Bronwyn Finnigan is an Associate Professor in the School of Philosophy at the Australian National University and will serve as a Visiting Associate Professor in Philosophy at Princeton University during Spring 2025. Her work explores issues in the philosophy of mind, moral psychology, and ethics, in both mainstream and Indian Buddhist philosophical traditions. Supported by the Australian Research Council, her current research bridges Indian Buddhist philosophy and contemporary emotion research, examining the nature of fear, anxiety, and their cognitive and social regulation. She is also writing a book, Varieties of Buddhist Views on No-Self (under contract with Cambridge University Press). She is a member of the Cowherds collective that co-authored Moonshadows: Conventional Truth in Buddhist Philosophy (OUP 2011). Her early work raised issues about ethics and agency within Abhidharma and Madhyamaka Buddhist frameworks as well as for Aristotelian virtue ethics. Since joining the School of Philosophy at ANU and its Centre for Consciousness, her research has increasingly incorporated empirical perspectives on philosophy of mind, conscious experience, pragmatic rationality, and the nature, structure, and regulation of emotions.