Remember that rebellious guy in your philosophy class who was "never going to law school"? Jebadiah was that guy.
But being such a contrarian that even his own code couldn't hold him, he soon found himself studying contracts at York University's Osgoode Hall.
Quickly disenchanted with what little justice there is in the universe and still brimming with four years of philosophical training, Jeb decided to exercise the free will he'd spent so much time writing essays about. The outcome of his choice? Writing even longer essays while finishing his master's at the University of Toronto's Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology, where he explored his love of social psychology, evolutionary metaphors and musty books that nobody's actually supposed to read.
Never one to shy from contradiction, Jeb went from working as an editor of scholarly titles to polishing his consumerist chops editing and writing for mass-published health magazines like Oxygen and Maximum Fitness.
He then found a home at Commune, where he uses his expertise in evolutionary psychology and linguistic philosophy to create smooth-talking content.
A maven of English grammar and an armchair lexicographer, Jeb enjoys making a futile case for the Oxford comma and testing the principle of social proof by initiating random rounds of applause.
When he isn't reading, writing, or reading about writing, you'll likely find him at GNC, questioning the punctuation on labels of nutraceutical supplements with his fitness-model wife.
