A Companion to Hobbes. Группа авторов
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Notes on Contributors
Arash Abizadeh, Professor, Department of Political Science and an Associate Member of the Department of Philosophy at McGill University. His research focusses on democratic theory; power; identity, nationalism, and cosmopolitanism; immigration and border control; and seventeenth- and eighteenth-century philosophy, particularly Hobbes and Rousseau. His monograph Hobbes and the Two Faces of Ethics (Cambridge) won the 2019 Canadian Philosophical Association Biennial Book Prize (English).
Marcus P. Adams, Associate Professor of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Albany and former Associate Editor of the journal Hobbes Studies. His research focuses on perception and natural philosophy in Early Modern Philosophy, in particular on Thomas Hobbes and Margaret Cavendish. His recent papers have appeared in journals such as British Journal for the History of Philosophy, History of Philosophy Quarterly, Philosophers’ Imprint, and Philosophical Studies.
Mónica Brito Vieira, Professor, University of York. Her work in political theory focuses on the languages and concepts through which we make sense of and shape our political world, most notably the concept of political representation. She is the author of The Elements of Representation in Hobbes (Brill, 2009), the coauthor of Representation (Polity, 2008), and editor of Reclaiming Representation (Routledge, 2017). Her work has also appeared in the American Political Science Review, Journal of the History of Ideas, History of Political Thought, Thesis Eleven, Constellations, Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, and other journals.
Jacqueline Broad, Associate Professor of Philosophy, School of Philosophical, Historical, and International Studies at Monash University, Melbourne. Her main area of research is early modern women’s philosophy. She is the author of The Philosophy of Mary Astell: An Early Modern Theory of Virtue (Oxford University Press, 2015), A History of Women’s Political Thought in Europe, 1400–1700 (with Karen Green, Cambridge University Press, 2009), and Women Philosophers of the Seventeenth Century (Cambridge University Press, 2002). She is currently the Series Editor for Cambridge University Press’s new Elements series on Women in the History of Philosophy.
Michael Byron, Professor and Chair of Philosophy, Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, where he has held an appointment since 1997. He is the author of Submission and Subjection in Leviathan (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), and the editor of Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason (Cambridge University Press, 2004). He has published journal articles on ethical theory and theory of rationality. During 2004–5, he was Visiting Fulbright Scholar in Philosophy at Lingnan University in Hong Kong.
Alexandra Chadwick, postdoctoral researcher, University of Jyväskylä and a lecturer at Leiden University College. She is Associate Editor of the journal Hobbes Studies. Her chapter in this collection was written while she was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Groningen. Her research has focused on Hobbes’s materialist psychology and its implications for his practical philosophy, and she is currently working on the psychology of sociability