Paul J. Serwinek, Ph.D., is a sociologist, educator, and writer whose work explores spirituality as a human experience, how people search for meaning, purpose, conscience, and ethical responsibility in everyday life. His perspective is grounded in social psychology, ethics, and human behaviour, with a focus on lived experience and personal reflection.
He earned his Ph.D. from Wayne State University, holds an MBA from the University of Detroit, and completed his undergraduate studies in Liberal Arts at Thomas Edison College. During his professional career, Dr. Serwinek worked as a researcher and consultant in human resources, organizational behavior, and business ethics, advising organizations on ethical decision-making, workplace standards, and social responsibility.
He later transitioned into academia, serving as an Assistant Professor of Professional Studies at William Tyndale College before retiring, and also taught sociology and management at Wayne State University and the University of Detroit Mercy.
A lifelong writer and educator, Dr. Serwinek has published academic and professional articles examining spirituality, ethics, and the moral dimensions of work, leadership, and personal fulfilment. His writing reflects a sustained interest in truth, accountability, integrity, and the inner forces that shape human choice and character. He is the author of Finding Fulfilment: Wisdom for Practical Living (1997) and several other works exploring purpose, character, and the human search for meaning.
Through both scholarship and storytelling, Dr. Serwinek offers readers thoughtful insight into conscience, justice, and social order, presenting spirituality as a reflective practice shaped by everyday human experience.