hobbes studies 31 (2018) 245-248

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List of Contributors

Laurens van Apeldoorn is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and a member of the Centre for at Leiden University, the Netherlands. He has held visiting appoint- ments at the University of Toronto, the University of Montreal, King’s College London, and the University of Leuven. His research has appeared in journals including Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, History of European Ideas, and Hobbes Studies.

Bernard Stefan Baumrin received a PhD from Johns Hopkins and a j.d. from Columbia Law School. He is Professor of Philosophy at cuny Graduate Center and Professor of Medi- cal Education at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. He is the editor of a reis- sue of Selby-Bigge’s British Moralists (Hackett) and of Hobbes’s Leviathan (Wadsworth, 1969).

David Boucher is Chair of Political Philosophy and at Cardiff Univer- sity, Distinguished Visiting Professor, University of Johannesburg, and Vice President, Learned Society of Wales. He has published on a wide variety of subjects, including international relations; history of political thought; British ; the political philosophy of R.G. Collingwood; and, cultural studies. He has held visiting fellowships in Oxford, the University of Johannesburg, Canterbury University, New Zealand, The Sun Yat Sen University, Taiwan; and the Australian National University. He is Chairman of the R.G. Collingwood So- ciety, and Director of the Collingwood and British Idealism Centre since 1993. His most recent books are Theories of International Relations from the Present (1998), British Idealism and Political Theory (with Andrew Vincent, 2001), The Limits of Ethics in International Relations (2009), British Idealism: A Guide for the Perplexed (2011 with Andrew Vincent), and Appropriating Hobbes: Legacies in Politics, Law and International Relations (2018).

Michael Byron is Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, where he has held an appointment since 1997. He is the author of Submis- sion and Subjection in Leviathan (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), and the editor of

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246 LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS

­Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason (Cambridge University Press, 2004). He has published journal articles in ethical theory and theory of rationality. During 2004–05, he was Visiting Fulbright Scholar in Phi- losophy at Lingnan University in Hong Kong.

Elad Carmel is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He works on Hobbes’s thought and the reception of Hobbesian ideas, particularly by English deists, freethinkers, and Whigs. His DPhil dissertation, completed at the University of Oxford, is entitled: ‘When Reason Is Against a Man, a Man Will Be Against Reason’: Hobbes, Deism, and Politics (2016).

Robin Douglass is Senior Lecturer in Political Theory at King’s College London. He is the author of Rousseau and Hobbes: Nature, Free Will, and the Passions (Oxford Univer- sity Press, 2015) and has published articles on Hobbes in the European Journal of Political Theory, History of European Ideas, History of Political Thought and Hobbes Studies. With Laurens van Apeldoorn, he has recently edited Hobbes on Politics and Religion, which is due to appear with Oxford University Press in the summer of 2018, and with Johan Olsthoorn he is currently editing a volume of essays on De Cive for the ‘Cambridge Critical Guides’ series.

Ioannis D. Evrigenis is Professor of Political Science at Tufts University. He is the author of Fear of Enemies and Collective Action, which won the 2009 Delba Winthrop Award for Excellence in Political Science, and of Images of Anarchy: The Rhetoric and ­Science in Hobbes’s State of Nature, both published by Cambridge University Press. His article entitled “Digital Tools and the History of Political Thought: The Case of Jean Bodin” won the 2016 rsa-tcp Article Prize for Digital Renais- sance Research, from the Renaissance Society of America.

Ismael del Olmo is Assistant Professor of Early Modern Europe at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina. His main research interests are in the field of demonology, biblical exegesis, and unbelief. He has published “Outsiders of Hagnopolis: unbelief, fear, and religion in Thomas More’s Utopia” (Moreana), “‘A savage conversion’: unbelief and demonic possession in Pierre de Bérulle’s Traité des énerguménes (1599)” (Revue d’histoire ecclésiastique), “La posesión diabólica en el Examen de Ingenios para las sciencias (1575) de Juan Huarte de San Juan: una paradoja” (Tiempos Modernos), and “‘El error de los Ateystas’: Posesión ­diabólica, discernimiento e incredulidad en el Patrocinio de ángeles y combate

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LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS 247 de demonios (1652) de Francisco de Blasco Lanuza” (Hispania Sacra, forthcom- ing). His forthcoming book, Legio: posesión diabólica y exorcismo en la Europa de los siglos xvi y xvii, will be published by Institución Fernando el Católica, Zaragoza, Spain.

Johan Olsthoorn is Assistant Professor in political theory at the University of Amsterdam and a postdoctoral fellow of the Research Foundation (fwo)-Flanders at ku Leuven (2015–2021). His research on Hobbes has been published in venues such as British Journal for the History of Philosophy, European Journal of Political Theo- ry, History of Political Thought, and Hobbes Studies.

Evan Oxman is the Uihlein Assistant Professor of American Politics at Lake Forest College. He received his Ph.D. from Princeton University in political theory and his b.a. from Duke University. His research interests include the social contract tradi- tion, democratic theory, American political thought, and politics and litera- ture. He has at work on a book manuscript tentatively entitled The Constitution of the People, which seeks to demarcate and defend a Hobbesian conception of popular sovereignty that is both descriptively plausible and normatively attractive.

Caleb Miller is a Doctoral Candidate and Teaching Associate in Political Science at the Uni- versity of California, Santa Barbara. While his research primarily focuses on post-democratic political subjectivity, he is also interested in democratic theo- ry more broadly, political realism, therapeutic approaches to political thought, and, of course, the work of . His article on political realism, “‘What is to be done’ when there is nothing to do?: Realism and Political In- equality,” is forthcoming from Constellations.

Ted H. Miller is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Alabama. He is the author of Mortal Gods: Science, Politics and the Humanist Ambitions of Thomas Hobbes (2011).

Rosamond Rhodes, Ph.D. is Professor of Medical Education and Director of Bioethics Education at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Professor of Philosophy at The Graduate Center, cuny, and Professor of Bioethics and Associate Director of the Clarkson- Mount Sinai Bioethics Program. She has published articles on the work of

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248 LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS

Thomas Hobbes and other major figures in the history of moral and political philosophy. She also writes on a broad array of issues in bioethics. She is co- editor of The Human Microbiome: Ethical, Legal and Social Concerns (Oxford University Press, 2013), The Blackwell Guide to Medical Ethics (Blackwell, 2007), Medicine and Social Justice: Essays on the Distribution of Health Care (Oxford University Press, first edition 2002; second edition 2012), and Physician Assisted Suicide: Expanding the Debate (Routledge, 1998).

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