hare airport to Trinity Christian College?
Your most affordable option:
1. Book your shuttle with Coach USA's shuttle from O'Hare to Crestwood, IL. (Schedule and timetables here.) It is the most affordable option. It drops off at 5545 W. 127th Street, which is less than 2 miles from the Trinity Christian College campus. (Note: the Double Tree will pick up and drop off their guests from the Coach USA stop as well.)
2. Email us at philosophy@trnty.edu to schedule a pick up from the Crestwood stop.
We will also be glad to take you back to the Crestwood stop upon your departure.
Otherwise, you can rent a car or take a taxi/limo.
How do I get from Midway airport to Trinity Christian College?
The two best options are:
A. If you are staying at the Double Tree in Alsip (the official conference hotel)...
1. Call the Double Tree to book your complimentary shuttle pick up from Midway or the Crestwood, IL Coach USA stop: 708-371-7300.
2. The Double Tree and the conference organizers are arranging transportation to and from campus at pre-arranged times.
B. If you are not staying at the Double Tree in Alsip...
1. Book your shuttle with Coach USA's shuttle from Midway to Crestwood, IL. (Schedule and timetables here.) Again, we find this to be the most affordable option.
2. Email us at philosophy@trnty.edu to schedule a pick up from the Crestwood stop. We will also be glad to take you back to the Crestwood stop upon your departure.
Otherwise, you should look into renting a car or taking a taxi/limo.
Again, how do I get between the Coach USA stop in Crestwood, IL and campus?
The Coach USA shuttle arrives and departs at 10 til the hour (i.e., 9:50, 10:50, etc.) throughout the day. So throughout the day on Thursday, we plan to have a van waiting for conferees at 9:45, 10:45, etc. We shall run a van back to the stop again at similar times on Saturday for those departing. Again, it is best if you inform us of your arrival and departure times in advance (philosophy@trnty.edu).
How do I get around while I am at the conference?
If you want wheels to move freely about the south suburbs of Chicago, you will need to rent a car. (A recent search of Hotwire.com revealed numerous economy car options in the $15-20/day range.) The conference organizers are helping the Double Tree to shuttle guests to and from the hotel and campus. We have limited transportation available to serve conference attendees, so that is all we can guarantee.
What if I am not staying at the Double Tree? How do I get around?
Again, car rental is your best option (and as we state above, hotwire.com has several options in the $15-20/day range). You may email us at philosophy@trnty.edu to see if we are able to drop you off and pick you up from your specific hotel--but we make no guarantees. We regret that we have limited transportation available to serve conference attendees. We could assist you if, for example, we pass your hotel on the way to and from the Double Tree. Or if we have a number of conference guests staying at the same area hotel, we would be willing to coordinate a carpool with those guests who do have a car.
Can I take a train from Chicago to Palos Heights, IL and get to the conference that way?
Unfortunately, it is not recommended. (This is the American suburbs we are talking about, after all!) Metra Rail does run trains to and from Palos Heights and Palos Hills, both relatively nearby. Unfortunately, the stops are not in walking distance and we do not have enough vehicles available to provide transportation to and from these train stops. If you elect to take the train out to the suburbs, you may email us at philosophy@trnty.edu to see if we know of a ride-provider--but we make no guarantees.
21 March 2014
10 March 2014
SCP/T Conference Schedule
Society of Christian Philosophers
Society for Continental Philosophy and Theology
Conference Schedule
Conference Registration & Other Details at:
27 March
2014
Thursday,
12:00PM Introduction
& Welcome Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
Thursday,
12:20PM Concurrent
1
Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Property
Borrowing and Compositional Christology”
Gideon
Jeffrey, Saint Louis University
“The
Type, Token, and Type/Token Readings of the Athanasian Creed”
Sanjay
Merchant, Moody Bible Institute
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“An
Open Theistic Multiverse?”
