Episteme Research Group group at the University of Santiago de Compostela, founded in 2006 and based in the Department of Philosophy and Anthropology.
Research Assistant · 2024–present
Ref. PID2022-142980NB-I00 · 2023–2026
Principal Investigator: Oscar Horta
Funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
A funded research project on environmental practice and wild animal ethics in the context of the climate crisis, approached from a longtermist perspective.
Research Consultant · June 2023–August 2023
Ref. IG300520 · 2020–2023
Principal Investigator: César Palacios-González
A research project on reproductive ethics in the Mexican context, for which I worked as a research consultant.
Co-founder and co-organiser · 2025–present
An international seminar and reading group on digital sentience, AI welfare, and the philosophical and ethical questions raised by artificial minds. The project brings together early-career researchers working across philosophy of mind, ethics, AI governance, and technical AI research.
Collaborator · 2025–present
A structured resource that maps key arguments for and against computational functionalism in consciousness studies, with special attention to digital consciousness and digital sentience.
Co-founder · 2020–2025
A seminar on future-oriented philosophical questions, organised and coordinated by Professor Oscar Horta, member of the Ethos Research Group, GI-1636, at the University of Santiago de Compostela.
Founder & Coordinator · 2024–2025
University of Santiago de Compostela
A reading group connected to the project Environmental Practice and Wild Animal Ethics in the Context of the Climate Crisis: A Longtermist Approach. The group focuses on wild animal ethics, environmental ethics, climate change, and longtermist approaches to moral consideration.
Co-founder and co-organiser · 2019–2021
A public humanities project funded by the City Council of Santiago de Compostela. The project sought to make women’s historical and cultural contributions visible in urban space through itineraries based on QR codes placed near statues of men, each connected to an analogous woman.
Co-founder and co-organiser · 2019–2020
A public history and memory project funded by the Forcarei City Council. The project aimed to recognise the productive and reproductive work of women in rural areas through interviews, dialogue tables, and an ethnographic exhibition.