Victoria Campbell

Education & Publications


PhD Theology, London School of Theology - University of Middlesex, UK (2021)

Dissertation Title: “A Philosophical, Scientific, and Theological Analysis of the Problem of Creaturely Suffering: Towards a New Perception of God and Pain.”

MA Theology, Asbury Theological Seminary - Wilmore, KY (2014)

PhD Chemistry, University of Texas - Austin (1995)

Dissertation Title: “Techniques for High Performance Electrospray Ionization Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometric Analysis of Biomolecules.”

BS Chemistry, University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign (1991)

Campbell, Victoria. The Problem of Animal Pain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024.

Campbell, Victoria. “Understanding Christian Perfection and its Struggle with Antinomianism.” Asbury Journal 68 (2013): 58-77.

Campbell, V. L., Z. Guan, V. H. Vartanian, and D. A. Laude, Jr. “Cell Geometry Considerations for the FT-ICR Remeasurement Experiment.” Analytical Chemistry 67 (1995): 420-425.

Campbell, V. L., Z. Guan, and D. A. Laude, Jr. Remeasurement at High Resolving Power in Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry.” Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 6 (1995): 564-570.

Campbell, V. L., Z. Guan, and D. A. Laude, Jr. “Selective Generation of Charge-Dependent/Independent Ion Energy Distributions from a Heated Capillary Electrospray Source.” Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 5 (1994): 221-229.

Guan, Z., V. L. Campbell, J. J. Drader, C. L. Hendrickson, and D. A. Laude, Jr. “High Performance Detection of Biomolecules Using a High Magnetic Field Electrospray Ionization Source/Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometer.” Review of Scientific Instruments 66 (1995): 4507-4515.

Guan, Z., J. J. Drader, V. L. Campbell, and D. A. Laude, Jr. “Real-Time Monitoring of the Gas Phase Reactions of a Single Ion Population Using the Remeasurement Experiment in Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry.” Analytical Chemistry 67 (1995): 1453-1458.