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4Extended Affectivity as the Cognition of Primary IntersubjectivityPhenomenology and Mind 11 232-241. 2017.I discuss the primordial affectivity approach (Colombetti 2014) and the extended emotions theory (Krueger 2014, Slaby 2014, Candiotto 2015, Carter et al. 2016) in order to propose a novel account of “extended affectivity” (EA) as the cognition of primary intersubjectivity (EACPI). I explain why the distributed cognition model is the more convenient to understand the collective and the subjective dimension of EA. The novelty of EACPI consists in the recognition of the protocognitive valence of th…Read more
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24Beyond the attention economy, towards an ecology of attending. A manifestoAI and Society 41 (1): 477-492. 2026.We endorse policymakers’ efforts to address the negative consequences of the attention economy’s technology but add that these approaches are often limited in their criticism of the systemic context of human attention. Starting from Buddhist philosophy, we advocate a broader approach: an ‘ecology of attending’ that centers on conceptualizing, designing, and using attention (1) in an embedded way and (2) focused on the alleviating of suffering. With ‘embedded’ we mean that attention is not a neut…Read more
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132Beyond the attention economy, towards an ecology of attending. A manifestoAI and Society 41. 2026.We endorse policymakers’ efforts to address the negative consequences of the attention economy’s technology but add that these approaches are often limited in their criticism of the systemic context of human attention. Starting from Buddhist philosophy, we advocate a broader approach: an ‘ecology of attending’ that centers on conceptualizing, designing, and using attention (1) in an embedded way and (2) focused on the alleviating of suffering. With ‘embedded’ we mean that attention is not a neut…Read more
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34MORAL REALISM IN PLATO - (L.P.) Gerson Plato’s Moral Realism. Pp. viii + 264. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023. Cased, £85, US$110. ISBN: 978-1-009-32998-9. 1 (review)The Classical Review 75 (2): 442-444. 2025.
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17Epistemic Emotions: The Case of WonderRevista de Filosofía 31 (54). 2019.In this paper I discuss the reasons for which we may consider wonder an epistemic emotion. I defend the thesis for which a specific type of wonder is aporia-based and that since it is aporia-based, this wonder is epistemic. The epistemic wonder is thus an interrogating wonder which plays the epistemic function of motivation to questioning in processes of inquiry. I first introduce the contemporary debate on epistemic emotions, and then I analyze the characteristics that make of wonder an epistem…Read more
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152The reality of relationsGiornale di Metafisica 2. 2017.Discussing the contemporary debate about the metaphysics of relations and structural realism, I analyse the philosophical significance of relational quantum mechanics. Relativising properties of objects to other objects, RQM affirms that reality is inherently relational. My claim is that RQM can be seen as an instantiation of the ontology of ontic structural realism, for which relations are prior to objects, since it provides good reasons for the argument from the primacy of relation. In order t…Read more
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84From Philosophy of Emotion to Epistemology: Some Questions About the Epistemic Relevance of EmotionsIn The Value of Emotions for Knowledge, Springer Verlag. pp. 3-24. 2019.The aim of this chapter is to discuss the relevance that emotions can play in our epistemic life considering the state of the art of the philosophical debate on emotions. The strategy is the one of focusing on the three main models on emotions as evaluative judgements, bodily feelings, and perceptions, following the fil rouge of emotion intentionality for rising questions about their epistemic functions. From this examination, a major challenge to mainstream epistemology arises, the one that ask…Read more
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97Epistemic Emotions: The Case of WonderRevista de Filosofia Aurora 31 (54). 2019.In this paper I discuss the reasons for which we may consider wonder an epistemic emotion. I defend the thesis for which a specific type of wonder is aporia-based and that since it is aporia-based, this wonder is epistemic. The epistemic wonder is thus an interrogating wonder which plays the epistemic function of motivation to questioning in processes of inquiry. I first introduce the contemporary debate on epistemic emotions, and then I analyze the characteristics that make of wonder an epistem…Read more
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73Review of Human Landscapes: Contributions to a Pragmatist Anthropology by Roberta Dreon, New York: SUNY 2022Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 24 (5): 1391-1395. 2025.
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111A Pragma-Enactivist Approach to the Affectively Extended SelfHumana Mente 12 (36). 2019.In this paper we suggest an understanding of the self within the conceptual framework of situated affectivity, proposing the notion of an affectively extended self and arguing that the construction, diachronic re-shaping and maintenance of the self is mediated first by affective interactions. We initially consider the different variations on the conception of the extended self that have been already proposed in the literature. We then propose our alternative, contextualising it within the curren…Read more
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215Epistemic Emotions and the Value of TruthActa Analytica 35 (4): 563-577. 2020.In this paper, I discuss the intrinsic value of truth from the perspective of the emotion studies in virtue epistemology. The strategy is the one that looks at epistemic emotions as driving forces towards truth as the most valuable epistemic good. But in doing so, a puzzle arises: how can the value of truth be intrinsic and instrumental? My answer lies in the difference established by Duncan Pritchard between epistemic value and the value of the epistemic applied to the case of subjective motiva…Read more
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11Review of Thomas L. Cooksey, Plato's Symposium: A Reader's Guide, Continuum, London-New York. 2010 (review)Plato Journal 12. 2012.The book consists of four chapters (1. Context; 2. Overview of Themes; 3. Reading the Text; 4. Reception and Influence) that offer the reader guidance in reading Plato's Symposium. Secondary literature is mostly in English. The line of interpretation may be defined as partly literary and partly thematic — being aware of the philosophical significance of the adopted style. The literary part contains a detailed description of the characters and the frame story; the thematic part comprises: (…) - 1…Read more
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35Platon: La médiation des émotions. L’éducation du thymos dans les dialogues, written by O. RenautMéthexis 28 (1): 158-161. 2016.
