Michael Hanby

Michael Hanby is an associate professor of religion and philosophy of science at the John Paul II Institute at the Catholic University of America, where he has taught since 2007, previously teaching at Baylor and Villanova University. He received his PhD from the University of Virginia after studying at Cambridge University, Duke University, and the University of Colorado.

Writing at the intersection of metaphysics, theology, politics, technology, and science, he is the author of two books, Augustine and Modernity (2003) and No God, No Science? Theology, Cosmology, Biology (2013). He is currently working on a book provisionally titled On Being…Human, Catholic, American. His work has also appeared in The Wall Street Journal, First Things, The Federalist, Touchstone Magazine, The Lamp, and New Polity, as well as numerous academic journals and edited volumes. Dr. Hanby lectures widely and has appeared in numerous podcasts and interviews. He has been a recognized leader in the movement to renew Catholic liberal arts education, co-authoring Catholic liberal arts curricula at the K-8 and high school levels and serving as a founding board member of the St. Jerome Institute, a Catholic liberal arts high school in Washington, D.C.

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