• This chapter examines the works of Walter Lippmann (1889–1974) and Friedrich A. Hayek (1899–1992) to understand how they interpreted the decline of the liberal order and formulated its renewal. Situating their contributions within the crises that twentieth-century liberalism, it explores how both thinkers conceived neoliberalism as a remedy to civilizational decline. Through a comparative reading of their major works, the chapter shows how each author mobilized evolutionary concepts to articulat…Read more
  • Reason, Crisis, and Europe. Conceptual and Historical Perspectives (edited book)
    with Panu-Matti Pöykkö
    Routledge. 2026.
    This volume examines the intertwined meanings of reason, crisis, and Europe against the backdrop of acute political, ethical, and geopolitical instability. Eschewing any singular diagnosis or overarching interpretive frame, it assembles a range of disciplinary, methodological, and normative approaches in productive tension. Through analyses of war and unrest, democratic backsliding, persistent colonial legacies, neoliberal forms of governance, and divergent philosophical lineages, the volume inv…Read more
  • Biopolítica y antropomorfismo
    Soft Power. Revista Euro-Americana de Teoría e Historia de la Politica 8 (1): 204-218. 2021.
    Toda investigación sobre biopolítica plantea de forma ineludible preguntas sobre la vida biológica y la política, la naturaleza y el lenguaje. Michel Foucault consideró esencial definir estos conceptos y las relaciones entre ellos. Partiendo de la exhortación de Foucault a pensar filológica y biológicamente, este artículo aborda la división entre naturaleza y lenguaje en el ámbito de los estudios biopolíticos. La investigación abarca diversos modelos filosóficos, desde el…Read more
  • Elämän merkityksen aatehistorian uudelleenarviointia
    Teologinen Aikakauskirja 129 (3): 330-332. 2024.
    The prevailing assumption holds that the process of disenchantment driven by the life sciences culminates in a worldview devoid of ultimate ends. This assumption, however, overlooks the possibility that scientific naturalism itself may harbor problematic forms of enchantment. I argue that the most prevalent forms of naturalism do not necessarily yield a fully disenchanted worldview. More specifically, I examine a philosophy of nature developed by prominent thinkers such as Richard Dawkins and Da…Read more
  • Una frattura sembra percorrere la relazione tra teoria critica e naturalismo. Nonostante il comune accordo sulla critica al sapere metafisico, le due tradizioni collidono sul modello di filosofia a venire. Natura e storia, visione scientifica e meccanismi di potere sono alcuni dei concetti che delineano lo spazio di tale tensione. La teoria biopolitica, ovvero la disciplina volta a indagare la relazione tra politica e vita, non è solamente espressione del conflitto in corso, ma anche un terreno …Read more
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    Politics of Evolution: Hayek’s Naturalization of Neoliberalism
    Political Theory 53 (5): 657-683. 2025.
    The article delves into Friedrich Hayek’s theory of cultural evolution as a framework for understanding his “restatement” of liberalism. Beginning in the 1950s, Hayek increasingly embraced a naturalistic perspective, leading to a conceptualization of the market in evolutionary terms. His definition of the market sharply contrasts with the one proper to laissez-faire liberalism of the nineteenth century. Unlike classical liberalism, Hayek claims that the market is “unnatural,” as it has culturall…Read more
  •  39
    We shall attempt to elucidate the concept of ‘civil person’, as developed by Hobbes in both On the Citizen and Leviathan. This is where the idea of political subjectification takes its first steps in modern political theory. Such a process of political subjectification is meant by Hobbes as a process of construction of the ‘artificial person’ of the State. The fact that Hobbes defines the persona ficta of the State as ‘artificial’ sometimes leads scholars to forget that he sees the State as a ‘p…Read more
  •  54
    The Anthropological Machine and its Reversal
    Angelaki 29 (5): 52-63. 2024.
