
Anthony Flood
Anthony G. Flood is a Christian Individualist whose writings have been published in American Communist History, Journal of American History, C. L. R. James Journal, FrontPage Magazine, LewRockwell.com, Crisis: Politics, Culture & the Church, The Philosopher’s Magazine, New Oxford Review, New International Review, and Science & Society.
A lifelong New Yorker, Flood studied philosophy at New York University in the early ‘70s (under Sidney Hook, while working for Herbert Aptheker and studying jazz guitar under Pat Martino) and at the Graduate Center, City University of New York in the late ‘70s (under Milton K. Munitz and J. B. Schneewind).
From 2003 to 2010 Flood, a member of the International Society of Philosophers since 2003, mentored a dozen adults (individually) through Pathways in Philosophy, a long-distance learning program based in Sheffield, England.
His journey has been graced by conversations with Bernard J. F. Lonergan S.J., Eric Voegelin, James A. Sadowsky, S.J., W. Norris Clarke, S.J., Francis Canavan, S.J., David Ray Griffin, Lewis Ford, Greg L. Bahnsen, Gary North, John W. Robbins and David Gordon.
Flood doubts that the personal and scholarly influence on him of the impossibly prolific Murray N. Rothbard for the last dozen years of his life will be matched by anyone else.
Among Flood’s several current projects is a biography of Otis Q. Sellers (1901-1992), Bible teacher. It will explain what Flood means by “Christian Individualist,” if anyone is interested. AnthonyGFlood.com
A lifelong New Yorker, Flood studied philosophy at New York University in the early ‘70s (under Sidney Hook, while working for Herbert Aptheker and studying jazz guitar under Pat Martino) and at the Graduate Center, City University of New York in the late ‘70s (under Milton K. Munitz and J. B. Schneewind).
From 2003 to 2010 Flood, a member of the International Society of Philosophers since 2003, mentored a dozen adults (individually) through Pathways in Philosophy, a long-distance learning program based in Sheffield, England.
His journey has been graced by conversations with Bernard J. F. Lonergan S.J., Eric Voegelin, James A. Sadowsky, S.J., W. Norris Clarke, S.J., Francis Canavan, S.J., David Ray Griffin, Lewis Ford, Greg L. Bahnsen, Gary North, John W. Robbins and David Gordon.
Flood doubts that the personal and scholarly influence on him of the impossibly prolific Murray N. Rothbard for the last dozen years of his life will be matched by anyone else.
Among Flood’s several current projects is a biography of Otis Q. Sellers (1901-1992), Bible teacher. It will explain what Flood means by “Christian Individualist,” if anyone is interested. AnthonyGFlood.com
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Papers by Anthony Flood
juxtaposes the facts of Aptheker’s political and literary life, but fails to integrate them, especially where doing so would help one evaluate Aptheker’s status as a historian. Significantly, Murrell fails to investigate Aptheker’s political formation in the 1930s, the decade during which he made the fateful choices that predicted his leaving “history for the pleasures of polemic” (Murrell’s words), well before he formally joined the Communist Party in 1939.
juxtaposes the facts of Aptheker’s political and literary life, but fails to integrate them, especially where doing so would help one evaluate Aptheker’s status as a historian. Significantly, Murrell fails to investigate Aptheker’s political formation in the 1930s, the decade during which he made the fateful choices that predicted his leaving “history for the pleasures of polemic” (Murrell’s words), well before he formally joined the Communist Party in 1939.