Tim
Blank, Ryerson University
“Closing the Door on Limited-Risk Open Theism"
Johannes Groessl, Institute of Christian Philosophy (Austria), Rutgers University
Johannes Groessl, Institute of Christian Philosophy (Austria), Rutgers University
Thursday,
1:30PM Concurrent
2
Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Discerning Discernment: A Phenomenological Account”
Kyle
David Bennett, The King's College
“Christian
Philosophy as an Exercise in Humility”
Craig
A. Boyd, St. Louis University
“On the Virtue of Graciousness”
Heidi Giannini, Wake Forest University
“On the Virtue of Graciousness”
Heidi Giannini, Wake Forest University
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“Sufferer
Centered Constraints and Genuinely Regrettable Evils”
Dustin
Crummett, University of Notre Dame
“William
Hasker On Gratuitous Evil”
Klaas
J. Kraay, Ryerson University
“Morality
With God: A Response To Walter Sinnott-Armstrong”
Beth
A. Rath, Saint Louis University
Fireside
Room
“Paradoxicality as a Criterion of an Authentic Revelation”
C.
Stephen Evans, Baylor University
“After
the Postmodern ‘Third Sophistic’: The Promise of Christian Philosophical
Rhetoric in Augustine and Milbank”
Drew
Van’t Land, Trinity Christian College
Thursday,
3:00PM Break
Thursday,
3:30PM Concurrent
3
Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Humility's Intellectual Rewards”
Jay
Wood, Wheaton College
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“An
Argument against Divine Simplicity from Divine Beauty”
Matthew
Baddorf, University of Rochester
“Can
God’s Willing Be Made Simple?”
John
Giannini, Baylor University
Fireside
Room
“Alasdair
MacIntyre and Christian Philosophy: Reflections on MacIntyrean Advice to
Christian Philosophers”
Paul
F. Jeffries, Ripon College
“Christian
Philosophy as World Critique: Charles Taylor’s Deconstructive Philosophy of
Religion”
Zane
Yi, Loma Linda University
Thursday,
4:40PM Keynote
Address Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Faith
in Philosophy or Philosophy in Faith?”
Adriaan
Peperzak, Loyola University Chicago
28 March
2014
Friday, 8:30AM Morning
Prayer & Announcements Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
Friday,
8:45AM Concurrent
4
Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“The
Strategies of Christian Philosophy”
J.
Aaron Simmons, Furman University
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“Medieval
Philosophy and Christian Philosophical Practice”
Josh
Blander, The King's College
“How
To Repair Human Nature: Anselm’s Understanding of the Relation Between Belief,
Understanding, Will, and Grace”
Jennifer
Kling, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Fireside
Room
“Philosophical
Reflection, Religious Experience, and Faith: the Case of Michel Henry”
Jeremy
H. Smith, Otterbein University
“Competing
Conceptions of God: The Personal God versus the God Beyond Being”
Mikael
Stenmark, Uppsala University
Friday, 10:00AM Chapel Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Too
Small to Notice”
Greg
Clark, North Park University
Friday, 11:00AM Keynote
Address Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“The Two-Fold Task of Christian Philosophy”
Bruce
Ellis Benson, Wheaton College
Friday,
12:30PM Lunch Various
Locations
Friday,
2:00PM Concurrent
5
Grand Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
Panel:
“Biblical and Historical Perspectives on The Nature of Christian
Philosophy,” Faculty of
The King’s College
“Some
Biblical Perspective on Philosophical Inquiry”
Dru
Johnson
“Socratic
Christian Philosophy”
David
Talcott
“Modern
Theology and Philosophical Inquiry”
Gregory
Thornbury
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“Religious
Epistemology Idealized”
Mark
Boespflug, University of Colorado, Boulder
“Relational
Autonomy: A Lesson for Christian Philosophers”
Anne
Jeffrey, Georgetown University
“A
Virtue-Theoretic Approach to Religious Epistemology”
Benjamin
W. McCraw, University of South Carolina Upstate
Fireside
Room
“What Can Eastern Orthodoxy Contribute to Christian Philosophy?”
David Bradshaw, University of Kentucky
“Christian
Philosophy as Attunement: What Can We Learn from the Jew Passing as an Atheist?”
