From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Taylor, Eugene
Taylor Eugene
3/27/2019
Eugene Taylor (psychologist) - Wikipedia
WIKIPEDIA
Eugene Taylor (psychologist)
Eugene Taylor (1946-2013) was a scholar on
Eugene Irvine Taylor, PhD
William James and a professor of psychology
Born
28 October 1946
at Saybrook University.
Philadelphia, PA
Biography
Died
30 January 2013
Cambridge,
Taylor was educated at Southern Methodist
Massachusetts
University and Harvard Divinity School, and
Nationality
United States
Boston University (PhD in the History and
Alma mater
Southern Methodist
Philosophy of Psychology). He was the 1983
University, Boston
William James Lecturer at Harvard Divinity
School. [1] Taylor died in 2013 and was the
University
subject of many remembrances and
Known for
Scholarship on
obituaries. [1][2][3][4] Taylor held the rank of
William James, Aikido
yondan (4th degree black belt) and was the
Instructor
founder the Harvard Aikido Club in 1981 and a
Scientific career
shidoin (instructor) in the United States Aikido
Fields
History & Philosophy
Federation. In 1993 he founded the
of Psychology &
Cambridge Institute of Psychology and
Religion
Comparative Religions; was a founding
Institutions
member of The New Existentialists; [6]
Cambridge Institute of
and was
Psychology and
the Vice President of the Massachusetts
Religion, Saybrook
Association of Swedenborgian Churches (see
University,
Church of the New Jerusalem (Cambridge,
Massachusetts
Massachusetts)). [7] Dr. Taylor was Senior
General Hospital,
Psychologist in the Department of Psychiatry
Harvard University
at Massachusetts General Hospital (appointed
official historian) and Lecturer in Psychiatry,
Academic
Henry Murray
Harvard Medical School. [8]
advisors
Influences Emanuel
Taylor was famous for the size and scope of his
Swedenborg, William
personal library of an estimated 8000
James, Carl Jung,
David Thoreau,
Swami Vivekananda
volumes.http://www.chronicle.com/article/Haunted-by-Spirits/234262
Publications
Books authored or edited by Taylor include
Taylor, Eugene (1983). William James on exceptional mental states. New York:
Scribner. ISBN 0684179385. OCLC 9532853
(https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/9532853).
Taylor, Eugene (1999). Shadow culture : psychology and spirituality in America.
Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint. ISBN 1887178805. OCLC 40762674 (https://www.w
orldcat.org/oclc/40762674).
Taylor, Eugene (2009). The mystery of personality : a history of psychodynamic
theories. New York: Springer. ISBN 9780387981031. OCLC 310401002 (https://www.
worldcat.org/oclc/310401002).
References
1. "Eugene Taylor, Professor of Psychology, has passed away" (http://www.saybrook.ed
a/forum/univ/eugene-taylor-professor-psychology-has-passed-away). 30 January
2013. Retrieved 2 July 2014.
2.
Mendelowitz, Ed. "The Centrifugal Mind: Requiems for Eugene Taylor (1946-2013)
and Joseph Roth (1894-1939)". The Humanistic Psychologist. 42 (1): 117-120.
doi:10.1080/08873267.2014.891910 (https://doi.org/10.1080%2F08873267.2014.891
910).
3. Ghaemi, Nassir. "Eugene Taylor in Memoriam: The Karma of William James" (http://w
ww.psychologytoday.com/blog/mood-swings/201302/eugene-taylor-in-memoriam-the-
karma-william-james). Retrieved 2 July 2014.
4
Buchanan, David (14 February 2013). "The Reincarnation of William James: Eugene
Taylor, R.I.P." (http://www.partiallyexaminedlife.com/2013/02/14/the-reincarnation-of-w
illiam-james/) The Partially Examined Life. Retrieved 2 July 2014.
5. Harvard Aikido Instructors (http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/aikido/04INSTRUCTORS/pas
t%20instructors.htm)
6. The New Existentialists (https://www.saybrook.edu/newexistentialists/author/eugene-t
aylor)
7.
The Messenger 234(1) Swedenborgian Church of North America (January 2012) (htt
p://www.swedenborgiancommunity.org/files/messenger/1201messenger_web_1.pdf)
(PDF)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Taylor_(psychologist)
2/3
3/27/2019
Eugene Taylor (psychologist) - Wikipedia
8. Kemp, H. V. (2013) Eugene Irvine Taylor (http://www.psywww.com/psyrelig/obits/taylo
r.html)
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Eugene_Taylor_(psychologist)&oldid=888712810"
This page was last edited on 20 March 2019, at 22:13 (UTC).
