I am a historian of philosophy. In 2015, I earned my PhD on semiotic theories in early modern philosophy (Lille - Lecce). My main published work is my monograph on semiotic theories in the 17th century (Vrin, 2021, Italian transl. BUP, 2023).
After a first postdoctoral period in Geneva in history of philosophy of language and mind, I have worked in Louvain-la-Neuve on the influence of scholastic philosophy on early modern theories of literature and art. Subsequently, as a postdoctoral researcher at the LabEx COMOD of the University of Lyon, and as an associate member of the IRHIM of the University of Lyon, I developed research on the history …
I am a historian of philosophy. In 2015, I earned my PhD on semiotic theories in early modern philosophy (Lille - Lecce). My main published work is my monograph on semiotic theories in the 17th century (Vrin, 2021, Italian transl. BUP, 2023).
After a first postdoctoral period in Geneva in history of philosophy of language and mind, I have worked in Louvain-la-Neuve on the influence of scholastic philosophy on early modern theories of literature and art. Subsequently, as a postdoctoral researcher at the LabEx COMOD of the University of Lyon, and as an associate member of the IRHIM of the University of Lyon, I developed research on the history of scholastic logic as an agonistic practice. This history covers the late medieval, renaissance and early modern periods, from 1300 to 1650. It is based on the comparison of two apparently heterogenous corpuses: scholastic logic and fencing books. I consider this a means of bridging the relatively isolated history of scholastic philosophy with the wider fields of the history of techniques and socio-cultural history.