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86Introduction: The Role of Emotions in Epistemic Practices and CommunitiesTopoi 41 (5): 835-837. 2022.
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90Elenchos public et honte dans la troisième partie du Gorgias de PlatonChôra 12 191-212. 2014.This article proposes an analysis of the use of emotions, in particular the shame, characterizing the elenctic method performed by Socrates in the dialogue with Callicles in the third part of Plato’s Gorgias. The elenchus aims at improving the interlocutor through a process of purification that is capable of changing his whole existence. However, Plato’s dialogues only rarely give testimony of a successful transformation occurring in the interlocutor. This is due to the interlocutor’s attitude t…Read more
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137Epistemic Emotions and Co-inquiry: A Situated ApproachTopoi 41 (5): 839-848. 2022.This paper discusses the virtue epistemology literature on epistemic emotions and challenges the individualist, unworldly account of epistemic emotions. It argues that epistemic emotions can be truth-motivating if embedded in co-inquiry epistemic cultures, namely virtuous epistemic cultures that valorise participatory processes of inquiry as truth-conducive. Co-inquiry epistemic cultures are seen as playing a constitutive role in shaping, developing, and regulating epistemic emotions. Using key …Read more
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120Plato’s cosmological medicine in the discourse of Eryximachus in the Symposium. The responsibility of a harmonic technePlato Journal 15 81-93. 2015.By comparing the role of harmony in Eryximachus’ discourse with other Platonic passages, especially from the Timaeus, this article aims to provide textual evidence concerning Plato’s conception of cosmological medicine as “harmonic techne”. The comparison with other dialogues will enable us to demonstrate how Eryximachus’ thesis is consistent with Plato’s cosmology — a cosmology which cannot be reduced to a physical conception of reality but represents the expression of a dialectical, and erotic…Read more
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92On the Epistemic Value of Eros. The Relationship Between Socrates and AlcibiadesPeitho 8 (1): 225-236. 2017.Several key lines concerning the relationship between Socrates and Alcibiades, extracted from the Symposium and the Alcibiades 1, are discussed for the purpose of detecting the epistemic value that Plato attributed to eros in his new model of education. As result of this analysis, I argue for the philosophical significance of the relationship between Socrates and Alcibiades as a clear example – even when failed – of the epistemic role of eros in the dialogically extended knowledge.
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31Luc Brisson, 2017. Platon. L’écrivain qui inventa la philosophie. Paris: Les Éditions du Cerf. Pp. 298Plato Journal: The Journal of the International Plato Society 19 93-94. 2019.https://doi.org/10.14195/2183-4105_19_4.
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69Eros, Song, and Philosophy in Plato. Toward a Synthesis of a Cultural Ideal, written by Chara KokkiouInternational Journal of the Platonic Tradition 16 (1): 79-81. 2022.
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104What I cannot do without you. Towards a truly embedded and embodied account of the socially extended mindPhenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 22 (4): 907-929. 2023.Through a discussion of the socially extended mind, this paper advances the “not possible without principle” as an alternative to the social parity principle. By charging the social parity principle with reductionism about the social dimension of socially extended processes, the paper offers a new argumentative strategy for the socially extended mind that stresses its existential significance. The “not possible without principle” shows that not only is something _more_ achieved through socially …Read more
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64Daniele Goldoni, Gratitudine. Voci di HölderlinRivista di Estetica 201-202. 2015.Un libro ispirato e che ispira. Non solo, una proposta ermeneutica innovativa e un metodo, opposto a quello heideggeriano, basato sulla comprensione poetica della filosofia di Hölderlin. L’opera di Daniele Goldoni non vuole limitarsi a essere, pur essendolo anche questo, uno studio sul poeta tedesco, ma ha l’ambizione di essere anche una proposta filosofica a partire da Hölderlin, un invito a pensare e a vivere secondo la prospettiva del poeta. Lo Hölderlin di Goldoni non è il poeta tragico r...
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86The Divine Feeling: the Epistemic Function of Erotic Desire in Plato’s Theory of RecollectionPhilosophia 48 (2): 445-462. 2020.In the so-called “erotic dialogues”, especially the Symposium and the Phaedrus, Plato explained why erotic desire can play an epistemic function, establishing a strong connection between erotic desire and beauty, “the most clearly visible and the most loved” among the Ideas. Taking the erotic dialogues as a background, in this paper I elucidate Plato’s explanation in another context, the one of the Phaedo, for discussing the epistemic function of erotic desire in relation to the deficiency argum…Read more
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32Mimesis and RecollectionIn Julia Pfefferkorn & Antonino Spinelli (eds.), Platonic Mimesis Revisited, Academia – Ein Verlag in Der Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft. pp. 103-122. 2021.
Pardubice, Czechia
Areas of Specialization
2 more
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Social Epistemology |
| Emotions |
| Plato |
| Epistemic Normativity |
| Epistemic Contextualism |
| Embodiment and Situated Cognition |