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional
terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit
organization.
partment in 1963. He specializes in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century American reli-
WS
gion and will, on occasion, hold seminars on subjects related to this specialty. Author of
over fifty books, his scholarly work is centred in a multi-volume work entitled Modern
American Religion, three volumes of which have appeared: The Irony of It All; The Noise
of Conflict; and Under God, Indivisible. He has been an ordained minister in the Evangeli-
cal Lutheran Church in America since 1952. He edited the Penguin edition of William
James' The Varieties of Religious Experience in 1982.
Keith Oatley (Department of Human Development & Applied Psychology, University
of Toronto, 252 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Canada M5S 1V6) is a professor of applied
psychology. He is the author of five books on psychology, and two psychological nov-
niversity,
els. His research is on emotions, and on the psychology of reading and writing imagina-
sor of re-
tive literature.
focus on
nscious-
Eleanor Rosch (Department of Psychology, 3210 Tolman Hall #1650, University of
sophy of
California, Berkeley, CA 94720-1650, USA) is a professor in the Psychology Depart-
co-editor
ment and the Cognitive Science Program at the University of California, Berkeley. She
of Mysti-
is known for her psychological research in concepts and categories and for more recent
e on the
work on implications of the Eastern meditation traditions. Books include Cognition and
imporary
Categorization (with B.B. Lloyd) and The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Hu-
man Experience (with F.J. Varela and E. Thompson).
ment, 80
Eugene Taylor (Saybrooke Institute and Harvard Medical School, 98 Clifton Street,
Psychol-
Cambridge, MA 02140, USA) holds the AB and MA in general/ experimental psychology
aculty of
with a minor in Asian Studies, and a PhD in the History and Philosophy of Psychology. He
psychol-
is an Executive Faculty member at Saybrook Institute, Lecturer on Psychiatry, Harvard
S among
Medical School, and a Senior Psychologist on the Psychiatry Service at the Massachusetts
philoso-
General Hospital. He is the author of William James on Exceptional Mental States
oks The
(Scribner's, 1982); William James on Consciousness beyond the Margin (Princeton Uni-
German,
versity Press, 1996), and with Robert Wozniak (eds), Pure experience: The response to
lhäusler;
William James (Routledge/Thommess, 1996). With Jeremy Carette he has also written an
(edited
introduction to the one-hundredth anniversary commemorative edition of James's Vari-
ang and
eties of Religious Experience (Taylor & Francis, 2002).
ersity of
Internated, Club,
t in psy-
lange in
ictional
8/22/07.
Univer-
doctor-
ently an
Educa-
related
experi-
he His-
D, from
pry De-
3/27/2019
Eugene Taylor
Society to
HUMANISTIC PSYCHOLOGY
LEADERSHIPNEWS & EVENTSAWARDSSIGSPUBLICATIONSMEMBERSHIPABOUT
Adult Development & Aging News(/division-32/publications/newsletters/humanistic/index)| June 2013 (/division-
32/publications/newsletters/humanistic/2013/06/index)
SPECIAL MEMORIAL SECTION
Eugene Taylor
Mark Stern pens a reverential reincarnation of Eugene Taylor.
f (#)
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By Mark Stern(https://www.apa.org/search?query=&fq=ContributorFilt:%22Stern,| Mark%22&sort=ContentDateSort desc)
It was SO very special to have known Eugene Taylor. Way back, when I was president-elect
of the then Psychologists Interested in Religious Issues - now the Society for the
Psychology of Religion and Spirituality (APA Division 36 (/division-36) it was suggested to
me by Dr. Mary Jo Meadow that I consider inviting a young scholar/historian who was
closely associated with the Swedenborgian Society and who served as archivist of the
William James papers at Harvard University School of Medicine. Gene and I arranged a
meeting. We discovered that we shared a broad array of interests - but particular in the
area of the history of a unique American psychotherapy. I asked if he knew of the late Andras Angyal, a
psychiatrist and psychologist, who had been a close friend (and perhaps therapist of Abraham Maslow) and,
incidentally, my own psychoanalyst. Indeed he did, and even more of the context surrounding the
emergence a circle of other practitioners and theorists who were infused with a new world spirit. As we
spoke, I recognized Eugene's ardor for the unfolding of unfamiliar historical events. Again, in our exchange,
I
realized that Eugene was a rare breed of historian - one who vastly relished the spiritual implications in his
subject matter. I was honored that Eugene accepted my invitation to be a speaker for the forthcoming APA
convention (http://www.apa.org/convention/)
Eugene had asked me to a lecture he was scheduled to give in New York City sponsored by the
Swedenborgian Society. It took place in a rare old New York clubhouse. There, amid an audience of mostly
elderly seekers, he held forth on his vast knowledge of the emergence of a distinctly American
psychotherapy. He was masterly, as he illuminated the gathering on the active roles that William James and
Morton Prince played as members of a somewhat loosely formed Boston School of Psychotherapy - a group
James drew on the intuitive, heavily influenced by the American Transcendentalists including his god-father
Ralph Waldo Emerson and the near hermit Henry David Thoreau as well as from his father Henry James, Sr.,
who himself had an impassioned life-long interest in Emmanuel Swedenborg's concerns for the spiritual
evolution of personal consciousness.
