ABOUT OUR CONTRIBUTORS Sarah Broadie Is a Professor of Moral
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ABOUT OUR CONTRIBUTORS Sarah Broadie is a Professor of Moral Philosophy and Wardlaw Professor at the University of St Andrews. Previously, she taught at the Universities of Edinburgh, Texas at Austin, Yale, Rutgers, and Princeton. In 2003 she gave the Nellie Wallace lectures in the University of Oxford, entitled Nature and Divinity in the philosophies of Plato and Aristotle. Jacques Brunschwig is Professor (emeritus) at Paris-I University. He studies at the Sorbonne and the Ecole Normale Superieure. He has published a critical edition of Aristotle's Topics I-IV, and is currently working on V-VIII. He wrote many papers on Plato, Aristotle and the Hellenistic philosophers. He participated to a great number of international conferences and colloquia, such as the Symposia Aristotelica and the Symposia Hellenistica, and devoted much time to bring closer together Anglo-American and French scholars. He translated several Anglophone works (Lloyd, Long and Sedley); a selection of his own papers m Hellenistic philosophy was itself translated into English. John J. Cleary is Professor of Philosophy at Boston College, and senior lecturer in Philosophy at NUI, Maynooth (Ireland). He received his B.A. and M.A. from University College, Dublin, and his Ph.D. from Boston University in 1982. He was director of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy from 1984 to 1988, and is the founding general editor of this series of proceedings. He has published extensively on ancient philosophy, including a monograph on Aristotle and Mathematics (Leiden, 1995). Currently he is studying the role of paideia in ancient political thought. John Cooper is the Stuart Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University and the director of the Program in Classical Philosophy. He works on Greek philosophy and is the author of Reason and Human Good in Aristotle (1975) and Reason and Emotion (1999), and editor of Seneca: Moral and Political Essays (1995), and Plato: Complete Works (1997). 180 ABOUT OUR CONTRIBUTORS John Dillon is Professor of Greek Philosophy at the Trinity College's School of Classics. His publications include research in Greek philosophy, in particular Plato and the Platonic Tradition, Middle Platonism and Neoplatonism as well as Christian Platonism and Renaissance Platonism. Recently, he published The Heirs of Plato: A study of the Old Academy (347-274 B.C.). Gary M. Gurtler, S.J., is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He was educated at St. John Fisher College, at Fordham University, and at the Weston School of Theology. He has published on ancient philosophy, with special attention to Neoplatonism, including a book Plotinus: The Experience of Unity (1988). Most recently, his article "The Activity of Happiness in Aristotle's Ethics" appeared in The Review of Metaphysics (June, 2003). Currently, he is continuing research on alienation and otherness in the psychology of Plotinus. Jonathan Lear is John U. Nef Distinguished Service Professor of Social Thought at the University of Chicago. He received his Ph.D. from Rockefeller University in 1978. His publications include: Aristotle and Logical Theory ( 1980); Aristotle: The Desire to Understand (1988); "Katharsis" Phronesis (1988); "On Reflection: The Legacy of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy," Ratio, (1989); Love and its Place in Nature: A Philosophical Interpretation of Freudian Psychoanalysis (1990); "Plato's Politics of Narcissism" Apeiron (1994); "Testing the Limits: The Place of Tragedy in Aristotle's Ethics" in Aristotle and Moral Realism ( 1995); "The Heterogeneity of the Mental," Mind ( 1996); Open Minded: Working Out the Logic of the Soul (1998); and Happiness, Death, and the Remainder ofLife (200 1). A.A. Long is Professor of Classics and Irving Stone Professor of Literature at the University of California, Berkeley, and currently Belle van Zuylen Professor of Philosophy, at the University of Utrecht, Netherlands. He is the author, most recently, of Stoic Studies (Cambridge, 1996) and Epictetus. A Stoic and Socratic Guide to Life (Oxford, 2002), and editor of The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy (Cambridge, 1999). He is currently working on Greek moral psychology and on Greek philosophical theology. .