Planet of the Apes and Philosophy (44 page)

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About the Authors

K
RISTIN
A
NDREWS
is an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Cognitive Science Program at York University, in Toronto. She is the author of
Do Apes Read Minds? Toward a New Folk Psychology
(2012) and has done extensive research into the minds of dolphins, human children, and orangutans, including investigations of the pantomime behavior of orangutans and Charlton Heston.

J
ONAS
-S
ÉBASTIEN
B
EAUDRY
is a DPhil candidate at the University of Oxford, where he served as a treasurer for the Oxford Animal Ethics Society. His work and research focus on the rights of women, poor and indigenous people, and the mentally disabled. He has worked at the Supreme Court of Canada, the Canadian Human Rights Commission, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, the International Court of Justice and the Ape City Tribunal.

A
NDREW
B
RENNAN
is chair of philosophy and pro vice-chancellor for graduate research at La Trobe University in Melbourne. He and Norva Lo have collaborated on a range of books and papers on environmental philosophy, forgiveness, and the puzzle of whether humans can aspire to any kind of simian dignity.

J
ASON
D
AVIS
works at Macquarie University in Sydney. He has written chapters for several books in Open Court's Popular Culture and Philosophy Series, including
Dexter and Philosophy: Mind over Spatter, Anime and Philosophy: Wide Eyed Wonder
, and
Manga and Philosophy: Fullmetal Metaphysician
. When he fails to complete tests, it's because he loathes bananas.

D
ON
F
ALLIS
is Professor of Information Resources and Adjunct Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona. He has written articles on lying and deception, including “What is Lying?” in the
Journal of Philosophy
and “The Most Terrific Liar You Ever Saw in Your Life” in
The Catcher in the Rye and Philosophy: A Book for Bastards, Morons, and Madmen
. In 1991, he was a PhD student in philosophy at the University of California, Irvine, where the
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes
occurred. But for the life of him, he can't remember a mob of angry apes trying to burn down the campus.

L
ESLIE
D
ALE
F
ELDMAN
is Professor of Political Science at Hofstra University and author of
Spaceships and Politics: The Political Theory of Rod Serling
(2010). Her parents are great science fiction fans, and her former babysitter always said, when
Planet of the Apes
was on TV, “Les, the Apes are on!”

L
ORI
G
RUEN
teaches at Wesleyan University and writes about animals and ethics. She has documented the history of the first one hundred chimpanzees in the US <
http://first100chimps.wesleyan.edu
> and is currently working on a book that draws lessons from the lives of the chimpanzees she has come to know, respect, and love.

E
UGENE
H
ALTON
is a harmonica player and guerilla philosopher who teaches in the sociology department of the University of Notre Dame. His books include
The Meaning of Things
(co-authored, 1981),
Meaning and Modernity
(1986),
Bereft of Reason
(1995), and
The Great Brain Suck
(2008). He has just completed a book on pragmatism in the twentieth-first century. Hopefully it will still provide useful guidance after the Great Ape Revolution.

J
OHN
H
USS
is a songwriter and philosopher who teaches at The University of Akron. His other works include
Lipchitz
(co-authored with the John Huss Moderate Combo),
Johnny Cash and Philosophy: The Burning Ring of Truth
(co-edited with David Werther), and
Use Your Head
(co-authored with Loch Phillipps and Lee Skaife). He still can feel the shock of seeing the Statue of Liberty waist deep in sand on the TV in Ricky Lesser's basement. See? The revolution did happen on television.

G
REG
L
ITTMANN
has written on evolutionary epistemology, philosophy of logic,
The Big Bang Theory, Breaking Bad, Doctor Who, Dune, Ender's Game, A Game of Thrones
, Ridley Scott,
Terminator
, and
The Walking Dead
. He's a member of the community of tall, shaved chimpanzees with big noses, also known as
Homo sapiens
, and teaches philosophy at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

N
ORVA
Y.S. L
O
is a senior lecturer in Philosophy at La Trobe University, Melbourne, who has written on ethics, environmental philosophy, and the philosophy of David Hume. She is particularly interested in movies that explore the dark side of human nature but equally those that inspire cross-species friendships (see this book's front cover).

S
HAUN
M
AY
lives in London where he's currently finishing a PhD applying Heidegger's philosophy to humor. He's also a theater director and producer who specializes in doing odd shows in weird spaces—his most critically acclaimed show being an opera in an Ikea store. Like Caesar, he's much better at solving the Lucas Tower than you would expect from looking at him.

T
OM
M
C
B
RIDE
has taught at Beloit College for nearly forty percent of a century. He is Professor of English and Keefer Professor of Humanities. Along with Ron Nief he's the co-creator of
The Annual Beloit College Mindset List
and co-author of
The Mindset Lists of American History
(2011). He's written on Shakespeare, Conan Doyle, Raymond Carver, and Saul Bellow. When asked, he denies that Dr. Zaius reminds him of college deans he has known.

W
ILLIAM
L. M
C
G
INNEY
teaches Music History at the University of North Texas. He has written on the film music of Aaron Copland, the music of Emerson, Lake, and Palmer, and science-fiction movie scores. Although he has never met a talking ape, as a child he dreamed of growing up to be a scholar and scientist like Dr. Cornelius.

D
AVID
L. M
ORGAN
received his PhD in theoretical particle physics from William and Mary, and his research has appeared in
Physical Review
and the
Astrophysical Journal
. He is the recipient of a Sloane/EST commission for the play “The Osiander Preface.” When not devoting time to thinking about space he devotes space to thinking about time.

M
ASSIMO
P
IGLIUCCI
is an evolutionary biologist and a philosopher of science at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. His latest cogitations can be found in
Answers for Aristotle: How Science and Philosophy Can Lead Us to A More Meaningful Life
(2012). As a biologist he has worked on plants, not apes, but as a member of the Order Primates, he feels qualified to pontificate about them anyway.

B
ERNARD
E. R
OLLIN
is the author of eighteen books including
The Frankenstein Syndrome
(1995) and
Animal Rights and Human
Morality
(1992), and co-editor of
Harley Davidson and Philosophy: Full Throttle Aristotle
(2006). He is University Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Colorado State University, where he is also University Bioethicist. His areas of research include animal ethics, animal pain, and animal consciousness. Having testified before Congress on animal research, he knows what it's like to be Taylor on trial.

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