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"Escape from the Planet of the Cows"

Life at the Interface of Science and Engineering
Dr. Patrick Brown
Founder, Impossible Foods
Stanford University
Isermann Auditorium, CBIS
Wed, September 11, 2024 at 2:00 PM
Refreshments available starting at 1:30 pm
Photo of Dr. Brown

Prof. Brown received each of his degrees from The University of Chicago,

including his B.S.in 1976, his Ph.D in 1980, and his M.D. in 1982.

After getting his medical degree in 1982, Brown completed a 3-year

pediatric residency at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago but decided

he could have a greater impact through basic research. In 1985, Brown

took a 3-year postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California, San

Francisco with J. Michael Bishop and Harold Varmus (who shared the 1989

Nobel Prize in Medicine for their discoveries about how genes can ignite

cancerous tumors). In 1988, Brown became an investigator of the Howard

Hughes Medical Institute and an assistant professor in the department of

biochemistry at Stanford University School of Medicine.

In 2001, Prof. Brown, Michael Eisen and Harold Varmus co-founded the

Public Library of Science (PLOS) to make published scientific research

open access and freely available to researchers in the scientific community.

Impossible Foods

In 2009, Prof. Brown took an 18-month sabbatical where he decided that

the world's largest environmental problem, and the problem where he could

have the most impact, was the use of animals to produce food.

By the end of his sabbatical, Prof. Brown began to recruit a small team of

scientists to determine precisely why meat smells, handles, cooks and

tastes like what we are familiar with as meat. This led to the founding of

Impossible Foods in July 2011.

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