| 2025 - present |
Early Career Research Fellow in AI and Theoretical Philosophy |
| 2024 - 2025 |
Lecturer in Computer Science, Christ Church College |
| 2024 - 2025 |
Director of Studies for Philosophy, St Catherine's College |
| 2024 |
Lecturer in Philosophy, Worcester College |
| 2023 - 2025 |
Janeway Project Officer in Computer Science and Philosophy, Hertford College |
| 2023 |
Fellow in Philosophy, Harvard University |
| 2019 - 2023 |
PhD in Philosophy, University of Bristol |
| 2015 - 2019 |
MCompPhil in Computer Science and Philosophy, University of Oxford |
| Nenu, T. (2024). |
The Algorithmicity of Mathematical Cognition. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 31(7-8), 74-85. |
| Hamkins, J. D. and Nenu. T (2024) |
Did Turing Prove the Undecidability of the Halting Problem? Mathematics arXiv preprint: 2407.00680 |
| Nenu, T. (2024). |
Fuzzy Semantics for the Language of Precise Truth. Proceedings of the 14th Panhellenic Logic Symposium, pp. 115-119. |
| Nenu, T. (2024). |
Religious Miracles versus Magic Tricks. Think, 23(67), 39-46. |
| Nenu, T. (2022). |
Douglas Hofstadter's Gödelian Philosophy of Mind. Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Consciousness, 9(02), 241-266. |
I have taught a wide range of courses spanning both Computer Science and Philosophy, including Models of Computation, Algorithms and Data Structures, Philosophical Topics in Logic and Probability, Philosophy of Mathematics, Philosophy of Logic and Language, Ethics of Al and Digital Technology, and several other FHS and Prelims courses. For the Faculty of Philosophy, I delivered the FHS Lectures for the Philosophy of Cognitive Science course in both 2024 and 2025, as well as the Prelims Lectures for the Alan Turing on Computability and Intelligence course in 2026 (with Peter Millican).