Kurtis R. Schaeffer is the Frances Myers Ball Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia, where he co-directs the Tibetan Buddhist Studies Program. His books include Himalayan Hermitess , Dreaming the Great Brahmin , The Culture of the Book in Tibet , An Early Tibetan Catalogue of Buddhist Literature (with Leonard van der Kuijp), and The Life of the Buddha by Tenzin Chögyel. William A. McGrath is the Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Assistant Professor of Buddhist Studies at New York University, where he teaches in the Department of Religious Studies. His research concerns the historical intersections of religion and medicine in Tibet, and he recently edited the volume Knowledge and Context in Tibetan Medicine (2019).
Jue Liang is Assistant Professor of Religion at Denison University, where she teaches courses on Asian religions and cultures. Her publications include "Questioning Women: Ye shes mtsho rgyal and Other Female Disciples in Zhus lan Literature" ( Revue d'Etudes Tibétaines ) and "Tilling the Fields of Merit: The Institutionalization of Feminine Enlightenment in Tibet's First Khenmo Program" ( Journal of Buddhist Ethics , with Andrew S. Taylor). Leonard W. J. van der Kuijp is Professor of Tibetan and Himalayan Studies at Harvard University, where he chairs the Committee on Inner Asian and Altaic Studies. He is a former MacArthur Fellow and has written numerous works on Tibetan history and Buddhist epistemology, including Bcom ldan ral gri (1227-1305) on Buddhist Epistemology and Logic: His Commentary on Dignaga's Pramanasamuccaya (co-author Arthur P. McKeown), An Early Tibetan Survey of Buddhist Literature: The Bstan pa rgyas pa nyi 'od of Bcom ldan rig ral (co-author Kurtis R.
Schaeffer), Contributions to the Development of Tibetan Buddhist Epistemology: From the Eleventh to the Thirteenth Century, and over ninety articles. His research focuses on Indo-Tibetan Buddhist thought, Tibetan Buddhist intellectual history, and premodern Tibetan relations with Mongolia and China.