    In this article, I shall outline a thought experiment aimed at reversing the relationship between bíos and zoē established by the anthropological machine. Giorgio Agamben resorts to the notion of “anthropological machine” to define the mechanism that produces the qualified life of human beings (bíos), through the inclusive exclusion of their biological life (zoē). My experiment does not render the exclusionary logic of the anthropological machine inoperative, but reverses the hierarchy it establ…Read more
  •  38
    In this thesis, I propose a theoretical framework to understand the process of secularization produced by the revolutions of language and life. Thanks to the linguistic turn it has discovered that knowledge is kept within language. As Agamben explains, the Copernican revolution of language has made us “the first human beings who have become completely conscious of language. For the first time, what preceding generations called God, Being, spirit, unconscious appear to us as what they are: names …Read more
  •  42
    Economy of Nature as the Logic of Government
    Filozofski Vestnik 44 (1): 29-52. 2023.
    The aim of this paper is to show that Foucault’s genealogy of liberal governmentality necessitates reconsideration in light of the history of biology and its societal implications. In his lectures at the Collège de France in the late 1970s, Foucault argued that the natural growth of the market is what ultimately verifies or falsifies the excellence of liberal governmentality. Liberal governmentality recognizes the intimate correlation between the physical and social dimensions in order to adapt …Read more
  •  165
    Foucault, Sellars, and the “conditions of possibility” of science
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (8): 1244-1263. 2024.
    Foucault and Sellars are representatives of conflicting philosophical traditions: whereas Foucault famously insisted that “power is everywhere,” Sellars proposed the well-known scientia mensura dictum. The tension between the two perspectives seems to be so strong that each of them ends up reducing the other to an epiphenomenal illusion. In this article, I shall attempt to show that the works of Sellars and Foucault are not necessarily irreconcilable. The common ground for this dialogue is what …Read more
  •  57
    In On Biopolitics, Marco Piasentier discusses one of the most persistent questions in biopolitical theory: the divide between nature and language. He attempts to redraw the conceptual map which has traditionally defined the permissible paths to address this question. Taking his cue from Foucault’s exhortation to think philologically and biologically, Piasentier traverses the main theoretical and methodological frameworks which have informed the biopolitical debate on nature and language, biolog…Read more
  •  61
    In this thesis, I propose a theoretical framework to understand the process of secularization produced by the revolutions of language and life. Thanks to the linguistic turn it has discovered that knowledge is kept within language. As Agamben explains, the Copernican revolution of language has made us “the first human beings who have become completely conscious of language. For the first time, what preceding generations called God, Being, spirit, unconscious appear to us as what they are: names …Read more
  •  90
    Foucault and the Two Approaches to Biopolitics
    In Hannah Richter (ed.), Biopolitical Governance: Race, Gender and Economy, Global Political Economies of Gender and Sexuality. pp. 21-39. 2018.
    What is biopolitics? What kind of relationship does biopolitics establish between politics and biology? Although the etymology of the term ‘biopoli- tics’ seems to suggest a straightforward meaning resulting from the relation- ship between biological life and politics, the current literature is characterised by a wide variety of definitions. As the social theorist Thomas Lemke notes in his thoughtful introduction to this field of research, ‘[p]lural and divergent meanings are undoubtedly evoked …Read more
  •  35
    At the Limits of the Political: Affect, Life, Things (review)
    Contemporary Political Theory 19 (1): 48-50. 2020.
  •  138
    This article tries to establish a possible dialogue between the way in which two influential contemporary theories, Roberto Esposito's biopolitical theory and Jacques Lacan's psychoanalysis, approach racism and the constitution of Otherness. After summing up key concepts in Esposito's theory, the article lays out the very deadlock in his work, represented by his assumption of racial difference or Otherness as inscribed in the bio-logical content of human life. However, by interpreting Jewishness…Read more
  •  110
    In On the Genealogy of Morality, Nietzsche sets up an opposition between the ‘naïveté of English biologists’ in their research on the evolution of life and a methodology that records the singularity and the contingency of natural events without introducing any finality: genealogy. Nietzsche shares with these scientists the need to trace the explanation of living beings back to a naturalistic framework liberated from theology, but he questions their linear and progressive conception of the evol…Read more