Nathan
Crawford, Trinity United Methodist Church, Plymouth, IN
“Substitution
at the Cross”
Chungsoo
J. Lee, Loyola University of Chicago.
Friday, 3:30PM Break Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
Friday, 4:00PM Concurrent
6
Grand Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Philosophy
in Light of the Person of Jesus Christ: Reflections on Birth, Family, Aging,
and Dying”
Charles
Taliaferro, St. Olaf
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“God’s
Knowledge by Acquaintance”
Travis
M. Dickinson, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
“Three
Kinds of Divine Thoughts”
Walter
Schultz, University of Northwestern
Fireside
Room
“Propositions,
Art and Truth: Revisiting Zuidervaart’s Critique of Wolterstorff”
Joshua
Lee Harris, Institute for Christian Studies
“A
Particular Collision: Arendt, CERN, and Reformational Philosophy”
Matt
Johnson, Institute for Christian Studies
Friday,
5:00PM Keynote
Address Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Augustinian
Christian Philosophy”
Alvin
Plantinga, Calvin College
Friday,
6:30PM Conference
Banquet Mama
Vesuvio’s
6361
W College Drive
Palos
Heights, IL 60463
29 March
2014
Saturday,
8:30AM Morning
Prayer & Announcements Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
Saturday,
8:45AM Concurrent
7
Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“St.
Thomas on Creation and the Best”
Samuel
Murray, St. Louis University
“Why
Disembodied Souls? Origins Essentialism and Aquinas's Account of the
Resurrection”
Adam
Wood, Wheaton College
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“Distinctive
Danger, Signal Sin: a Reply to Moser on Philosophy and the Law of Love”
Donald
Bungum, St. Louis University
“Christian
Philosophy as Loving Stance”
Robert
Whitaker, Marquette University
Saturday,
8:45AM Concurrent
7 (Cont’d)
Fireside
Room
“Faith
as Acceptance: A Tentative Solution to the Problem of Religious Disagreement”
Kirk
Lougheed, Ryerson University
“The
Religious Problem of Religious Disagreement”
Tanya
Randle, St. Ambrose University
Saturday,
10:00AM Keynote
Address Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
“Christian
Philosophy and the Christian Life”
Kyla
Ebels-Duggan, Northwestern University
Saturday,
11:30AM Lunch Various
Locations
Saturday,
12:30PM Concurrent
8
Grand Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
Panel:
“Embodiment and Method in Christian Philosophy”
“Body
and Method: Merleau-Ponty on Institution”
John
Brittingham, SIU Carbondale
“Methods
and Ap/prehension”
Jonathan
Heaps, Marquette University
“Body,
Cognition, and Method: A Theological Response”
Ryan
Hemmer, Marquette University
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“Compatibilism
and Atonement”
Peter
Furlong, University of North Carolina Asheville
“Hard
Facts Made Easy”
Blake
McAllister, Baylor University
“Why
Molinism Does Not Help with the Rollback Argument”
Dan
Sheffler, University of Kentucky
Fireside
Room
“From
Defending Theism to Discerning Spirits: Reconceiving the Task of Christian
Philosophy”
Neal
DeRoo, Dordt College
“Back to
the Rough Ground! Into Life!: (Anti-)philosophy as Christian Philosophy”
Dean
Dettloff, Institute for Christian Studies
“Christian
Philosophy: A Proposal”
Jazz
Feyer-Salo, Cornerstone University
Saturday,
2:15PM Concurrent
9
Grand Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
Advice
to a Christian Philosopher: You Gotta have (Socratic) Faith!
Paul
E. Carron, Baylor University
How
Christian Philosophy Can Appropriate the Causal Closure of the Physical
Timothy
Dolch, University of Dallas
Board
Room, Huizenga Library
“George
Berkeley’s Unabashedly Supernaturalist Christian Philosophy”
Nathan
Greeley, Claremont Graduate University
“Kierkegaard’s
Advice to Christian Philosophers: Christian Philosophy as Confession and the
Conversion of the Mind”
Chikara
Saito, Hope College
Fireside
Room
“Faith
Requires Belief, But Rationality Does Not Require Truth-aiming”
Joshua
Mugg, York University
“A
Synthesis Of Evidentialism and Dissagreement As A De Jure Objection To
Plantinga”
Hannah
Scanlon, Calvin College
Saturday,
3:15PM Benediction Grand
Lobby, Ozinga Chapel
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