Paul Thagard

Paul Thagard is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Waterloo. His writings in the philosophy of medicine includes the book How Scientists Explain Disease (Princeton University Press, 2000), several articles on mental illness, and work in progress on balance disorders.

Jim Tabery

Jim Tabery is Professor of Philosophy and Adjunct Associate Professor of Internal Medicine at the University of Utah. His research focuses largely on the philosophy of science and applied ethics, as well as the intersection between those domains.

Beckett Sterner

Beckett Sterner is an Assistant Professor at Arizona State University. His research focuses on the question: “When and why is mathematics useful for biology?”

Adrian Stencel

Adrian Stencel is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Jagiellonian University Kraków, Poland. His research is mainly in the philosophy of biology, with strong interests in the conceptual and foundational issues surrounding the theory of evolution, population biology and microbiology.

Jacob Stegenga

Jacob Stegenga is a Professor at NTU Singapore. Jacob has published widely in philosophy of science and philosophy of medicine. He is the author of Medical Nihilism and Care and Cure: An Introduction to Philosophy of Medicine, and a book to be published in 2025 titled Heart of Science.

Miriam Solomon

Miriam Solomon is Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy at Temple University, Philadelphia. Her research interests are in philosophy of science, philosophy of medicine, history of science, epistemology, gender and science and biomedical ethics. She is a member of the PhilInBioMed Scientific Committee.

Brian Skyrms

Brian Skyrms is a Distinguished Professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science and Economics at the University of California, Irvine and a Professor of Philosophy at Stanford University. Most recently, he has worked on the evolution of conventions and the social contract. Other research interests include inductive logic, decision theory, rational deliberation, and Truth.