My research moves through the history of cybernetics, automation, and economic organization by tracing how complex systems get designed, where they fail, and what gets lost in the process of reduction and formalization.
Current work includes an essay on the Vienna Circle for the Slovenian magazine ŠUM, examining the legacy of logical positivism in contemporary AI criticism; a study of media theory and theological phenomenology, asking what algorithmic temporality does to subjectivity and the conditions of emancipation; and a developing inquiry into the emergence of new financial and economic phenomena in the 1970s across the West, the Soviet Union, and China, as a site where political ambition and technical infrastructure became indistinguishable.
I am also developing ELSIE — an experimental project investigating coordination and collective decision-making through a physical installation and online platform.
Alongside this I run Vienna Circle 2.0 — a research project and a weekly reading group in Vienna, currently fifteen researchers and artists, working at the intersection of philosophy, mathematics, governance theory, and arts.