Tyler Burge - Tyler Burge–UCLA since 1971, currently Flint Professor of Philosophy. Author of 175 articles, including halves of two books of essays on his work with replies: Reflections and Replies: Essays on the Philosophy of Tyler Burge (2003) and Meaning, Basic Self-Knowledge, and Mind (2003); and 3 volumes of essays: Essays on Frege: Truth, Thought, Meaning (2005); Foundations of Mind (2008), and Cognition Through Understanding (2013). He has also authored Origins of Objectivity (2010); and Perception: First Form of Mind (2022). Principle interests: philosophy of mind, epistemology, philosophy of logic and language, Frege, and Kant. Member American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Philosophical Society, British Academy, Institute International du Philosophie.
Hannah Ginsborg - Hannah Ginsborg is Willis S. and Marion Slusser Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of The Normativity of Nature: Essays on Kant's Critique of Judgment (Oxford University Press, 2015) and of articles in a range of areas including Kant, Wittgenstein, philosophy of mind, and theory of meaning.
Stefanie Grüne - Stefanie Grüne is Lecturer at the Philosophy Department of the Free University, Berlin. She is the author of Blinde Anschauung. Die Rolle von Begriffen in Kants Theorie sinnlicher Synthesis. (Klostermann 2009). Her primary research interests are Kant’s theoretical philosophy and contemporary philosophy of perception.
Gary Hatfield - Gary Hatfield received the PhD from the University of Wisconsin--Madison in 1979, and then taught at Harvard and Johns Hopkins before joining the University of Pennsylvania in 1987. He works in the history of modern philosophy, the philosophy of psychology, theories of vision, and the philosophy of science. In 1990, he published The Natural and the Normative: Theories of Spatial Perception from Kant to Helmholtz. In 2009, Perception and Cognition: Essays in the Philosophy of Psychology appeared from the Clarendon Press. A revised version of his book on Descartes' Meditations appeared in 2014. In 2012, an edited volume (co-edited with the psychologist Sarah Allred), arising from a workshop on the perceptual constancies, was published by Oxford: Visual Experience. The revised edition of his translation of Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics appeared in 2004. He is affiliated with the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience and the Penn Center for Neuroaesthetics, as well as the Visual Studies Program. He has directed dissertations in history of philosophy, philosophy of psychology, and philosophy and history of science, and has advised several postdocs in these fields. He has long been fascinated by visual perception and the mind–body problem.
Rolf-Peter Horstmann - Rolf-Peter Horstmann is Prof. emeritus at Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany, where he held the chair in Classical German Philosophy. Since his retirement in 2007 he was a visiting professor at different universities mainly in the USA but also in China and Brazil. His published work deals primarily with topics in metaphysics, epistemology and the philosophy of mind in the period from Kant to Hegel.
Anja Jauernig - Anja Jauernig is Associate Professor of Philosophy at New York University. Before coming to NYU, she taught at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Notre Dame; her Ph.D. is from Princeton. Her philosophical interests include Kant, Early Modern Philosophy, 19th century German Philosophy, Aesthetics, and Animal Ethics. Her book The World According to Kant was published in 2021 with OUP.
Scott Jenkins - Scott Jenkins is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Kansas. He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University, where Béatrice Longuenesse was his advisor. He specializes in post-Kantian European philosophy and serves as Associate Editor of The Journal of Nietzsche Studies. He is currently working on a book on Nietzsche and pessimism.
Patricia Kitcher - Patricia Kitcher is Roberta and William Campbell Professor Emerita of Humanities and Professor Emerita of Philosophy at Columbia University. She has written a book on the structure of Freud’s theory of the mind and two books on the relation between Kant’s theories of cognition and of the self.
Colin Marshall - Colin Marshall is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Washington. He works on various topics in the history of European philosophy, metaethics, and, more recently, the ethics of persuasion. His publications include "Does Kant Demand Explanations for All Synthetic A Priori Claims?" (Journal of the History of Philosophy), "Moral Realism in Spinoza's Ethics" (The Cambridge Critical Companion to Spinoza's Ethics, CUP), "Schopenhauer on the Content of Compassion" (Noûs), and Compassionate Moral Realism (OUP). Together with Colin McLear, he is currently editing Kant's Fundamental Assumptions (OUP).
Richard Moran - Richard Moran is the Brian D. Young Professor of Philosophy at Harvard University, where he has taught since 1995, serving as Department Chair from 2003 - 2009. He received his Ph.D. in Philosophy from Cornell University in 1989, and taught at Princeton University from 1989 to 1995. Professor Moran has received fellowships from the National Humanities Center (1994 – 1995), the Princeton University Center for Human Values (1998 – 1999), and the American Council of Learned Societies (2014 – 2015). He has also been a Visiting Fellow at the Research School for Social Science, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, and an Invited Scholar at L’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, in Paris, France. He is the author of Authority and Estrangement: An essay on self-knowledge (Princeton, 2001), The Exchange of Words: Speech, Testimony, and Intersubjectivity (Oxford 2018), and The Philosophical Imagination (Oxford 2017), a collection of essays in philosophy of mind and action, aesthetics, metaphor, moral psychology, and narrative as a form of self-understanding. He continues to work on Proust.
Nick Riggle - Nick Riggle is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Diego. He has published two books and over a dozen articles on a wide range of issues in aesthetics and the philosophy of art. He has two books forthcoming, This Beauty: A Philosophy of Being Alive (Basic Books) and a collection of some of his essays entitled Understanding Aesthetic Life (Oxford University Press).
Karl Schafer - Karl Schafer is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. Previously he was Professor of Philosophy at University of California, Irvine and Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh, as well as a Lawrence S. Rockefeller Faculty Fellow at Princeton University's Center for Human Values and a Humboldt Fellow at Humboldt Universität zu Berlin. His philosophical interests lie primarily in ethics, epistemology, the history of modern philosophy, and German philosophy (especially Kant). He is the co-editor (with Nicholas Stang) of The Sensible and Intelligible Worlds: New Essays on Kant’s Metaphysics and Epistemology and the author of Kant’s Reason: The Unity of Reason and the Limits of Comprehension in Kant's Philosophy, both forthcoming with Oxford University Press.
Nicholas Stang - Nicholas Stang is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Canada Research Chair at the University of Toronto. He works at the intersection of Kant, German idealism, and analytic philosophy.
Allen Wood - Allen Wood is Ruth Norman Halls Professor at Indiana University, Bloomington and Ward W. and Priscilla B. Woods Professor emeritus at Stanford University. He has also held professorships at Cornell University and Yale University. He grew up in Seattle, Washington, graduating from Garfield High School, received a B.A. from Reed College, Portland, OR and PhD from Yale University. He has held visiting positions at the University of Michigan, University of California at San Diego and Oxford University.