Academic & Scholarly Interest
There are many academics and scholars interested in Julian Jaynes’s theory, but few are able to focus on it full time. Some of the many professors and scholars who have written favorably on Jaynes’s bicameral mind theory include:
- Mel Alexenberg, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Art and Education, Columbia University
Future of Art in a Digital Age: From Hellenistic to Hebraic Consciousness - 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
The Cultural Animal: Human Nature, Meaning, and Social Life; “Consciousness, Free Choice, and Automaticity” - Ciaran Benson, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University College, Dublin, Ireland
- Morris Berman, Ph.D., Sociology Department, The Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C.
Wandering God; The Reenchantment of the World - 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., Reader in Media and Communications, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK
“Immaterial Bodies: Affect, Embodiment, Mediation; Voices and the Concept of the ‘Double-Brain'” - Susan Blackmore, Ph.D., Visiting Professor, School of Psychology, University of Plymouth
Consciousness: An Introduction - 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” - Brendan Muir Bombaci, MA, Cultural Anthropology
“The Ubiquity of Gnostic Panpsychism: Self-Identification with the Cosmos and Natural Order In Adherents of Past and Present Religions” - Roberto Bottini, Department of Human Sciences, University of Bergamo, Italy
L’Invenzione di Coscienza (The Invention of Consciousness) - José Carlos Bouso, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, International Center for Ethnobotanical Education, Research and Service
“Hallucinations and Hallucinogens: Psychopathology or Wisdom?” - Mark Bracher, Ph.D., Department of English, Kent State University
“Social Symptoms of Identity Needs: Why We Have Failed to Solve Our Social Problems and What to do About It“ - 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) - Elizabeth A. Caparros, LCSW, The Odyssey Foundation
The Advantages of PsychoSpiritual Psychotherapy (in Innovative Collaborative Practice and Reflection in Patient Education) - Michael Carr, Ph.D, Chinese and Japanese culture and linguistics, Otaru University of Commerce, Japan (retired)
“The Shi “Corpse/Personator” Ceremony In Early China“; additional articles by Michael Carr on bicameral mentality in ancient China available in the Member Area. - 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; “Consciousness, Hypnosis, and Free Will,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - Andrea E. Cavanna, M.D., Institute of Neurology, UK; Dept. of Neurology, Amedeo Avogadro University, Italy
“Julian Jaynes,” in Consciousness: Theories in Neuroscience and Philosophy of Mind; “The “Bicameral Mind” 30 Years On: A Critical Reappraisal of Julian Jaynes’ Hypothesis“; “Were Babylonians Self Conscious?” - 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?” - Gregory Cochran, Ph.D., Adjunct Professor of Anthropology, University of Utah
What Is Your Dangerous Idea?: Today’s Leading Thinkers on the Unthinkable - Rabbi James Cohn, The Minds of the Bible: Speculations on the Cultural Evolution of Human Consciousness; “The Bible as a Written Record of the Dawn of Consciousness,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind
- Jack Copeland, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
“Artificial Intelligence: A Philosophical Introduction“ - Dirk Corstens, M.D., Psychiatrist and Cognitive Therapist, Social Psychiatric Service Riagg Maastricht, The Netherlands
“Auditory Hallucinations: Psychotic Symptom or Dissociative Experience?;” “The Origins of Voices: Life History and Voices & Lessons for Recovery;” “Making Sense of Voicies,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - 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“ - Branislava Curcic-Blake, Ph.D., University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen
“When Broca Goes Uninformed: Reduced Information Flow to Broca’s Area in Schizophrenia Patients With Auditory Hallucinations” - Antonio R. Damasio, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology and Neurology, University of Southern California
Self Comes to Mind: Constructing the Conscious Brain - Marcel Danesi, Ph.D., Professor of Semiotics and Linguistic Anthropology, University of Toronto, Canada
