Contributors to This Issue Muhammad Kamal is on the faculty of the Melbourne Institute of Asian Languages and Societies at the University of Melbourne, Australia. He holds a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Karachi. His many publications include Hegel’s Metalogic, A Critical Study of Hegel’s Logic; Heterodoxy in Islam: A Philosophical Study; Toward Hegel’s Anthropology; Essential Dictionary of Islamic Thought; and numerous articles. Mark E. Hanshaw is an assistant professor of comparative religious studies at Texas Wesleyan University. He holds a doctoral degree from Southern Methodist University and a juris doctor degree from the University of Tennessee, College of Law. His particular academic interests are in Islam, Christianity and Hinduism; his 2008 doctoral dissertation was entitled “An Intersection of Societies: American Muslims, Islamic Law, and U.S. Courts in Conflict.” Fr. Joseph Wong, O.S.B. Cam., is a monk of the New Camaldoli Hermitage in Big Sur, California. He holds a doctorate in theology from Gregorian University in Rome, with a dissertation on Karl Rahner, published as LogosSymbol in the Christology of Karl Rahner. He is coeditor of Purity of Heart and Contemplation: A Monastic Dialogue between Christian and Asian Traditions. Rev. Heng Sure is a member of Religion East & West’s editorial board (see page 151). Maggie Norton, a teacher of the physical and spiritual aspects of Iyengar Yoga for many years, is cofounder and director of therapeutic studies at Yoga Mendocino in Ukiah, California. Fr. Robert Hale, O.S.B. Cam., has been a Camaldolese Benedictine monk since 1959. He has published more than 100 articles in the area of spirituality. He has taught at the Pontifical Benedictine College of Sant’Anselmo, Rome, and at the Jesuit School of Theology of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. Michael Nagler is professor emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley and founder of the Metta Center for Nonviolence. His book The Search for a Nonviolent Future won an American Book Award and has been translated into five languages. He has lived at the Blue Mountain Center Issue 10, October 2010
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