A road sign in Starr, South Carolina. photo credit: Charlie Starkey

I am an Eric Brown. Some of us are famous enough for Wikipedia, but I haven't been confused with one of those. I am, however, occasionally mistaken for another academic Eric Brown, especially by the campus mail and the online bots. If you're not sure whether you've found the Eric Brown you're looking for, perhaps this little "autobiogeography" will help.


I was born and raised in Ohio, where I met my wife, Amy Ravin. We both grew up in Sylvania, just outside Toledo, the "Glass Capital of the World" (see the RAQs!) and home of the Mud Hens. She went to Northview; I went to Southview.

Harper Library at the University of Chicago, my favorite study spot in college.

From 1988 to 1997, I studied at the University of Chicago, first in the College and then as a graduate student in the philosophy department. Hyde Park was home for eight of these years: three years in Linn House 713B at Burton-Judson Courts, one year at 5401 S. Woodlawn Ave., Apt. 1, and four years at 1159 E. 56th St., Apt. 2.


I was away for several weeks every Summer, though, to teach at debate "institutes" for high school students at American University (in Washington, DC) (1988, 1990), the University of Kentucky (1989-1995), the University of California, Berkeley (1989-1991), and Stanford (1993-1996).


I also spent two terms in 1996 studying in the Classics Faculty at the University of Cambridge and living a few steps away from The Free Press.

In June 1996, when Amy reached the end of her eight years of study at MIT and the University of Chicago's Pritzker School of Medicine, we moved to Pittsburgh. Amy joined the residency program in Obstetrics and Gynecology at Magee-Womens Hospital, and 340 S. Highland Ave., Apt. 5A, was home for four years.


During the first of these, I was finishing up my dissertation in the company of the Program of Classics, Philosophy, and Ancient Science at the University of Pittsburgh. But after earning my PhD in 1997, I joined the philosophy department at Washington University in St. Louis, so years two and three were spent commuting between Shadyside in Pittsburgh and the Skinker-Debaliviere neighborhood of St. Louis. Fortunately, though, Wash U gave me an early sabbatical, so I could spend year four as a visiting scholar in Pitt's philosophy department.

Pitt's Cathedral of Learning.
St. Louis's Gateway Arch at sunset. photo credit: me

Amy finished her residency in June 2000, and we moved to St. Louis, settling a few miles west of the Arch in University City and then resettling, with two adorable and much adored children, right next door in Clayton, in August 2015.


So despite what the mail clerks and online bots might suppose, I am not the Eric Brown who used to work in Washington University's School of Medicine and now works in private industry, and I am not the Eric Brown who took a philosophy PhD at Boston College or the Eric Brown who is working on a philosophy PhD at Tulane University.

I am an associate professor of philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis. I research and teach mainly on ancient Greek and Roman philosophy but also in ethics. (In addition to the philosophy department, I work with Classics, the Interdisciplinary Project in the Humanities, and Religious Studies.)


If you are curious about some course I teach or about my research or advising, you can use the links in this paragraph or in the menu at the top of the page. If you just want to get in touch with me, send me an email at the address below.


A selfie at Busch Stadium, one of my favorite spots in St. Louis.