Eugene gave a stirring presentation to Division 36 - one that concentrated on the materialization of healing
modalities emanating from New England and somewhat culminating in the seminal workings by luminaries
such as Andras Angyal in Boston and Harry Stack Sullivan in Washington. Some years later, when I was
elected as president of the now Society of Humanistic Psychology (Division 32 of APA), I again had the
opportunity of being able to invite Eugene to speak at the annual convention of APA. This time he launched
into a fine critique of conventional experimentation in psychology in favor of more humanistic inquiry. I
contend that Taylor's alive interest which ran counter to the empirical allowed him the space to be a font of
historical facts resting as the foundation of American psychology: one that made live its contextual
relationship to James' tantalizing emphasis on experience.
I well recall the time that I was brought on the carpet by one of my critics who denied what I had written of
James' having taken depressed patients into his Cambridge home for periods of conversation and
recuperation. I turned to Eugene who was then bringing together James' "Exceptional Mental States," which
were drawn from his Lowell Lectures at Harvard. With certainty he confirmed my account from what James
himself recorded.
After I heard of Eugene's passing, I began to reflect on my bringing Eugene into membership in the
American Psychological Association and later having had the privilege of nominating him for APA Fellow.
I
thought back to my editorship of Voices - the Journal of the American Academy of Psychotherapists, and
Eugene graciously allowing me to appoint him Historical Editor. We were often comrades in arms - each in
our way, provoking an understanding of a sometime lost and found experiential emphasis in and of
American psychology and psychotherapy.
I
will miss those encounters with my friend Eugene and that distinctive Jamesian appearance (recall the well
shaped beard). His fluency in bringing rich and expansive servings to a table of offerings ran counter-clock
to what others in the mainstream would cling to. Those of us who were fortunate enough to behold Eugene
have been SO enriched by his presence and his battles.
SHARE
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Dr. Eugene Taylor, Harvard University: Guest Lectures
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Home > Programs/Education > Program Archive > Taylor
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March 8th - Guest Lectures
Dr. Eugene Taylor
Clinical Service
Harvard University
Research
Service to the State
LECTURES
Contact Us
Internal Medicine Grand Rounds
Three Revolutionary Hypotheses in
"William James and Walter Cannon:
Contemporary Mind-Body Medicine
Make a Contribution
The Dialogue between Psychology
Related Links
and Physiology"
Dr. Eugene Taylor
Search WVIIH
Harvard University
Friday, March 8th ~ 8 a.m. to 9 a.m.
Room 2116 HSC
Friday, March 8 ~ Noon-1 p.m.
Room 4007 Health Sciences North
PO Box 9147
(Pylon Entrance)
Robert C. Byrd HSCS
Box lunch available-first come, first
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Morgantown, WV
serve
26506
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Phone: 304.293.8188
broadcast to Charleston Campus via
Fax: 304.293.5860
MDTV room 2014
About Eugene Taylor, Ph.D.
in
Eugene Taylor holds the MA in experimental psychology and the PhD in the History
and Philosophy of Psychology. He is an Executive Faculty member at Saybrook
Graduate School, where he teaches the history of psychology, and also Lecturer on
Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Senior psychologist on the Psychiatry
Service at the Massachusetts General Hospital. He has been a member of the
Harvard Medical faculty for the past twenty years, where he has specialized in the
history and philosophy of the mind/body problem in the late 19th century. He is the
historian in the Department of Psychiatry at the Massachusetts General Hospital and
author of numerous publications on medical biography, the history of medical
sugars,
psychology, and the introduction of psychotherapeutic methods into neurology,
psychiatry, and psychology in the United States. A former consultant to the Walter
Bradford Cannon biography project under Saul Benison, A. Clifford Barger, and Elin
Wolfe at the Countway Library of Medicine, his biographical vignette on Walter
Cannon has recently appeared in the Encyclopedia of Psychology (Oxford, 2000) and
he is author of three outstanding works on the American philosopher-psychologist and
physician, William James. He is also a co-author with Benjamin White and Richard
Wolfe of Stanley Cobb: Builder of the modern neurosciences (1982). He is a Fellow in
the History Division of the American Psychological Association, a member of the
American Association for the History of Medicine, the History of Science Society, and
the European Association for the History of Psychiatry.
