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  • Notes on Contributors/Sur les Collaborateurs

Ingo Brigandt is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Alberta. His primary interests are in philosophy of biology, philosophy of mind, and philosophy of science. Current publications include 'The Epistemic Goal of a Concept: Accounting for the Rationality of Semantic Change and Variation' (Synthese, 2010), 'Beyond Reduction and Pluralism: Toward an Epistemology of Explanatory Integration in Biology' (Erkenntnis, 2010), and 'Reductionism in Biology' (with A.C. Love, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2008).

Matti Eklund is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Cornell University. He has published articles in many areas of philosophy, primarily metaphysics, philosophy of language, and philosophy of logic.

Peter J. Graham is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Riverside. He works in epistemology, philosophy of language, and the philosophy of psychology. He has published articles on the epistemology of testimony, philosophical skepticism, and the nature of justifi cation. Two related forthcoming articles will appear in Noûs and Philosophical Studies.

Martin Montminy received his PhD at the Université de Montréal. Formerly Associate Professor at the University of Ottawa, he is now Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oklahoma. He works in the philosophy of language, the philosophy of mind, and epistemology. He has recently published articles in such journals as the American Philosophical Quarterly, Analysis, Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Linguistics and Philosophy, Metaphilosophy, Philosophical Studies, and Synthese.

Seyed N. Mousavian is Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Alberta, Canada, and Faculty Research Fellow at the Iranian Institute of Philosophy, Iran. His main interests are philosophy of language, philosophical logic, and metaphysics. [End Page 187]

Avia Pasternak is a University Lecturer at the Department of Government, University of Essex. Her primary area of research is political theory. She has published on the distribution of collective responsibility in democracies, on collective punishment, and on international economic sanctions. She is currently working on the connection between democratic theory and theories of global justice.

Neil Sinclair is a Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Nottingham, UK. His research interests are in meta-ethics (particularly expressivism) and the philosophical notions that meta-ethicists hope to deal with, such as truth, truth-aptness, mind-independence, disagreement, knowledge, explanation, and logic. [End Page 188]

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