Jonathan Beale is a Teacher of Philosophy at Queen Anne’s School, Caversham. He wrote a PhD thesis on Wittgenstein’s views on scientism at the University of Reading and has published articles on Wittgenstein in journals including Ratio. He has lectured at the University of Reading and from 2011–2013 he was a Fellow in Philosophy at Harvard University.
William Child is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oxford and Fellow of University College, Oxford. He is the author of Wittgenstein (2011) and Causality, Interpretation and the Mind (1994) and co-editor, with David Charles, of Wittgensteinian Themes: Essays in Honour of David Pears (2001). He has published widely on Wittgenstein and on the philosophy of mind.
Annalisa Coliva is Professor of Philosophy at University of California, Irvine and Associate Professor at the University of Emilia. Her research focuses on epistemology, philosophy of mind and on the history of analytic philosophy, especially Moore and Wittgenstein on scepticism, relativism and self-knowledge.
David E. Cooper is Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Durham University, having previously taught at Oxford, Miami, London and Surrey universities. His books include The Measure of Things: Humanism, Humility and Mystery (2002), Meaning (2003), A Philosophy of Gardens (2006), and Convergence with Nature: A Daoist Perspective (2012). His current research interests are in the areas of animal ethics, phenomenology of religion, aesthetics and environmental philosophy.
Ian James Kidd is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Nottingham and formerly worked at Durham and Leeds. His research interests include the philosophy of science, scientism and anti-scientism, and the philosophy of Paul Feyerabend. He has published widely on all of these, including Reappraising Feyerabend (2016, co-edited with Matthew Brown). His webpage is https://sites.google.com/site/dfl2ijk/.
James C. Klagge is Professor of Philosophy at Virginia Tech, where he has taught since 1985. He has co-edited two collections of material from Wittgenstein: Philosophical Occasions (1993) and Public and Private Occasions (2003), and authored two books on Wittgenstein: Wittgenstein in Exile (2011) and Simply Wittgenstein (2016). He is currently working on two further book projects, Tractatus in Context and Wittgenstein’s Artillery.
Danièle Moyal-Sharrock is Reader in Philosophy at the University of Hertfordshire. Her research and publications focus on what she calls ‘the third Wittgenstein’. She is the author of Understanding Wittgenstein’s On Certainty (2007) and The Third Wittgenstein (2004), and several edited volumes. She is also President of the British Wittgenstein Society.
Rupert Read is Reader in Philosophy at the University of East Anglia. He has written and edited a number of books on Wittgenstein. His interest in environmental ethics has included critiques of scientism and the Precautionary Principle. He is also chair of the UK-based think tank, Green House, and a former Green Party of England and Wales councillor, spokesperson, European parliamentary candidate and national parliamentary candidate.
Genia Schönbaumsfeld is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southampton who specialises in epistemology, Wittgenstein, Kierkegaard and the philosophy of religion. She is the author of The Illusion of Doubt (2016) and A Confusion of the Spheres – Kierkegaard and Wittgenstein on Philosophy and Religion (2007). Online versions of some of her papers and articles can be found at https://soton.academia.edu/GeniaSchönbaumsfeld.
Severin Schroeder is Associate Professor in Philosophy at the University of Reading. He has written three monographs on Wittgenstein: Wittgenstein: The Way Out of the Fly Bottle (2006), Wittgenstein Lesen (2009) and Das Privatsprachen-Argument (1998). He is the editor of Wittgenstein and Contemporary Philosophy of Mind (2001) and Philosophy of Literature (2010). He is currently working on a book on Wittgenstein’s philosophy of mathematics.
Benedict Smith is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Durham. His research interests include ethics, philosophy of mind and the history of philosophy. His publications include Particularism and the Space of Moral Reasons (2011). His webpage is durham.academia.edu/BenedictSmith.
Chon Tejedor is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Hertfordshire. She specialises in ethics and Wittgenstein’s treatment of science, language, metaphysics, ethics and religion. Her publications include The Early Wittgenstein (2015) and Starting with Wittgenstein (2011).