About the authors
About the Authors
M.D.
Moorman is a doctoral
candidate in philosophy at The Catholic University of America. He has
an MA in philosophy from Georgetown University and an M.Phil in the
History and
Philosophy of Science from Cambridge University. His main philosophical
interest is the philosophy of the 19th and 20th centuries. He is
considering a
dissertation on Josiah Royce or Charles Hartshorne. He lives on the
Eastern
Shore of Maryland with his wife and three children.
Benjamin
Tucker is currently a
graduate student in the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies M.A.
Program at Florida Atlantic University. He graduated from the
University of Central Florida with two
bachelors degrees in the fields of Philosophy and Interdisciplinary
Humanities.
His research interests primarily include the anti-globalization
movement, queer
theory, and poststructuralist philosophy.
Colin
Wysman is a philosophy
undergraduate student in his final year of study at the University of
Windsor,
Ontario. His areas of interest are in social and political philosophy
and
critical theory.
Jordan
Bartol recently graduated
from the university of Windsor and will be attending the University of
Guelph in the fall of 2009 to begin work on my M.A. His philosophical
interests are primarily in
Critical Theory. He is especially interested in the
relationship between
processes of socialization and human nature.
Laith
Al-Shawaf is currently a
senior undergraduate Merit Scholar at the American University of
Beirut, Lebanon. His concentrations are in Psychology, Philosophy, and
Cognitive Science,
but he has other strong academic interests, most notably in biology and
physics. In August 2009, he will begin his doctoral studies in
Evolutionary Psychology
at The University of Texas at Austin. His main interests in philosophy
are
philosophy of science, philosophy of physics, metaphysics, philosophy
of
biology, and philosophy of mind. Laith would like to thank his parents
for
instilling in him a love of learning and knowledge, and for their
wisdom and
constant support.
Aditya
Singh is a recent high
school graduate of Anglo-Chinese Junior College, Singapore, and is
currently
preparing to commence his undergraduate studies in September, 2009 at
Stanford University, California. Originally from India, he was offered
the SIA Youth
Scholarship to pursue his high school studies in Singapore,
and recently
received another generous scholarship from Stanford. His chief
interests are
Physics, Mathematics, and the implications of the two in various
branches of philosophy
and epistemology. He is also deeply interested in
aeronautics, English
literature and the ancient Egyptian civilization.
Joshua
Seigal is a final year
undergraduate at University College London. In September he will
be continuing as a postgraduate at Oxford University. His
primary
philosophical interests are in epistemology, the philosophy of mind,
and the
philosophy of religion
Christina
S. Chen is an
undergraduate at Vanderbilt University, majoring in psychology and
philosophy.
Her philosophical interests include ethics as well as philosophy of
religion,
science, literature, and language. She hopes to explore philosophical
themes in
poetry after her graduation in 2010.