Academic and Scholarly Interest in Jaynes's Theory
There are many scholars interested in Jaynes's theory, but few if any are able to focus on it full time. Professors and scholars who have written favorably on Jaynes's theory include:
Andre Aleman, Ph.D., BCN Neuroimaging Centre, University of Groningen, The Netherlands Hallucinations: The Science of Idiosyncratic Perception; The Hallucinating Brain: A Review of Structural and Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Hallucinations
Paul Allen, M.D., Kings College London, Dept. of Psychological Medicine and Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK The Hallucinating Brain: A Review of Structural and Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Hallucinations
Roy F. Baumeister, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Florida State University Consciousness, Free Choice, and Automaticity
Ciarán Benson, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University College, Dublin, Ireland
Jonathan Bernier, Ph.D. candidate in Religious Studies at McMaster University, Ontario, Canada The Consciousness of John's Gospel: A Prolegomenon to a Jaynesian-Jamesonian Approach
Lisa Blackman, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer in Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK Voices and the Concept of the 'Double-Brain'
Jan Dirk Blom, M.D., Ph.D., Clinical Psychiatrist, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands A Dictionary of Hallucinations
Kenneth Blum, M.D., Department of Psychiatry, University of Florida College of Medicine and McKnight Brain Institute Understanding the High Mind: Humans Are Still Evolving Genetically
Roberto Bottini, Department of Human Sciences, University of Bergamo, Italy L'Invenzione di Coscienza (The Invention of Consciousness)
T. Buchan, Ph.D., Department of Psychiatry, University of Zimbabwe Stranger in A Strange Land (The Bicameral Mind in Africa)
Enrique Canchola, Ph.D., The Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico La teoria de la Mente Bicameral, el Lenguaje y la Evolucion de la Conciencia Humana (The Theory of the Bicameral Mind, Language, Evolution ... Human Consciousness)
Charles Carter, Ph.D., Professor of Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego
Edoardo Casiglia, M.D., Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Padova, Italy
Hypnosis in the Theory of the Bicameral Mind, The Jaynesian
Andrea E. Cavanna, M.D., Institute of Neurology, UK; Dept. of Neurology, Amedeo Avogadro University, Italy The "Bicameral Mind" 30 Years On: A Critical Reappraisal of Julian Jaynes' Hypothesis
Kyle Cave, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Psychology 391D: Scientific Studies of Consciousness (course)
Guillermo A. Cecchi, Ph.D., Computational Biology Center, T.J. Watson IBM Research Center, NY The Emergence of the Modern Concept of Introspection: A Quantitative Linguistic Analysis
M. M. Cirkovic, Ph.D., Department of Physics, University of Novi Sad, Serbia Fermi's Paradox – The Last Challenge For Copernicanism?
Dirk Corstens, M.D., Psychiatrist and Cognitive Therapist, Social Psychiatric Service Riagg Maastricht, The Netherlands
Auditory Hallucinations: Psychotic Symptom or Dissociative Experience?
Timothy J. Crow, Ph.D., Professor of Psychiatry, Price of Wales Center, University Dept. of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, Oxford Right Hemisphere Language Functions and Schizophrenia: The Forgotten Hemisphere
Carlos G. Diuk-Wasser, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Princeton University The Emergence of the Modern Concept of Introspection: A Quantitative Linguistic Analysis
Hector Jose Duenes-Tentori, Ph.D., The Metropolitan Autonomous University, Mexico La teoria de la Mente Bicameral, el Lenguaje y la Evolucion de la Conciencia Humana (The Theory of the Bicameral Mind, Language, Evolution ... Human Consciousness)
Gabriel Egan, Ph.D, Reader in Shakespeare Studies, Dept. of English and Drama, Loughborough University, UK Shakespeare and the 'Multiple-Drafts' Model of Consciousness
Michael Finch, Ph.D., Math and Theoretical Physics, UK Jaynes's Notion of Consciousness as Self-Referential
Takashi X. Fujisawa, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow at the Research Ctr. for Human Media, Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan Chinese Pictograms and the Bicameral Mind, The Jaynesian
Stanley I. Greenspan, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics, George Washington University Medical School
Scott Greer, Ph.D, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Prince Edward Island A Knowing Noos and A Slippery Psyche: Jaynes's Recipe for an Unnatural Theory of Consciousness
John Hainly, M.A., Department of Philosophy, Southern University Mythological Consciousness: Jaynes's Bicameral Mind & Vico's Imaginative Universals, The Jaynesian
Robert Hurley, Ph.D., Professor of Practical Theology, Université Laval, Canada Liberation Through Story: Children's Literature and the Spirit of the Child
Masanori Ishimori, Ph.D., Associate Prof., Faculty of Human Relations, Kyoto Koka Women's University, Japan Chinese Pictograms and the Bicameral Mind, The Jaynesian
Doyle Paul Johnson, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology, Texas Tech University The Brain-Mind Relation, Religious Evolution, and Forms of Consciousness: An Exploratory Statement
Julie Kane, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Language and Communication Dept., Northwestern State University Poetry as Right-Hemisphere Language
Anthony B. Kelly, Ph.D., Faculty of Education, Humanities, Law and Theology, Flinders University, Australia The Process of the Cosmos: Philosophical and Theology and Cosmology
John Kilhstrom, Ph.D, Professor of Psychology, U.C. Berkeley
Maria Korogodsky, Department of Psychology, University of New Hampshire Exploring the Universality of Personality Judgments: Evidence From the Great Transformation (1000 BCE–200 BCE)
Robert K. Kretz, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist The Evolution of Self-Awareness: Advances in Neurological Understandings Since Julian Jaynes's Bicameral Mind
Frank Larøi, Ph.D., Cognitive Psychopathology Unit, Dept. of Cognitive Sciences, University of Liege, Belgium The Hallucinating Brain: A Review of Structural and Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Hallucinations
Michael Lewis, M.D., Prof. of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, & Psychology, Univ. of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey Shame: The Exposed Self
Stephanie C. Lin, Modern Languages, Phillips Exeter Academy Exploring the Universality of Personality Judgments: Evidence From the Great Transformation (1000 BCE–200 BCE)
John D. Mayer, Department of Psychology, University of New Hampshire Exploring the Universality of Personality Judgments: Evidence From the Great Transformation (1000 BCE–200 BCE)
Rachel L.C. Mitchell, Ph.D., School of Psychology, University of Reading; Neuroscience and Emotion Section, Institute of Psychiatry, London Right Hemisphere Language Functions and Schizophrenia: The Forgotten Hemisphere?
