is assistant professor of philosophy at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, VA. Her primary interests are in philosophy of logic, mathematics and language, with a focus on the relationship between the meanings of the connectives in formal and natural languages. She is also interested in the work of Susan Stebbing, a contemporary of Russell, Moore and Wittgenstein who wrote on logic and critical thinking, and in mathematical structuralism.
is professor of philosophy at San Jose State University in Northern California, and occasional Director of the Center for Comparative Philosophy. He has longstanding project in logic and critical thinking which, on one hand, is aimed at defending a form of logical pluralism about logic based on the normativity of logic. On the other hand, he defends the relevance of a number of Nyāya, Jain, and Buddhist conceptions of critical thinking to our current critical thinking curriculum.
is associate professor of philosophy at Yale-NUS College in Singapore, with a joint appointment at the National University of Singapore. He focuses on philosophy of language and epistemology informed by Indian Sanskritic traditions, and is currently working on topics at the intersection of argumentation theory and pragmatics within the early Nyāya corpus, investigating norms for agonistic dialectic and their relationship to truth-seeking.