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'''Stanley Krippner''' is an [[United States|American]] [[psychology|psychologist]] and professor of psychology and an executive faculty member of the [[Saybrook Graduate School]] in [[San Francisco]], where his personal commitment to teaching has been honored by the establishment of an interdisciplinary chair for the study of consciousness. Prior to this, he was director of the Kent State University Child Study Center, Kent OH, and the Maimonides Medical Center Dream Research Laboratory, Brooklyn NY. Dr. Krippner has appeared as a speaker at both the [[Starwood Festival]] and the [[WinterStar Symposium]]. He has spent the last several decades investigating the field of human consciousness, conducting research in such areas as dreams, hypnosis, shamanism, and disassociation, often from a cross-cultural perspective, with an emphasis on anomalous phenomena that seem to question mainstream paradigms. By "pushing the envelope" of orthodox models of actuality, he believes he and his colleagues have provided room to move for individuals and groups whose experiences, often classified as pathological, actually represent different belief systems, different ways of being, and different mythologies. |
'''Stanley Krippner''' is an [[United States|American]] [[psychology|psychologist]] and professor of psychology and an executive faculty member of the [[Saybrook Graduate School]] in [[San Francisco]], where his personal commitment to teaching has been honored by the establishment of an interdisciplinary chair for the study of consciousness.{{citation needed}} Prior to this, he was director of the Kent State University Child Study Center, Kent OH, and the Maimonides Medical Center Dream Research Laboratory, Brooklyn NY. Dr. Krippner has appeared as a speaker at both the [[Starwood Festival]] and the [[WinterStar Symposium]]. He has spent the last several decades investigating the field of human consciousness, conducting research in such areas as dreams, hypnosis, shamanism, and disassociation, often from a cross-cultural perspective, with an emphasis on anomalous phenomena that seem to question mainstream paradigms.{{citation needed}} By "pushing the envelope" of orthodox models of actuality, he believes he and his colleagues have provided room to move for individuals and groups whose experiences, often classified as pathological, actually represent different belief systems, different ways of being, and different mythologies.{{citation needed}} |
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⚫ | A leader in the [[transpersonal psychology]] movement, he is an author and a contributor to several books on [[altered states of consciousness]], dream states, and [[parapsychology]] including ''Extraordinary Dreams'', ''Varieties of Anomalous Experience: Examining the Scientific Evidence'' and ''The Psychological Impact of War on Civilians: An International Perspective''. |
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⚫ | A leader in the [[transpersonal psychology]] movement,{{citation needed}} he is an author and a contributor to several books on [[altered states of consciousness]], dream states, and [[parapsychology]] including ''Extraordinary Dreams'', ''Varieties of Anomalous Experience: Examining the Scientific Evidence'' and ''The Psychological Impact of War on Civilians: An International Perspective''. |
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==References== |
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==Bibliography== |
==Bibliography== |
Revision as of 22:35, 22 August 2006
Stanley Krippner is an American psychologist and professor of psychology and an executive faculty member of the Saybrook Graduate School in San Francisco, where his personal commitment to teaching has been honored by the establishment of an interdisciplinary chair for the study of consciousness.[citation needed] Prior to this, he was director of the Kent State University Child Study Center, Kent OH, and the Maimonides Medical Center Dream Research Laboratory, Brooklyn NY. Dr. Krippner has appeared as a speaker at both the Starwood Festival and the WinterStar Symposium. He has spent the last several decades investigating the field of human consciousness, conducting research in such areas as dreams, hypnosis, shamanism, and disassociation, often from a cross-cultural perspective, with an emphasis on anomalous phenomena that seem to question mainstream paradigms.[citation needed] By "pushing the envelope" of orthodox models of actuality, he believes he and his colleagues have provided room to move for individuals and groups whose experiences, often classified as pathological, actually represent different belief systems, different ways of being, and different mythologies.[citation needed]
A leader in the transpersonal psychology movement,[citation needed] he is an author and a contributor to several books on altered states of consciousness, dream states, and parapsychology including Extraordinary Dreams, Varieties of Anomalous Experience: Examining the Scientific Evidence and The Psychological Impact of War on Civilians: An International Perspective.
References
Bibliography
- Becoming Psychic: Spiritual Lessons for Focusing Your Hidden Abilities
- Song of the Siren: A Parapsychological Odyssey
- Dreamtime & Dreamwork
- Personal Mythology (with David Feinstein)