Vico, Metaphor and the Origin of Language; Giambattista Vico and Anglo-American Science: Philosophy and Writing - Richard Dawkins, Ph.D., Professor of Zoology, Oxford University
The God Delusion - Boban Dedovic, MA, University of Chicago
“Minds’ in ‘Homer’: A Quantitative Psycholinguistic Comparison of the Iliad and Odyssey;” “The Evolution of Mental Language in the Iliad and the Odyssey,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - Daniel Dennett, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy, Tufts University
Consciousness Explained; Kinds of Minds - Carlos G. Diuk-Wasser, Ph.D., Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University
“A Quantitative Philology of Introspection“; “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) - Christian Y. Dupont, Ph.D., Associate University Librarian for Collections and Burns Librarian, Boston College
Review of Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - David Eagleman, Ph.D, Departments of Neuroscience and Psychiatry, Baylor College of Medicine
Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain - Gabriel Egan, Ph.D, Reader in Shakespeare Studies, Dept. of English and Drama, Loughborough University, UK
“Shakespeare and the ‘Multiple-Drafts’ Model of Consciousness” - Franco Fabbro, M.D., Department of Medicine, University of Udine, Udine, Italy
“Contributions of Neuropsychology to the Study of Ancient Literature” - Enrico Facco, M.D., Philosophy of Science, Epistemology, Intrapersonal Communications, University of Padova
“Dr. A.M. – A Rare Case of a Modern Mystic? Implications for Psychology and Medicine“ - Charles Fernyhough, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology at Durham University
“Imaginary Companions and Young Children’s Reponses to Ambiguous Auditory Stimuli” - Michael Finch, Ph.D., Math and Theoretical Physics, UK
“Jaynes’s Notion of Consciousness as Self-Referential” - Harwood Fisher, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, City College of the City University of New York
“The Subjective Self: A Portrait Inside Logical Space“; “Self, Logic, and Figurative Thinking“ - Graham Nicol Forst, Ph.D., Instructor, Dept. of Continuing Studies, Simon Fraser University, Canada
“Mediation Matters: Archetypes of Transference” - 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 - Todd Gibson, Ph.D.
“Souls, Gods, Kings, and Mountains: Julian Jaynes’s Theory of the Bicameral Mind in Tibet, Part One;” “Listening for Ancient Voices: Julian Jaynes’s Theory of the Bicameral Mind in Tibet, Part Two;” “Buddhism and Bicamerality“; “Evidence for Bicameral Mentality in Ancient Tibet,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - Elkhonon Goldberg, Ph.D., Clinical Professor of Neurology, New York University School of Medicine
The Executive Brain: Frontal Lobes and the Civilized Mind - 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;” “The Last Modern Psychologist: Julian Jaynes’ Search for Consciousness in the Natural World” - John Hainly, M.A., Department of Philosophy, Southern University
“A Missing Piece of the Puzzle: Jaynes and the Psychology of Religion;” “Mythological Consciousness: Jaynes’s Bicameral Mind & Vico’s Imaginative Universals” - John Hamilton, Ph.D, was Director of Psychology, Gracewood Hospital (retired)
“Auditory Hallucinations in Non-Verbal Quadriplegics“ - Charles Hampden-Turner, Ph.D., MBA, Senior Research Associate, Judge Business School, University of Cambridge
Maps of the Mind: Charts and Concepts of the Mind and its Labyrinths - Klaus J. Hansen, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, Queen’s University, Ontario
Mormonism and the American Experience - Thomas Hare, Associate Professor, Dept. of Asian Language & Comparative Literature, Stanford University
ReMembering Osiris: Number, Gender, and the Word in Ancient Egyptian Representational Systems - Robin Carhart-Harris, M.D., Centre for Neuropsychopharmacology Imperial College, London, UK
“Psychedelics and Consciousness: An Interview with Robin Carhart-Harris” - William Hart, Ph.D., School of Art, University of Tasmania, Australia
“Idols and Art: The Cognitive Fetish” - Robert E. Haskell, Professor of Psychology, University of New England
Vico and Jaynes: Neurocultural and Cognitive Operations in the Origin of Consciousness - Morton Hunt, science writer and author of twenty-one books.
