
Lorenzo Zemolin is a doctoral student within a joint PhD agreement between the University of Roma Tre and the University of Tübingen, working under the supervision of Riccardo Chiaradonna and Klaus Corcilius. Previously, he completed his Master’s studies (M.A.) and Bachelor’s studies (B.A.) in Philosophy and History at the Ca’ Foscari University of Venice.
His doctoral research focuses on Aristotle’s science of living beings as part of his science of corruptible nature, with the aim of understanding the common principles that apply to animate and inanimate nature alike as corruptible things, and the foundational role of De Generatione et Corruptione for the study of these principles. Other related interests of his include the notion of genus in Aristotle and the concept of mixture in Aristotle and in the Aristotelian tradition.
Contact
lorenzo.zemolinstudent.uni-tuebingen.de