I am a Ph.D. candidate at Princeton, looking through contemporary and historical lenses at the structure and implications of physical theories.

Before coming to Princeton I got my B.A. in philosophy at Yale College (distinction in the major) and did an M.A.R. in philosophy of religion at Yale Divinity School. As my philosophical interests have developed over time, Kant has remained central to my thinking. I am prepared to teach the philosophy of physics, as well as Kant and other philosophers of early modern Europe, at the graduate level. At the undergraduate level my teaching interests extend to logic, Kierkegaard and other 19th-century continental philosophers, general philosophy of science, philosophy of religion, and ethics.

As a look at my research page will show, I am working on a range of interconnected projects in both contemporary philosophy of physics and history of philosophy, and working towards papers on two neo-Kantian philosophers of science that will bring these areas of expertise together.