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St. Mary's Seminary & University

Dr. Philip John Paul Gonzales

Associate Professor of Philosophy

B.A., Ave Maria University
M.A., M. Phil., Ph.D., Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Dr. Gonzales completed his Ph.D. in philosophy at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in 2015. There he worked under the supervision of Prof. William Desmond and the co-supervision of Prof. Cyril O’Regan. His dissertation was on the German-Polish Jesuit philosopher and theologian Erich Przywara, now published as Reimagining the Analogia Entis (eerdmans.com). From 2015 to 2019 Dr. Gonzales was an Affiliate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Dallas at both their Dallas and Rome campuses. In 2019 he took a position at St Patrick’s Pontifical University, Maynooth, Ireland, where he was a permanent Lecturer in Philosophy. In 2024 he joyfully joined the ranks of the theological faculty at St. Mary’s. Philosophy, Dr. Gonzales says, “deals with the most fundamental human questions, and as such, to philosophize is to be human. Seminarians must learn to philosophize in order ‘to become what they are’ (Pindar).”

Dr. Gonzales is also one of the twelve recipients of the grants awarded from the Widening Horizons in Philosophical Theology project, run out of the University of St. Andrews by Prof. Judith Wolfe and funded by the Templeton Religion Trust. He also has close association with the Institut Catholique de Toulouse (Catholic Institute of Toulouse, France) as an invited member of its scientific committee for teaching and research on Christian philosophy and an associate member of its unit on research in cultures, ethics, religion, and society (CERES).

Dr. Gonzales is a philosophical theologian working within the continental tradition. He is currently developing an apocalyptic Christological metaphysics that opens into a metaphysics of Trinitarian response. The outcome of his WHIPT grant is the completed first volume of the projected five-volume Metaphysics of Patmos series.

Dr. Gonzales has lived across Europe with his wife, Sarah, and their five children (Sophia, Anastasia, Melanie, Serafina, and John-Paul), including three years in Belgium, five years in France, two years in Italy, and five years in Ireland before “Coming home to a place he’d never been before” (John Denver)—Baltimore.

Selected Courses Taught

  • Natural Theology
  • Modern Philosophy
  • Philosophical Anthropology
  • Scholastic Themes in Philosophy

Selected Publications

Online Resources

Recommended Reading

  • Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov
  • Solovyov, War, Progress, and the End of History: Three Conversations, Including a Short Story of the Anti-Christ
  • Bernanos, The Diary of a Country Priest
  • Péguy, Notes on Bergson and Descartes: Philosophy, Christianity, and Modernity in Contestation

Active love is a harsh and fearful thing compared with the love in dreams. Love in dreams thirsts for immediate action, quickly performed, and with everyone watching. Indeed, it will go as far as the giving even of one’s life, provided it does not take long but is soon over, as on stage, and everyone is looking on and praising. Whereas active love is labor and persistence, and for some people, perhaps, a whole science. [The Brothers Karamazov] Dostoevsky