The Story of Psychology - Robert Hurley, Ph.D., Professor of Practical Theology, University Laval, Canada
Liberation Through Story: Children’s Literature and the Spirit of the Child - Matti Impio, M.A., University of Oulu, Finland
“Ihmiskunta ilman tietoisuutta. Julian Jaynesin teoria kaksikamarisesta mielesta : sen vastaanotto ja vaikutukset” (Mankind Without Consciousness – Julian Jaynes’ Bicameral Mind Theory: Its Reception and Influence) - Masanori Ishimori, Ph.D., Associate Prof., Faculty of Human Relations, Kyoto Koka Women’s University, Japan
“Chinese Pictograms and the Bicameral Mind,” The Jaynesian - David Martel Johnson, Ph.D., Full Professor Emeritus, Department of Philosophy, York University
How History Made the Mind: The Cultural Origins of Objective Thinking - Doyle Paul Johnson, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology, Texas Tech University
“The Brain-Mind Relation, Religious Evolution;” Forms of Consciousness: An Exploratory Statement” - Julie Kane, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Language and Communication Dept., Northwestern State University
“Poetry as Right-Hemisphere Language“ - Howard P. Kainz, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy, Marquette University
The Philosophy of Human Nature; The Philosophy of Man: A New Introduction to Some Perennial Issues - 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 Kihlstrom, Ph.D, Professor of Psychology, U.C. Berkeley
“Psychology of Consciousness” (course); “Hypnosis, Bicameral Mentality, and the Theory of Mind,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind; “Consciousness and Me-ness (Reprise)” - Livia Kohn, Ph.D., Professor of Religion & East Asian Studies, Boston University
Science and the Dao: From the Big Bang to Lived Perfection - 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“ - Marcel Kuijsten, MBA, “Consciousness and Language,” “The Bicameral Mind Explained,” “Consciousness, Cave Art, and Dreams,” and “New Evidence for Jaynes’s Neurological Model,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind
- Frank Laroi, 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” - Martin L. Lenhardt, Au.D., Ph.D., Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University
“Expansion of Jaynes’ Wahee-Wahoo Hypothesis for Speech/Language Evolution“ - Michael Lewis, M.D., Prof. of Pediatrics, Psychiatry, & Psychology, Univ. of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey
Shame: The Exposed Self - David Lewis-Williams, Ph.D., Prof. Emeritus of Cognitive Archaeology, Univ. of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
The Mind in the Cave: Consciousness and the Origins of Art; Inside the Neolithic Mind: Consciousness, Cosmos and the Realm of the Gods - John Limber, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of New Hampshire
“Language and Consciousness: Jaynes’s “Preposterous Idea” Reconsidered“ - David E. J. Linden, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Cardiff University, UK
“The Brain’s Voices: Comparing Nonclinical Auditory Hallucinations and Imagery;” “Consciousness: Theories in Neuroscience and Philosophy of Mind” (Book Review) - Stephanie C. Lin, Modern Languages, Phillips Exeter Academy
“Exploring the Universality of Personality Judgments: Evidence From the Great Transformation (1000 BCE–200 BCE)” - Daniela Lucangeli, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Padova
“Dr. A.M. – A Rare Case of a Modern Mystic? Implications for Psychology and Medicine“ - Tanya Luhrmann, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology, Stanford University
When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God; “Knowing God;” “Hallucinations and Sensory Overrides;” “Living with Voices;” “Hearing Voices, Sensed Presences, and Imagined ‘Others'” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - Irving Massey, Ph.D., Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University at Buffalo
The Neural Imagination: Aesthetic and Neuroscientific Approaches to the Arts - Ross R. Maxwell, Historian
“Eternal Rome: Subjective Consciousness and Immortality“ - 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)” - Philip E. McDowell, MSW, Lewis County Community Mental Health Center
Thinking about Thinking: Cognition, Science, and Psychotherapy - Ferren McIntyre, Ph.D., Earth & Ocean Science, National University of Ireland, Galway
“Talking Moai“ - Stephen McGregor, Ph.D., School of Electronic Engineering & Computer Science, Queen Mary University of London
“Metaphor, Meaning, Computers and Consciousness” - Clay McNearney, Ph.D., Professor of Religious Studies, Marshall University
“Robert Bellah and Julian Jaynes: An Imagined Conversation“ - Brian J. McVeigh, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of East Asian Studies, University of Arizona
“Elephants in the Psychology Department: Overcoming Intellectual Barriers to Understanding Julian Jaynes’s Theory;” “Humility as a Profession: A Memorial to Julian Jaynes;” “The Self as Interiorized Social Relations: Applying a Jaynesian Approach to Problems of Agency and Volition;’ The Psychology of the Bible: Explaining Divine Voices and Visions; A Psychohistory of Metaphors: Envisioning Time, Space, and Self through the Centuries; How Religion Evolved: Explaining the Living Dead, Talking Idols, and Mesmerizing Monuments; “Julian Jaynes and the Features of Consciousness,” “Vestiges of Bicameral Mentality,” and “Evidence for Bicameral Mentality in the Bible,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - 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?“ - James W. Moore, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, Goldsmiths University of London, London
