I am an associate professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science. I received an MSc and PhD in Logic, Computation, and Methodology from the Philosophy department at Carnegie Mellon University. Before attending CMU I completed an MSc in the Philosophy of Science at the London School of Economics in the Department of Philosophy, Logic, and Scientific Method. This was funded by an Arts and Humanities Research Council Scholarship, for which I am eternally grateful. In 2020 I was the recipient of the Philip Leverhulme Prize. Prior to the LSE, I completed a BA in Philosophy at the University of Warwick. If you want a bit of an intellectual autobiography then this interview nicely covers some of that ground.
This is my website! The research page contains descriptions of my projects, links to some of my papers, and brief statements of some intellectual aspirations. The teaching page highlights some of my past teaching work, and also describes courses I would one day like to teach. The public philosophy page links to work of mine that I hope will be more accessible to a general audience. The CV page, for all you no-nonsense straight-down-to-business types, is exactly what it sounds like. The bonus page is this one containing three essays on truth by a Ghanaian philosopher called Kwasi Wiredu. They were hard to find online and I enjoy them (the dialogue is especially fun!) so I thought I'd use my website to do a bit of a public service and make them more widely available.
This is my website! The research page contains descriptions of my projects, links to some of my papers, and brief statements of some intellectual aspirations. The teaching page highlights some of my past teaching work, and also describes courses I would one day like to teach. The public philosophy page links to work of mine that I hope will be more accessible to a general audience. The CV page, for all you no-nonsense straight-down-to-business types, is exactly what it sounds like. The bonus page is this one containing three essays on truth by a Ghanaian philosopher called Kwasi Wiredu. They were hard to find online and I enjoy them (the dialogue is especially fun!) so I thought I'd use my website to do a bit of a public service and make them more widely available.