About
I'm a philosopher and socio-anthropologist exploring how people make sense through concepts, narratives, and embodied practices.
I combine critical thinking with fieldwork methods to clarify the stories we tell, the technologies we shape, and the meanings we live by.
My research weaves together philosophical analysis, ethnographic methods, anthropological perspectives, and sociological critique.
I've recently worked on subjectivation, agency, and practices of the self.
Earlier projects focused more on time and attention, grounded in a strong phenomenological perspective.
My approach is interdisciplinary, intuitive, and rigorous.
I reframe problems, ask different questions, sharpen concepts, and build robust definitions to help us think and to name what often goes unnamed.
I bridge conceptual work and field research in search of new tools, new narratives, and better ways of making sense. To think, and rethink, our place in the world.
I'm currently exploring how AI technologies act as conceptual tools: shaping how we think, collaborate, and imagine our place in the world. I'm interested in what this transformation means for meaning-making, ethics, and attention.
And I believe anthropology and philosophy are invaluable resources and tools to help us think about AGI.
I'm particularly drawn to spaces where ambiguity is generative, and where sense is something we co-compose across disciplines, perspectives, and systems, creatively and ethically.