Position Student Email [email protected] Bio/Description Victoria is a fourth-year graduate student in the Religion, Ethics and Politics subfield. Her research and teaching interests lie at the intersections of philosophy and religion, especially on philosophical and religious thought on the relationship between ethics and hermeneutics. Victoria’s dissertation – tentatively entitled “Grappling with Finitude: On the Potential and Danger of Separation” – examines the potential and danger of different traditions’ modes of thinking about the separation and/or relation between self and nature for addressing the ethical and hermeneutical crises of the Anthropocene. Victoria’s work has been supported by the Program in Judaic Studies and the Center for Culture, Society and Religion at Princeton. Prior to coming to Princeton, Victoria completed an MSt in Theology (Christian Ethics) and a Postgraduate Diploma in Theology and Religion at the University of Oxford, an MSc in Philosophy and Public Policy at the London School of Economics, and a BA in Economics and Political Science at the University of Münster (Germany).