Currently he is working on a history of psychiatric services at the Massachusetts
General Hospital from the hospital's founding in 1812 until the modern era of
managed care. He is also working on a sketch of the history of mind/body medicine
http://www.hsc.wvu.edu/wviih/programsAndEdu/programArchive/taylor.asp
8/21/2007
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Hello Ronald Epp,
Ron Archives (18)
How about you and Ward doing a quick lunch at the Faculty Club as my
guest, 12 noon. Its just steps away from Pusey. They have an informal
map
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room downstairs that does soups and sandwhiches and is a fast in and
out.
My Photos
My Attachments
Eugene Taylor, PhD
Original Message
>From: Ward Williamson
>Sent: Aug 21, 2007 12:33 PM
>To: ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP , Eugene Taylor
>Subject: Re: William James and George B. Dorr
>
>Ron,
>
>Sounds great
Let me know what might be your time
>frame SO that I can arrange with Eugene. There are
>also other options near-by. As we are now talking
>about tomorrow, I'll give you my phone number.
>Regards, Ward 617-547-5447
>
>
>--- ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP
>wrote:
>
>> Dear Ward,
>>
>>
I've requested documents from the depository and
>> have myself boxed in with too much work for next
>> Wednesday. The amoun t of work I needed to get done
>> inclined me to cancel lunch with you on Wednesday
>> but wondered whether you would not begrudge a 30-40
>> minute "picnic" lunch in front of Houghton- -but
>> you'd have to bring your own luncheon fare since
>> I'll be carrying a sandwich that I've carted down
>> from New Hampshire. Noon? Meet at Pusey
>> entrance/exit adjacent to Widener?
>>
>>
If this is cumbersome, we'll delay this get
>> together until I next visit sometime in October.
>>
>> Ron
>>
>> Ward Williamson wrote:
>>
Hello Ron,
>>
>> Next Wed is fine for me, but Eugene may be gone by
>> then to make his presentations on the West Coast.
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=3744_9780865_109313_2371_200...
8/21/2007
Verizon Yahoo! Mail-eppster2@verizon.net
Page 2 of 3
>> Let's just see how it goes. I will tell you about my
>> conversation with John C. Dorr about his family and
>> the Dorr War in Rhode Island, We will be in touch. I
>> have looked at the Dorr link, but haven't had time
>> to
>> read it.
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Ward Williamson
9 Dana Street #4
>> Cambridge, MA 02138
617-547-5443
>>
>> ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Dear Ward:
>> >
>> > I appreciated our conversation yesterday at the
>> > Harvard Archives. As I mulled over the name of
>> > Eugene Taylor as I drove home, I found myself
>> > recalling his contribution to the centenary issue
>> of
>> > the Varieties of Religious Experience. However, I
>> > did not fully grasp your task at the archives even
>> as we both made use of many of the same resources.
>> > Can you elaborate?
>> >
>> > I'm including below a link to a publication of
>> > mine on Mr. Dorr (pp. 8-10) in the Friends of
>> Aacdia
>> > Journal which makes no reference to William James
>> > but will give you a snapshot of Acadia's Founder.
>> As
>> > I work my way toward the conclusion of a rough
>> draft
>> > of the Dorr biography, I intend to emphasize how
>> > Dorr can be better understood through his mentors
>> > and that the philosophy and friendship of William
>> > James were significant ingredients to his
>> > conservation achievements in Maine.
>> >
>> > I don't now know whether I'll be able to return to
>> > the Archives next week but hope that we can keep
>> in
>> > touch and meet once again.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>http://www.friendsofacadia.org/journal/sum2001/sum2001.pdf
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > Ronald H. Epp , Ph.D.
47 Pond View Drive
>> > >> > Merrimack, NH 03054
>> > (603) 424-6149
>> > eppster2@verizon.net
>
>> Be a better Globetrotter. Get better travel answers
>> from someone who knows. Yahoo! Answers - Check it
>> out.
>>
http://answers.yahoo.com/dir/?link=list&sid=396545469
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=3744_9780865_109313_2371_200... 8/21/2007
Review
Reviewed Work(s): William James on Exceptional Mental States: The 1896 Lowell Lee-
Lectures by Eugene Taylor; William James on Exceptional Mental States: The 1896 Lowell
Lectures by Eugene Taylor
Review by: Henry Samuel Levinson
Source: Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society, Vol. 21, No. 4 (Fall, 1985), pp. 580-586
Published by: Indiana University Press
Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/40320117
Accessed: 28-03-2019 13:50 UTC
VOLUME 3
INVESTIGATIONS INTO THE WILLIAM JAMES
COLLECTION AT HARVARD: AN INTERVIEW WITH
EUGENE TAYLOR
Investigations into the William James
Collection at Harvard: An interview with
Eugene Taylor1
Thibaud Trochu
See WilliamJTames Studies.org
William James on Psychopathology:
The 1896 Lowell Lectures on
"Exceptional Mental States"
Eugene Taylor
See Howard Library Bulletin 30(1982):4554
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