William James

Person
Mentions
20
Relationships
1
Events
1
Documents
10

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person Author (Unknown)
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Date Event Type Description Location Actions
2001-01-01 N/A William James Fellow Award (Association for Psychological Science) N/A View

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This document is a section from a Curriculum Vitae, detailing academic honors, fellowships, research grants, and awards received by an individual from 1965 to 2019. It lists numerous affiliations with universities, government agencies, and scientific organizations, highlighting contributions to psychology, memory research, and public policy. The document also includes collaborators on various funded projects.

Curriculum vitae / professional achievements summary
2025-11-20

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This document appears to be page 173 of a manuscript, essay, or book contained within a House Oversight Committee document production (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013673). The text is a philosophical and theological discussion exploring the intersection of mathematics and metaphysics, referencing figures such as Spinoza, Nicholas Von Cusa, and C.S. Lewis. The author contrasts rational/mathematical approaches to spirituality with 'primary religious experience,' citing personal beliefs and family influences.

Manuscript/book page (evidence item)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013668.jpg

This document appears to be page 168 of a manuscript, specifically 'Chapter 8: Faith and Rationality.' The text is a philosophical reflection by an unnamed first-person narrator contrasting the 'mystical high' of religious experience (referencing Martin Buber, Sufism, and Pentecostalism) with the social utility of religious attendance. It discusses concepts such as 'Tzedakah' and 'altruism' (referencing E.O. Wilson). The document bears the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013668, indicating it was part of a document production for the House Oversight Committee.

Book manuscript / chapter draft
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be page 119 of a larger academic or philosophical manuscript, bearing a House Oversight footer. The text discusses the conflict between scientific positivism and mystical experiences, referencing the 'relaxation response' (attributed here to William Benson of Boston University) and the psychological work of William James. It critiques the scientific community's reluctance to accept subjective mystical experiences without external experimental data.

Academic/scientific manuscript page (likely an email attachment)
2025-11-19

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This document appears to be page 96 of a manuscript, essay, or book discussing the history and resurgence of mysticism in the Western World towards the end of the 20th Century. It references Baba Muktananda's views on entheogenic agents (psychedelics) as a potential gateway to spiritual experience, despite them being banned in his ashrams, and draws philosophical connections to Thomas Aquinas and William James. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation.

Manuscript page / academic or philosophical text
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013568.jpg

This document appears to be page 68 of a larger manuscript or academic paper included in a House Oversight Committee production. The text discusses philosophical concepts from Lao-Tzu regarding 'letting go' and psychological theories from William James concerning brain dynamics, entropy, and self-organization. The content is theoretical and scientific in nature, likely related to neuroscience or consciousness studies.

Manuscript/academic text (house oversight production)
2025-11-19

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A page from a manuscript or book draft (page 44), produced by the House Oversight Committee. The text is written by an academic or scientist describing the psychological and spiritual effects of long-distance running ('global brain state transition'). The author draws parallels between these physiological states and religious experiences, while also reflecting on personal relationships with their son, students, and university administration.

Manuscript page / book draft (scientific/memoir)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013518.jpg

This page, marked as evidence for the House Oversight Committee (Bates 013518), appears to be an excerpt from a scientific narrative or memoir. It details the narrator's interactions with Harvard neurologist Norman Geschwind and describes 'Geschwind Syndrome' (temporal lobe epilepsy), characterizing symptoms such as hypergraphia (obsessive writing), intense religiosity, hyposexuality, and interpersonal 'stickiness'. The text references specific researchers including Paul MacLean and Henri Gastaut.

Narrative/scientific account (likely book excerpt or witness statement included in house oversight evidence)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013506.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir, marked with a House Oversight Bates stamp. The text blends neuroscience terminology with religious mysticism, detailing the narrator's childhood interactions with a Rabbi and a specific 'tenth summer' sexual awakening which the author conflates with religious transformative experiences and ancient mythology.

Manuscript / memoir draft (house oversight committee evidence)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021257.jpg

This document is page 11 of a larger manuscript, bearing a House Oversight Committee stamp. The text outlines the background of a book or study produced by 'the Network,' discussing the intersection of science and humanities, evolutionary psychology, and the physiological effects of spiritual beliefs. It contrasts 'Homo sapiens' with 'Homo economicus' and discusses the human drive to create narratives to explain uncertainty, citing psychologist William James.

Academic manuscript / house oversight committee document
2025-11-19
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