For a general summary of my employment history, see my LinkedIn.
My professional career has involved the following positions:
- ItemPath: Sole technical writer for a REST API and web app for warehouse management.
- ThinkLP: Internal and external documentation for a Salesforce-based retail loss prevention application.
- ApplyBoard: Knowledge management and research for an ed-tech startup focusing on international student recruitment.
Below is an abridged summary of my academic experience during my time as a PhD candidate at the University of Toronto.
Publications
- 2016; Review of Zvi Arstein’s Mathematics and the Real World (Prometheus Books, 2014) Isis: Journal of the History of Science Society.
- 2014; With James Robert Brown. Review of Andrew Aberdein and Ian J. Dove (eds), The Argument of Mathematics (Springer 2013) in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.
Teaching
As lead instructor:
- 2017, PHL 245 Modern Symbolic Logic, University of Toronto, St. George Campus.
- 2016, PHL245 Modern Symbolic Logic, University of Toronto, Mississauga Campus.
- 2016, PHL145 Critical Reasoning, University of Toronto, Mississauga Campus.
- 2016, PHLB50 Symbolic Logic I, University of Toronto, Scarborough Campus.
- 2015, PHL245F Modern Symbolic Logic, University of Toronto, St. George Campus.
- 2014, PHL201F Introductory Philosophy, University of Toronto, St. George Campus.
Talks
- November 2015 “Structuralism and (Meta)Mathematical Disagreement” Association for the Philosophy of Mathematical Practice, Institut Henri Poincare, Sorbonne University.
- June 2015 “Structuralism and (Meta)Mathematical Disagreement” Canadian Philosophical Association Annual Congress, University of Ottawa.
- June 2014 “How to Be a Structuralist About Set Theory” 42nd Annual Meeting of the Society for Exact Philosophy, California Institute of Technology.
- May 2014 “How to Be a Structuralist About Set Theory” Canadian Philosophical Association Annual Congress, Brock University.
- January 2014 “How to Be a Structuralist About Set Theory” 7th Annual Cambridge Graduate Conference on Logic and Philosophy of Mathematics. St. John’s College, Cambridge University.