I'm a philosopher turned technology analyst. My career has been about making sense of human thinking and behavior.
As a philosopher, I studied the structure of consciousness with the aim of explaining how the mind makes sense of the world. This led me to fields like phenomenology and social cognition. My published work focused on topics such as the relationship between language and thought, the role of embodiment in perception and social interaction, cognitive extension and enhancement, and even a bit of classical Chinese philosophy. But really, being a philosopher is about developing a certain critical and creative mindset marked by a delig…
I'm a philosopher turned technology analyst. My career has been about making sense of human thinking and behavior.
As a philosopher, I studied the structure of consciousness with the aim of explaining how the mind makes sense of the world. This led me to fields like phenomenology and social cognition. My published work focused on topics such as the relationship between language and thought, the role of embodiment in perception and social interaction, cognitive extension and enhancement, and even a bit of classical Chinese philosophy. But really, being a philosopher is about developing a certain critical and creative mindset marked by a delight for conceptual work: abstraction, fine-grained distinctions, articulating entailment relations, and distilling things down to their essence.
I've always been a bridge-builder, aiming to synthesize ideas from disparate fields. I blend analytical rigor with big picture thinking to build compelling narratives driven by concrete examples. Now I apply that skillset as an analyst at Gartner covering software engineering and AI. My job is to guide technology leaders and their teams on adopting new technologies, improving their processes, and building world-class organizational structure and culture.