At the LSE, I have lectured in Philosophy of Language and Epistemology and been a graduate teaching assistant for the following courses.
Philosophy of Society, LSE, 2025/26.
This course examines how many traditional philosophical questions take on a new character when we consider our existence as socially embedded entities. Amongst other topics, the course investigates personal identity, social norms, social structures, and group agency.
Philosophy of Language, LSE, 2025.
This course examines many topics in the philosophy of language, including definite descriptions, names, theories of meaning, implicature, speech acts, and feminist philosophy of language.
Epistemology, LSE, 2024/25.
The first half of the course explores classic epistemology, by focusing on external world skepticism and different accounts of knowledge. The second half of the course explores modern formal epistemology, by focusing on Bayesian epistemology and its many puzzles, like the sleeping beauty problem, imprecise credences, and awareness growth.
Philosophy & Public Policy, LSE, 2023/24.
This course offers critical reflection on the design and evaluation of public policies from the perspective of moral and political philosophy. To do this, the course investigates a range of theories and concepts that are used in policy evaluation.
The Big Questions: An Introduction to Philosophy, LSE, 2022/23.
This is an introductory course that explores big philosophical questions, such as: Do we know anything? What is consciousness? Do we have free will? How can we tell right from wrong? What is the best form of government?