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Contributors
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Contributors Sara Brill is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and the Classical Studies Program at Fairfield University. She is the author of articles on Plato, Greek tragedy and ancient Greek medicine; currently, she is completing a monograph on the political dimensions of Plato’s psychology. Patricia Fagan teaches Greek and Roman Studies in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures at the University of Windsor in Windsor, Ontario. She is a specialist in Homer and Ancient Greek Literature. Francisco J. Gonzalez is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Ottawa. He is the author of Dialectic and Dialogue: Plato’s Practice of Philosophical Inquiry and Plato and Heidegger: A Question of Dialogue, as well as numerous articles on Ancient Greek and Contemporary Continental philosophy. Robert Metcalf is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Philosophy, University of Colorado Denver. He is translator, along with Mark Tanzer, of Martin Heidegger’s Basic Concepts of Aristotelian Philosophy (Indiana University Press, 2009), and the author of numerous articles on topics in ancient Greek philosophy . Mitchell Miller is the Dexter M. Ferry Jr. Professor at Vassar College. He is the author of Plato’s Parmenides: The Conversion of the Soul and The Philosopher in Plato ’s Statesman. In recent years he has been concentrating on “the longer way” declared by Socrates at Republic 435c–d and 504b–e and on the problem of the “unwritten teachings.” For more on his work, go to http://blogs.vassar.edu/mitchellmiller /. Mark Munn is Professor of Ancient Greek History and Greek Archaeology in the Department of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies at Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of The School of History: Athens in the Age of Socrates. Gregory Recco is a tutor at St. John’s College in Annapolis, Maryland. 246 Contributors David Roochnik is Professor of Philosophy at Boston University. He is the author of four books and forty articles on various topics in Ancient Greek Philosophy. His most recent work is Retrieving the Ancients: An Introduction to Greek Philosophy. John Russon is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Guelph, in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. He is the author or editor of various works of original philosophy and various studies in the history of philosophy, including Retracing the Platonic Text (2000), Human Experience (2003), Bearing Witness to Epiphany (2009), and Reexamining Socrates in the Apology (2009). Eric Salem has been a tutor at St. John’s College since 1990. He and two of his colleagues, Eva Brann and Peter Kalkavage, have just finished their third jointtranslation project, a translation of Plato’s Statesman. John Sallis is Frederick J. Adelmann, S.J. Professor of Philosophy at Boston College . He is author of Force of Imagination, On Translation, and Topographies. Eric Sanday is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Kentucky. Catherine Zuckert is Nancy Reeves Dreux Professor of Political Science and Editor-in-Chief of The Review of Politics at the University of Notre Dame. Her books include Plato’s Philosophers: On the Coherence of the Dialogues and Postmodern Platos: Nietzsche, Heidegger, Gadamer, Strauss, Derrida. Michael P. Zuckert is Nancy Reeves Dreux Professor of Political Science and Director of the Tocqueville Program for Inquiry into the Place of Religion in American Public Life and the Potenziani Program in Constitutional Studies at the University of Notre Dame. He has published extensively on early modern political philosophy and modestly on ancient philosophy. ...