I'm a Peruvian PhD student in Philosophy at Durham University (UK), supervised by Anna Marmodoro (Philosophy) & Alberto Rigolio (Classics), and Matthew Tugby (Philosophy) thanks to a Wolfson Postgraduate Scholarship in the Humanities. I work at the intersection of late ancient/early medieval philosophy (focused on the Neoplatonic tradition) and contemporary metaphysics (especially causality, existence, properties, and relations). I also have strong interests in philosophy of religion (e.g., apophatism, divine attributes, and universalism).
I hold a BA from the University of Navarra (Spain) and an MA from the Università della Svizzera italiana (Switzerland). My training as a historian of philosophy began at the former, whereas at the latter, I became acquainted with analytic metaphysics. I'm using both skill sets in my doctoral dissertation: 'Early Medieval Theories of Relations (4th-9th centuries)'. My goal is to reconstruct the overlooked metaphysics of relations of Augustine, Boethius, and Eriugena to introduce them within the contemporary - and heated - debate on the topic.
I'm also part of the editorial team of IPM. Monthly. Medieval Philosophy Today. I coordinate the 'Small Portraits' section, whose goal is to highlight the work of young researchers in medieval philosophy and related areas.
IPM's May issue is out! This time, the Small Portraits section features the work of Dario Affronti (University of Lucern). If you have any suggestions for future entries, please send me a message!
Read my contribution to the Graduate Student Reflection Series on the American Philosophical Association Blog: Selena Gomez Over Hobbes, or How to Be Successful in Academia.
This academic year (2024-2025), I will tutor in 'The Philosophical Traditions' (PHIL1091) & 'Moral Theory' (PHIL2041) at Durham University.
Take a look at the new website of the Medieval Philosophy Network in the UK! I had the opportunity to interview their organisers for IPM Monthly. Check this out here.
I interviewed Anna Marmodoro (Saint Louis University) concerning our shared approach to the history of philosophy: 'Philosophising with the Greats': Can we, today's philosophers, profitably dialogue with the ancient (and medieval) ones?