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Filippo Scafi
Filippo Scafi is a philosopher and researcher currently completing his Ph.D. in Philosophy at GCAS/Woolf University (supervisor: Rocco Gangle), where he is developing a dissertation on the epistemological and political limits of the Ontological Turn in anthropology, with a focus on philosophical Difference and Non-philosophy. He holds a BA in Philosophy from the University of Turin and an MA in Continental Philosophy from the University of Warwick.
He lectures in philosophy at GCAS College Dublin and at the International Studies Institute in Florence, where he teaches courses on ancient and contemporary thought. He is the Editorial Manager and co-founder of Chaosmotics: Journal of Theory and Fiction, and serves as Editorial Planner for the GCAS Journal. His research interests include continental philosophy, anthropology, epistemology, psychoanalysis, and speculative methods of thought. The two broader research areas are a) the relation between knowledge and Alterity; b) philosophical truth and its communicability.
Filippo Scafi is a philosopher and researcher currently completing his Ph.D. in Philosophy at GCAS/Woolf University (supervisor: Rocco Gangle), where he is developing a dissertation on the epistemological and political limits of the Ontological Turn in anthropology, with a focus on philosophical Difference and Non-philosophy. He holds a BA in Philosophy from the University of Turin and an MA in Continental Philosophy from the University of Warwick. He lectures in philosophy at GCAS College Dublin and at the International Studies Institute in Florence, where he teaches courses on ancient and contemporary thought. He is the Editorial Manager and co-founder of Chaosmotics: Journal of Theory and Fiction, and serves as Editorial Planner for the GCAS Journal. His research interests include continental philosophy, anthropology, epistemology, psychoanalysis, and speculative methods of thought. The two broader research areas are a) the relation between knowledge and Alterity; b) philosophical truth and its communicability.