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Hypatia 20.4 (2005) 238-241



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Notes on Contributors

Louise Antony is Professor of Philosophy, Women's Studies, and Comparative Studies at the Ohio State University. Her research interests include philosophy of mind, epistemology, and feminist theory. With Charlotte Witt, she coedited A Mind of One's Own (Westview 1993), and she is currently working on issues about normativity in mind, language, and knowledge. (antony.3@osu.edu)
Susan Babbitt is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. She is the author of Impossible Dreams: Rationality, Integrity and Moral Imagination (Westview 1996) and Artless Integrity: Moral Imagination, Agency and Stories (Rowman & Littlefield 2001), and coeditor (with Sue Campbell) of Racism and Philosophy (Cornell 1999). Since 1993 her research has been focused on the situation of women in Cuba. She has received a number of research grants for this work and has been taking large groups of students to the University of Havana since 2001. (Babbitts@post.queensu.ca)
Macalester Bell is completing her dissertation at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her current work concerns the moral psychology of responding to immorality. (mbell@unc.edu)
Samantha Brennan is Associate Professor and Chair of Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada. Her research mainly focuses on moderate approaches to deontological moral theory, but she also has interests in feminist ethics, issues of children's rights and family justice, and bioethics. She is the editor of Feminist Moral Philosophy (University of Calgary Press, 2003). She is also the author of "A Survey of Recent Work in Feminist Ethics" (Ethics) and "Reconciling Feminist Ethics and Feminist Politics on the Issue of Rights" (The Journal of Social Philosophy). (sbrennan@uwo.ca)
Sylvia Burrow has recently been appointed as Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Cape Breton University, Nova Scotia. Her dissertation is "Showing Some Humean Sympathy: The Role of Emotion in Moral Reasoning." Currently she is working on emotion theory in the context of Hume's moral psychology and, separately, within contemporary feminist moral theory. Her interests lie in the intersections between traditional and feminist ethics as sources of insight into the emotions as central to such topics as moral psychology, moral reasoning, integrity, and autonomy. (sylvia_burrow@uccb.ca) [End Page 238]
Patricia Hill Collins is Charles Phelps Taft Emeritus Professor of Sociology at the University of Cincinnati. She is the author of the award winning Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment; Race, Class and Gender: An Anthology; and Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender and the New Racism. (collinph@email.uc.edu)
Alice Crary is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the New School in New York. She has written articles on feminism and philosophy, ethical theory, moral psychology, philosophy and literature, and also on figures such as Wittgenstein, J. L. Austin, and Ryle. She is coeditor of The New Wittgenstein (Routledge, 2000) and Reading Cavell (Routledge, 2005) and editor of Wittgenstein and the Moral Life: Essays in Honor of Cora Diamond (MIT Press, forthcoming). She is also author of Beyond Moral Judgment (Harvard University Press, forthcoming). (crarya@newschool.edu)
Ann E. Cudd is Professor of Philosophy and director of Women's Studies at the University of Kansas. Her research interests include oppression, democracy, explanation, and global economic justice. Her book Analyzing Oppression is forthcoming from Oxford University Press. (acudd@ku.edu)
Julia Driver is Professor of Philosophy at Dartmouth College. Her areas of research interest are in normative ethical theory, particularly consequentialism. She has published a book, Uneasy Virtue (Cambridge 2001), as well as articles in a variety of journals such as Ethics, Journal of Philosophy, Philosophical Studies, Utilitas, and Pacific Philosophical Quarterly. She is currently working on a book on recent developments in utilitarianism and consequentialist moral philosophy which is tentatively titled The Greatest Happiness Principle. (Julia.Driver@dartmouth.edu)
Phil Gasper is Professor of Philosophy and chair of the Department of Philosophy & Religion at Notre Dame de Namur University, Belmont, California. He is coeditor of The Philosophy of Science (MIT 1991), editor of The Communist Manifesto: A Roadmap to History's Most...

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