Andrew Moskowitz, M.D., Department of Mental Health, University of Aberdeen, Institute of Medical Science, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, Scotland Auditory Hallucinations: Psychotic Symptom or Dissociative Experience?
Kary Banks Mullis, Ph.D., Nobel Prize winning chemist, consultant on nucleic acid chemistry for more than a dozen corporations Dr. Mullis lists Jaynes on the Recommended Reading page of his website.
Joseph Naimo, Ph.D., Philosophy, University of Notre Dame The Primacy of Consciousness: A Triple Aspect Ontology
Henry A. Nasrallah, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry, Neurology and Neuroscience and Director of the Schizophrenia Research Program, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine The Unintegrated Right Cerebral Hemispheric Consciousness as Alien Intruder: A Possible Mechanism for Schneiderian Delusions in Schizophrenia
Christopher Lee Niebauer, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Psychology, Slippery Rock University Handedness and the Fringe of Consciousness: Strong Handers Ruminate while Mixed Handers Self-Reflect
Robert Olin, M.D., Ph.D., Karolinska Institute, Professor Emeritus of Preventative Medicine, Sweden Auditory Hallucinations and the Bicameral Mind
David Pearson, DClinPsych, Department of Psychology, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK Auditory Hallucinations in Adolescent and Adult Students
Michael Persinger, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology and Behavioral Neuroscience, Laurentian University, Ontario Foreword to Reflections on the Dawn of Consciousness; The Sensed Presence Within Experimental Settings; The Feeling of a Presence and Verbal Meaningfulness in Context of Temporal Lobe Function
Carole Brooks Platt, Ph.D., author and independent scholar Presence, Poetry and the Collaborative Right Hemisphere
Robert Pos, M.D., was Professor of Psychiatry and Psychiatrist-in-Chief, Toronto General Hospital, and later Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia (retired) The Evolution of Self-Talk, The Jaynesian
Thomas B. Posey, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychology, Murray State University Auditory Hallucinations of Hearing Voices in 375 Normal Subjects
Iván Raskovsky, Department of Computer Science, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina The Emergence of the Modern Concept of Introspection: A Quantitative Linguistic Analysis
Angelo N. Recchia-Luciani, M.D., Città di Bari Hospital S.p.a., Bari, Italy Manipulating Representations
Theodore Remington, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Dept. of English & Foreign Languages, University of Saint Francis The Origin of Rhetoric in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind, The Jaynesian
David A.J. Richards, Ph.D., Professor of Law, New York University Rights and Autonomy
Alessandro Salvini, Ph.D., Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Padova, Italy Il Nostro Inquilino Segreto: La Coscienza. Psicologia e Psicoterapia
Jeff Sandoz, Ph.D., Professor, Counseling Education, University of Louisiana at Lafayette Julian Jaynes's Bicameral Mind Theory as a Metaphor for Alcoholism, The Jaynesian
John Schedel, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Communication, Medaille College Hitler's Rhetoric: A Jaynesian Approach, The Jaynesian
Eric Schwitzgebel, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Riverside Perplexities of Consciousness
Tullio Scrimali, M.D., Professor of Cognitive Psychotherapy, University of Catania, Italy Entropy of Mind and Negative Entropy: A Cognitive and Complex Approach to Schizophrenia and its Treatment
Leo Sher, M.D., Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University, and Research Psychiatrist at the at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Department of Neuroscience Neuroimaging, Auditory Hallucinations, and the Bicameral Mind
Diego Fernandez Slezak, Department of Computer Science, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina The Emergence of the Modern Concept of Introspection: A Quantitative Linguistic Analysis
Khalid Sohail, M.D., Psychiatrist and Author, Whitby, Ontario, Canada Julian Jaynes' Theory of the Evolution of Human Consciousness
Rick Strassman, M.D., Clinical Assoc. Prof. of Psychiatry at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine Engogenous Hallucinations and Bicamerality, The Jaynesian
Gerald M. Swatez, Ph.D., University of Phoenix Interrogating The Peninsular Individual: The Dialectical Relationship Constituting Individual Minds and Group Mind
Judith Weissman, Ph.D. (1946–1998), was Professor of English, Syracuse University Of Two Minds: Poets Who Hear Voices
Heward Wilkinson, MSc Psychotherapy, Psychotherapist, UK Schizophrenic Process, the Emergence of Consciousness in Recent History and Phenomenological Causality: The Significance for Psychotherapy of Julian Jaynes
Gary Williams, Ph.D. candidate, Louisiana State University What Is It Like To Be Nonconscious: A Defense of Julian Jaynes
Clive Wynne, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Florida Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience Seminar: "Is a Behavioral Account of Consciousness Possible?"
Paul Youngquist, Ph.D., Department of English, Penn State Madness & Blake's Myth