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Volume 1, No. 2 - Spring 2000

CONTRIBUTOR BIOGRAPHIES

ROBERT L. CAMPBELL, Professor, Department of Psychology, Clemson University, Brackett Hall 410A, Clemson, South Carolina 29634-1511, email: <campber@clemson.edu>, url: <http://hubcap.clemson.edu/~campber/index.html>, first read Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology in 1973, while studying developmental and cognitive psychology as an undergraduate. He is the co-author (with Mark Bickhard) of Knowing Levels and Developmental Stages (S. Karger). 

STEPHEN COX, Professor of Literature and Director of the Humanities Program at the University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, California 92093-0306, email: <sdcox@ucsd.edu>, is the author of The Stranger Within Thee (University of Pittsburgh Press), Love and Logic: The Evolution of Blake's Thought (University of Michigan Press), The Titanic Story (Open Court), and the biographical introduction to Isabel Paterson's The God of the Machine (Transaction). 

LISA M. DOLLING, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, St. John's University, Jamaica, New York 11439, email: <muccio.nj@worldnet.att.net>, specializes in hermeneutics and the philosophy of science. She is co-editor (with Arthur Gianelli) of the forthcoming Tests of Time: Readings in the Development of Scientific Theory, and is currently at work on a reader of twentieth century women philosophers. She has written on Edith Stein, Simone Weil, and on the philosophy of physicist Neils Bohr.

GREGORY R. JOHNSON, <gregoryrjohnson@mindspring.com>, is a philosopher in private practice in Atlanta. In addition to consulting with individuals and institutions, he runs The Invisible College, a private educational organization offering classes on topics in philosophy, psychology, and literature. 

TIBOR R. MACHAN, Distinguished Fellow and Freedom Communications Professor of Business Ethics and Free Enterprise at the Leatherby Center of Chapman University, Argyros School of Business and Economics, Orange, California 92866, email: <Machan@chapman.edu>, url:  http://genius.ucsd.edu/~john/p/libuniv_dir/Machan_dir/Machan.html, is also Professor Emeritus at Auburn University's Department of Philosophy and Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution (Stanford, California). He has written, among other works, Ayn Rand (Peter Lang, 1999), Generosity: Virtue in the Civil Society (Cato Institute, 1998), and Classical Individualism: The Supreme Importance of Each Human Being (Routledge, 1998).

KIRSTI MINSAAS, University of Oslo, Department of British and American Studies, P. O. Box 1003 Blindern, 0315 Oslo, Norway, email: <kirstimi@mail.hf.uio.no>, is a research fellow in English literature at the University of Oslo, Norway. Receiving her doctorate in 1998, her dissertation topic was on the role of Aristotelian catharsis in Shakespearean tragedy, and she is currently working on a project on the "exemplary hero" in English literature from 1590 to 1820. She has also lectured extensively on Ayn Rand's fiction, both in Europe and in the United States.  For an interview with Minsaas, click here.

DAVID RASMUSSEN is an independent scholar living in Carson City Nevada. He earned his M.S. in Computer Science from North Carolina State University.

BRYAN REGISTER, Department of Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712-1180, email: <bregister@mail.utexas.edu>, is a graduate student in the Special Program in Continental Philosophy of UT-Austin, and has studied Rand's theory of concepts under David Kelley during an internship at the Institute for Objectivist Studies (now The Objectivist Center). He has written for Liberty, Navigator, Free Inquiry, and The Free Radical. His thesis, The Logic and Validity of Emotional Appeal in Classical Greek Rhetorical Theory, as well as other preliminary work on the emotions, language, and other topics, is available at: <http://www.olist.com>.

MATTHEW STOLOFF, email: <magnus2@ix.netcom.com>, holds a B.A. in philosophy from the University of Cincinnati and a Masters in Labor Relations and Human Resources from the School of Labor and Industrial Relations at Michigan State University. His current research interests include labor law, corporate campaigns, and corporate crimes. His online guide to Rand scholarship is at: <http://www.netcom.com/~magnus2>.

VOL. 1, NO. 2:   TABLE OF CONTENTS


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Copyright ©2007 by The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies Foundation.   Printed in USA.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number, ISSN 1526-1018