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  • Notes on Contributors/Sur les Collaborateurs

Nathan Ballantyne is pursuing his doctorate in philosophy at the University of Arizona. He is writing a dissertation on epistemology.

From 2007-2010 Stephen Biggs will be a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto, where he will work with Mohan Matthen. His primary interests include metaphysics, philosophy of mind, and cognitive science.

Dan López de Sa is an ICREA Researcher at LOGOS (Barcelona) and Associate Fellow at Arché (St Andrews). He is particularly interested in the view of vagueness as semantic indecision, the notion of rigidity for predicates, the relation between response-dependence and realism, the nature of values, debates in meta-metaphysics, and the characterization of the different forms of contextualism/relativism. He has published in Analysis, Mind, Noûs, Philosophers' Imprint, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, and Synthèse, among others.

Peter King is Professor of Philosophy and of Mediaeval Studies at the University of Toronto. He has published widely on mediaeval philosophy, and is fi nishing a translation of several of Augustine's works on will and grace.

Ishani Maitra is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Women's & Gender Studies at Rutgers University (Newark and New Brunswick). Her primary areas of research specialization are philosophy of language and feminist philosophy.

Oron Shagrir is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He works on various topics in philosophy of mind, foundations of cognitive science, and history and philosophy of computing. His articles have been published in Mind, Philosophical Studies, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, The Monist, Synthese, Minds and Machines, and Theoretical Computer Science. [End Page 339]

Donald Wilson is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Kansas State University. His primary interests are in issues concerning practical applications of Kantian ethics. He has published articles on Kant's views about sex and marriage and duties of virtue and the way in which Kant's treatment of these duties can be used to inform our understanding of his view and its practical application in moral life.

Gideon Yaffe is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Law at the University of Southern California. He has published on early modern philosophy of action and mind, on free will and moral responsibility, and on applications of philosophical thought about action and freedom to the criminal law. He is the author of two books: Liberty Worth the Name: Locke on Free Agency (2000) and Manifest Activity: Thomas Reid's Theory of Action (2004). [End Page 340]

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