Visiting Scholars

Chi-Chun Chiu Ph.D. in philosophy at SUNY-Buffalo. Currently he is associate professor in the Graduate Institute of Philosophy at National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan. His primary area of interest includes epistemology and American philosophy (Peirce).

Hang Qing Cong

Frederick Eberhardt Ph.D. in Logic, Computation, and Methodology from Carnegie Mellon University. Graduated from Carnegie Mellon in 2007 with a thesis on "Causation & Intervention". He is now part of the Causal Learning Collaborative led by Alison Gopnik in the Psychology Department at UC Berkeley. His main interests are in causation and probability and their implications for human causal learning.

Iris Einheuser Iris Einheuser is assistant professor of philosophy at Duke University. Her primary areas of interest are ontology, modality, essence, content, reference and philosophical logic. Currently, she is working on a project which develops a conceptualist approach to ontology.

Alan Fenster

Robert Fogelin Professor of Philosophy and Sherman Fairchild Professor in the Humanities at Dartmouth College. His many books include Walking the Tightrope of Reason, Pyrrhonian Reflections, Wittgenstein, and Hume's Skepticism.

Gordian Haas Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Konstanz, Germany. Graduated in 2003 with a thesis on belief revision. He is Assistant Professor of philosophy at the University of Bayreuth, Germany. His main areas of interest are in verificationism, belief revision, logic and epistemic justification.

Yooshin Kim B.S., Seoul National University,Korea. M.S. Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, UC Berkeley. Ph.D. Philosophy of Science, Cornell University. Currently Professor in the Department of Electrical and Communication Engineering, graduate program of science and technology studies at Pusan National University, Busan Korea.

Naozumi Mitani Adjunct Lecturer of Philosophy, Ritsumeikan University, Japan Adjunct Lecturer of Philosophy, Kwansei-Gakuin University, Japan Adjunct Lecturer of Contemporary Social Studies, Kyoto Women's University, Japan

Visiting Student Researchers

Florian Grosser Florian earned an M.A. degree in Political Science, Philosophy, and Contemporary History at Ludwig-Maximilians University (LMU), Munich, in 2005. After a stay at Université Aix-Marseille III, he started working on his doctoral thesis at LMU’s Philosophy Department. His main areas of interest are 20th Century Continental Philosophy, Political Philosophy/Theory, and the History of Political Thought.

Julia Hermann