Education
Lewis received his Doctor of Philosophy in classical studies at Cambridge University in 2001, with the dissertation, Solon’s Polis as Kosmos: Intellectual, Moral and Political Integration in Archaic Athens.
Lewis received his Doctor of Philosophy in classical studies at Cambridge University in 2001, with the dissertation, Solon’s Polis as Kosmos: Intellectual, Moral and Political Integration in Archaic Athens.
Lewis was also an Anthem Fellow for Objectivist Scholarship. He taught at the University of London from 2000-2001. From 2001 to 2008, he was a professor in the History and Political Science Department at Ashland University, where contention surrounding his promotion to tenured professor drew national attention.
Lewis frequently spoke at Objectivist conferences and Tea Party events.
He also spoke on the morality of free markets in medicine, arguing that innovators ought to be freed from unnecessary regulation. Lewis died on January 3, 2012 after a long battle with cancer.
He was 56.
Lewis was a member of the American Political Science Association, the Association of Ancient Historians, the Society for Military History, the American Philological Association, and the Cambridge Philological Society. Lewis published three books, was a contributing editor to The Objective Standard and contributed to Capitalism Magazine and contributed to multiple publications including Journal of Business Ethics, Social Philosophy and Policy, Polis, Dike, and Bryn Mawr Classical Review.