Knowledge is one form of good; happiness is another. If there are intimate connections between knowledge and happiness, it should not be surprising that the pursuit of one is not easily separable from the pursuit of the other.
[Linda T. Zagzebski] |

Welcome!
I am an Assistant Professor at the University of Genoa (RTD-B in Filosofia Morale).
Previously, I held a Beatriu de Pinós Fellowship at LOGOS, University of Barcelona, a postdoctoral fellowship at University College Dublin, where I worked as part of the Horizon 2020 project PEriTia - Policy, Trust, and Expertise in Action, and an FCT research fellowship at LanCog group (Centro de Filosofia), University of Lisbon.
I am affiliated to the LanCog group and Aretai - Center on Virtues.
I have recently obtained a Ph.D. in Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh (2020), where I worked as an Early Stage Marie Curie Researcher under the supervision of Prof. Duncan Pritchard FRSE, and Dr. Aidan McGlynn on a project titled Epistemic
Inequality Reconsidered. My work there as part of the European Training Network DIAPHORA was generously funded by the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions.
I obtained my first Ph.D. in Philosophy at the University of Genoa (2016) with a dissertation
on the topic of authority in the epistemic and moral realms.
A paper of mine (titled "On What It Takes to Be An Expert") has been mentioned in Oxford University Press's reading list for the Oxford Think Festival 2018 "Celebrating The Quest for Knowledge", together with three other philosophy articles.
Here is a recent post of mine for the blog Open for Debate: The Right to Know and the Duty to Inform: A Lesson from the Italian Experience with Covid-19.
Here you can find my CV.
I am an Assistant Professor at the University of Genoa (RTD-B in Filosofia Morale).
Previously, I held a Beatriu de Pinós Fellowship at LOGOS, University of Barcelona, a postdoctoral fellowship at University College Dublin, where I worked as part of the Horizon 2020 project PEriTia - Policy, Trust, and Expertise in Action, and an FCT research fellowship at LanCog group (Centro de Filosofia), University of Lisbon.
I am affiliated to the LanCog group and Aretai - Center on Virtues.
I have recently obtained a Ph.D. in Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh (2020), where I worked as an Early Stage Marie Curie Researcher under the supervision of Prof. Duncan Pritchard FRSE, and Dr. Aidan McGlynn on a project titled Epistemic
Inequality Reconsidered. My work there as part of the European Training Network DIAPHORA was generously funded by the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions.
I obtained my first Ph.D. in Philosophy at the University of Genoa (2016) with a dissertation
on the topic of authority in the epistemic and moral realms.
A paper of mine (titled "On What It Takes to Be An Expert") has been mentioned in Oxford University Press's reading list for the Oxford Think Festival 2018 "Celebrating The Quest for Knowledge", together with three other philosophy articles.
Here is a recent post of mine for the blog Open for Debate: The Right to Know and the Duty to Inform: A Lesson from the Italian Experience with Covid-19.
Here you can find my CV.

In the spare time, I love playing tennis and beach volley, skiing, playing Texas Hold'em poker and Xbox (mostly online, mostly football), trying new restaurants, and traveling around the world.
I am a dedicated fan of F.C. Inter, Roger Federer, Federica Pellegrini, Valentino Rossi, and Ferrari.