My commitment to public philosophy comes from a genuine belief that philosophical thinking should be shared widely, not kept within academic walls. I love the challenge of making complex ideas clear and meaningful for broader audiences, and I see this work as essential for strengthening public debate and collective understanding. If you have any proposal for a public philosophy event, please feel free to contact me.
On the right, you can find my most recent contribution at the Utrecht Night of Philosophy, where I spoke about Frantz Fanon's two prominent theses on epidermalization of inferiority (internalization process of colonial oppression) and racial epidermal schema (bodily embodiment of racial oppression).
My op-ed, “Limits of Language Promotion,” was published on Justice Everywhere in early 2025, as a collaboration with the Journal of Applied Philosophy, bringing my research on linguistic justice into a public forum.
I also partook in the @aboutlogic podcast with Jordi Fairhurst, where we discuss logic, philosophy, mathematics, and computer science with scholars in an accessible way. You can chech it out here.
In addition, my participation in the Linguistic Justice Society webinar reflects my ongoing effort to connect academic research with public concerns about language and justice.
Across these projects, my aim is consistent: to make philosophy a living, public-facing practice that enriches conversations beyond the university.