“They Were Noble Automatons Who Knew Not What They Did:” Volition in Jaynes’ The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind - 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?“ - Stanley A. Mulaik, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus at the School of Psychology at the Georgia Institute of Technology
“The Metaphoric Origins of Objectivity, Subjectivity, and Consciousness in the Direct Perception of Reality” - 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” - V. Hari Narayanan, Ph.D., Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, India
“Voice in the Head: The Road Ahead” - 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” - Keith Oatley, Ph.D., Department of Human Development and Applied Psychology, University of Toronto
The Cambridge Handbook of Consciousness; Best Laid Schemes: The Psychology of Emotions; Understanding Emotions - 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”; “Auditory Hallucinations in Normal Child Populations”; “The Social Acceptability of Children Hearing Voices” - Michael Persinger, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology & 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;” “Validating New Technologies to Treat Depression, Pain and the Feeling of Sentient Beings: A Reply to ‘Neuroscience for the Soul'” - M. Pitkanen, Ph.D., Dept. of Physics, University of Helsinki, Finland
“Semi-trance, Mental Illness, and Altered States of Consciousness” - Carole Brooks Platt, Ph.D., author and independent scholar
In Their Right Minds: The Lives and Shared Practices of Poetic Geniuses; “The Right Mind of the Poet“; “Presence, Poetry and the Collaborative Right Hemisphere“ - Frank Poletti, Ph.D., Esalen Center for Theory & Research
“Plato’s Vowels: How the Alphabet Influenced the Evolution of Consciousness” - 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“ - Matthew Purver, Ph.D., School of Electronic Engineering & Computer Science, Queen Mary University of London
“Metaphor, Meaning, Computers and Consciousness” - Ivan 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., Citta di Bari Hospital S.p.a., Bari, Italy
“The Descent of Humanity: The Biological Roots of Human Consciousness, Culture and History”; “Manipulating Representations” - Theodore Remington, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Dept. of English & Foreign Languages, University of Saint Francis
“Echoes of the Gods: Towards a Jaynesian Understanding of Rhetoric“; “The Origin of Rhetoric in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind,“ The Jaynesian; “Metaphor and the Rhetorical Structuring of Consciousness” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - Sidarta Ribeiro, Ph.D., Neuroscientist & Dir. of the Brain Institute at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte
“The Onset of Data-Driven Mental Archaeology” - David A.J. Richards, Ph.D., Professor of Law, New York University
“Rights and Autonomy” - Bill Rowe, U.C. Santa Cruz
“Voices Become Gods“; “The Ancient Dark Age“; “Two Origins of Consciousness;” “The Other Origin of Consciousness: Infancy and its Relationship to Julian Jaynes’s Theory“; Retrospective: Julian Jaynes and The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind“; “The Development of Consciousness in Children,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - 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; “Julian Jaynes and Owen Barfield on the Origins, Nature, and Trajectory of Consciousness“ - 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” - Martin Seligman, Ph.D., Director of the Penn Positive Psychology Center and Zellerbach Family Professor of Psychology in the Penn Department of Psychology
“Agency in Greco-Roman Philosophy”; Review of Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - 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“ - Diana Van Lancker Sidtis, Professor of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, New York University
“Two-Track Mind” in Miriam Faust (ed.) The Handbook of the Neuropsychology of Language - Dorothy G. Singer, Ed. D., Senior Research Scientist, Dept. of Psychology and Child Study Center, Yale University
The House of Make-Believe: Children’s Play and the Developing Imagination - Jerome Singer, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Psychology, Yale University
The House of Make-Believe: Children’s Play and the Developing Imagination - Jan Sleutels, Ph.D, Professor of Philosophy, Leiden University, Netherlands
“Greek Zombies: On the Alleged Absurdity of Substantially Unconscious Greek Minds“; “The Contingency of Mind: Situating Jaynes in the Changing Landscape of Contemporary Philosophy of Mind“; “Julian Jaynes and Contemporary Philosophy of Mind,” in Conversations on Consciousness 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” - I.E.C. (Iris) Sommer, M.D., Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience Psychiatry Department, Utrecht University
