Deontic Modality
Edited by Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman
Author Information
Nate Charlow, University of Toronto,Matthew Chrisman, University of Edinburgh
Nate Charlow works primarily on language, semantics, and related issues in meta-ethics and epistemology. He wrote a dissertation on imperatives (and deontic modals) at the University of Michigan, and has taught at the University of Toronto since 2011. His interest in imperatives and deontic modals is both linguistic and philosophical. He has published on the a priori; the semantics of conditionals, imperatives, and modals; and Expressivism.
Matthew Chrisman has taught Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh since 2006, before which he did his PhD at the University of North Carolina. He works primarily on ethical theory, philosophy of language, and epistemology. He has published The Meaning of 'Ought' with Oxford University Press and articles in journals including the Journal of Philosophy, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Philosophical Studies, and Philosophers' Imprint.
Contributors:
Aaron Bronfman, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Fabrizio Cariani, Northwestern University
Nate Charlow, University of Toronto
Matthew Chrisman, Edinburgh University
J. L. Dowell, Syracuse University
Stephen Finlay, University of Southern California
Benj Hellie, University of Toronto
Daniel Lassiter, Stanford University
Paul Portner, Georgetown University
Jessica Rett, University of California Los Angeles
Aynat Rubinstein, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
William Starr, Cornell University
Ralph Wedgwood, University of Southern California
Malte Willer, University of Chicago
Seth Yalcin, University of California Berkeley