I am Visiting Assistant Professor at the Department of Philosophy at Duke University. I was also a 2012-2014 ACLS New Faculty Fellow at the same department.
Prior to this, I taught at Humber College in Toronto, and was a visiting scholar at the University of Toronto. In 2011, I received a PhD from the Department of Philosophy and the Cognitive Science Program at the University of Arizona, with a dissertation titled “General Situated Cognition”. I also have a MS in Logic & Computation from Carnegie Mellon University, and a MA in Philosophy and BSc in Philosophy & Mathematics from the University of Toronto. My main interests are in cognitive s…
I am Visiting Assistant Professor at the Department of Philosophy at Duke University. I was also a 2012-2014 ACLS New Faculty Fellow at the same department.
Prior to this, I taught at Humber College in Toronto, and was a visiting scholar at the University of Toronto. In 2011, I received a PhD from the Department of Philosophy and the Cognitive Science Program at the University of Arizona, with a dissertation titled “General Situated Cognition”. I also have a MS in Logic & Computation from Carnegie Mellon University, and a MA in Philosophy and BSc in Philosophy & Mathematics from the University of Toronto. My main interests are in cognitive science, the philosophy of information, and the philosophy of science, with special emphasis on the emergence of informational phenomena in embodied models of cognition.