Language Lateralization and Psychosis; “Auditory Hallucinations and the Right Hemisphere,” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - Bernard Spilka, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology (Emeritus), University of Denver
The Psychology of Religion: An Empirical Approach - David N. Stamos, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy, York University, Toronto
Evolution and the Big Questions - Julio Michael Stern, Ph.D,. Professor of Applied Mathematics, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
“Jacob’s Ladder: Logics of Magic, Metaphor and Metaphysics“ - Richard Stoneman, Ph.D., Professor of Classics and Ancient History, University of Exeter
The Ancient Oracles: Making the Gods Speak - David C. Stove, Ph.D. (1927-1994), was Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Sydney
“The Oracles and Their Cessation: A Tribute to Julian Jaynes“ - Rick Strassman, M.D., Clinical Assoc. Prof. of Psychiatry at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine
“Endogenous Hallucinations and Bicamerality,” The Jaynesian - Lance Strate, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Communication & Media Studies, Fordham University
“Something From Nothing: Seeking a Sense of Self” - Thomas Styron, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine
“The Hearing Voices Network: Initial Lessons & Future Directions for Mental Health Professionals & Systems of Care” - Peter Suedfeld, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Dept. of Psychology, University of British Columbia
“The “Sensed Presence” in Unusual Environments“ - Laurence I. Sugarman, M.D., “Leaving Hypnosis Behind?“; “Authorizing Clinical Hypnosis: From Bicameral Mentality to Autonomy” in Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind
- Gerald M. Swatez, Ph.D., University of Phoenix
“Interrogating The Peninsular Individual: The Dialectical Relationship Constituting Individual Minds and Group Mind” - Olaf Tans, Ph.D., Legal Philosopher and Political Scientist, Amsterdam University
“Imagined Constitutionality: Rethinking Democratic Citizenship with the Aid of Fiction Theory” - Patrizio Tressoldi, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Padova
“Dr. A.M. – A Rare Case of a Modern Mystic? Implications for Psychology and Medicine“ - Michael R. Trimble, M.D., Professor of Behavioral Neurology, Institute of Neurology, UK
The Soul in the Brain: The Cerebral Basis of Language, Art, and Belief - Endel Tulving, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto
“Memory and Consciousness,” Canadian Psychology, 26 (1) - Human-Friedrich Unterrainer, Ph.D., Medical University of Graz, Austria
“Functional and Dysfunctional Religious/Spiritual Beliefs in Psychotic Disorders” - Matteo Valencic, Linkoping University, Sweden
“The Big Fallacy: Forcing Agamemnon and Achilles into Westerners’ Dreams” - Kraft E. von Maltzahn, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Biology, Dalhousie University and University of King’s College
“Nature as Landscape: Dwelling and Understanding“ - Evan Harris Walker, Ph.D. (1936-2006), Physicist, former President of the Walker Cancer Research Institute
The Physics of Consciousness: Quantum Minds and the Meaning of Life - Mary M. Watkins, Ph.D., Clinical and Developmental Psychologist, Pacifica Graduate Institute
Invisible Guests: The Development of Imaginal Dialogues; Waking Dreams - Michel Weber, Ph.D., Director of the Centre of Philosophical Practice, Belgium
“Rationality and Consciousness from a Genetic Perspective” - Daniel M. Wegner, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Harvard University
The Illusion of Conscious Will - Judith Weissman, Ph.D. (1946-1998), was Professor of English, Syracuse University
Of Two Minds: Poets Who Hear Voices - Andrew Wickens, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer in Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Central Lancashire, UK
A History of the Brain: From Stone Age Surgery to Modern Neuroscience - Ian Wickramasekera, PsyD, Professor of Psychology, University of the Rockies, Colorado
“Early Psychological Knowledge” in The History of Psychology - Geraint Wiggins, Ph.D., School of Electronic Engineering & Computer Science, Queen Mary University of London
“Metaphor, Meaning, Computers and Consciousness” - 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, Philosophy-Neuroscience-Psychology, Washington University in St. Louis
“What Is It Like To Be Nonconscious: A Defense of Julian Jaynes“; “Consciousness Behind Closed Doors: Julian Jaynes and the Refrigerator Light Problem“ - Rob Wiseman, Ph.D., Oxford Archaeology, Cambridge
“Metaphors Concerning Speech in Homer“ - Fred Alan Wolf, Ph.D., Theoretical Physicist
Ontology, Epistemology, Consciousness; And Closed, Timelike Curves; Taking the Quantum Leap; The Dreaming Universe - William Woodward, Ph.D. Professors of Psychology, University of New Hampshire
“Julian Jaynes: Introducing His Life and Thought” (with June Tower); Review of Conversations on Consciousness and the Bicameral Mind - 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” - Marciana Zambillo, Ph.D., Social and Institutional Psychology at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil)
“Julian Jaynes e Intervoice: apontamentos sobre ouvir vozes” (Julian Jaynes and Intervoice: Notes on Hearing Voices)
Updated 1/23/2023