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Gerald Heard

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Gerald Heard
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Fitzgerald Heard commonly called Gerald Heard (October 6, 1889 -
August 14, 1971) was an historian, science writer, educator, and philosopher.
He wrote many articles and authored over 35 books.
Heard was a guide and mentor to numerous well-known Americans, including Clare Boothe Luce and Bill Wilson, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, in the 1950s and 1960s. His work was a forerunner of, and influence on, the consciousness-development movement that has spread in the Western world since the 1960s. Contents
Life and work
The son of an Anglo-Irish clergyman, Heard was born in London. He studied history and theology at the University of Cambridge. After working in other roles, he lectured from 1926 to 1929 for Oxford University's extra-mural studies program. Heard took a strong interest in developments in the sciences. In 1929, he edited The Realist, a short-lived monthly journal of scientific humanism (its sponsors included H.G. Wells, Arnold Bennett, Julian Huxley, and Aldous Huxley). In 1927 Heard began lecturing for South Place Ethical Society, and from 1932 to 1942 he was a council member of the Society for Psychical Research.
He first embarked as a book author in 1924, but The Ascent of Humanity, published in 1929, marked his first foray into public acclaim as it received the British Academy’s Hertz Prize. From 1930 to 1934 he served as a science and current-affairs commentator for the BBC. In 1937 he emigrated to the United States, accompanied by Aldous Huxley, to accept the chair of historical anthropology at Duke University. In the U.S., Heard's main activities were writing, lecturing, and the occasional radio and TV appearance. His pattern was set as an informed individual who recognized no conflict among history, science, literature, and theology.
Heard left this post at Duke, settling in California. In 1942 he began founding, soon building, Trabuco College (in the Santa Ana Mountains) as a facility where comparative-religion studies and practices could be pursued.
Heard was the first among a group of literati friends (several others of whom were also originally British) to discover Swami Prabhavananda and Vedanta. Heard became an initiate of Vedanta. Like the outlook of his friend Aldous Huxley (another in this circle), the essence of Heard’s mature outlook was that a human being can effectively pursue intentional evolution of consciousness. He maintained a regular discipline of meditation, along the lines of yoga, for many years.
In the 1950s, Heard tried LSD and felt that, used properly, it had strong potential to 'enlarge Man's mind' by allowing a person to see beyond his ego. In late August 1956, Alcoholics Anonymous founder Bill Wilson first took LSD — under Heard's guidance and with the officiating presence of Dr. Sidney Cohen, a psychiatrist then with the California Veterans Administration Hospital. According to Wilson, the session allowed him to re-experience a spontaneous spiritual experience he had had years before, which had enabled him to overcome his own alcoholism.
Heard is also responsible for introducing the then unknown Huston Smith to Huxley. Smith became one of the preeminent religious studies scholars in the United States. His book The World's Religions is a classic in the field, sold over two million copies and is considered a particularly useful introduction to comparative religion. The meeting with Huxley led eventually to Smith's connection to Timothy Leary.
In 1963, some consider to be Heard's magnum opus, a book titled The Five Ages of Man, was published.
According to Heard, the prevalent developmental stage among humans in today’s well-industrialized societies is the fourth: the “total individual,” who is mentally dominated, feeling him- or herself to be autonomous, separate from other persons. However, according to Heard – based on his many years of studies, his intuition, and his many years of reflection – a fifth stage is in the process of emerging: a post-individual phase of persons and of culture. Heard termed this stage 'leptoid man' because humans will increasingly 'take a leap' into a considerably expanded consciousness, in which the various aspects of the psyche will be integrated, without any aspects being repressed or seeming foreign. A society that recognizes this stage of development will honor and support individuals entering a "second maturity." Further, instead of simply enjoying biological and psychological health, as Freud and other important psychiatric or psychological philosophers of the “total-individual” phase conceived, Leptoid man (having entered the second maturity) will be a human of developed spirituality, similar to the mystics of the past.
Heard died at his home in Santa Monica, California of the effects of several earlier strokes in August 1971.
Books
* Narcissus: An Anatomy of Clothes
* The Ascent of Humanity
* The Emergence of Man
* Social Substance of Religion: An Essay of the Evolution of Religion
* This Surprising World: A Journalist Looks at Science
* These Hurrying Years: An Historical Outline 1900-1933
* Science in the Making
* The Source of Civilization
* Exploring the Stratosphere
* The Third Morality
* Science Front, 1936
* Pain, Sex and Time: A New Outlook on Evolution and the Future of Man
* The Creed of Christ: An Interpretation of the Lord's Prayer
* Training for the Life of the Spirit
* The Code of Christ: An Interpretation of the Beatitudes
* A Taste for Honey (fiction published under H.F. Heard)
* Man The Master
* A Dialogue in the Desert
* Murder by Reflection (fiction published under H.F. Heard)
* Reply Paid: A Mystery (fiction published under H.F. Heard)
* The Recollection
* A Preface to Prayer
* The Great Fog and Other Weird Tales (fiction published under H.F. Heard)
* The Gospel According to Gamaliel
* The Eternal Gospel
* Doppelgangers (fiction published under H.F. Heard)
* Is God Evident? An Essay Toward a Natural Theology
* The Lost Cavern and Other Tales of the Fantastic (fiction published under H.F. Heard)
* The Notched Hairpin: A Mycroft Mystery (fiction published under H.F. Heard)
* Prayers and Meditations: A Monthly Cycle Arranged for Daily Use (edited by Gerald Heard)
* The Black Fox: A Novel of the Seventies (fiction)
* Is God in History?
* Morals Since 1900
* Is Another World Watching? The Riddle of the Flying Saucers
* Gabriel and the Creatures (UK edition entitled Wishing Well)
* The Human Venture
* Training For a Life of Growth
* The Five Ages of Man: The Psychology of Human History
See also
* Richard Bucke
* Buckminster Fuller
* Aldous Huxley
* Arthur M. Young
External links* Gerald Heard Web site
* Gerald Heard on the Mystical Site www.mysticism.nl

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 12/16/2006
Sounds Like: From www.lysergia.com

Gerald Heard - Re-birth LP (1961)

After receiving some interesting commentary from Heard scholar John V Cody, I've expanded this review page considerably. Apart from the general interest of Cody's comments, the status of the "Re-birth" LP as one of the very first psychedelic LPs is made clear. My original commentary on this important recording can be found at the bottom of this page.

John Cody's comments are in red:

"Gerald was a genius and far more artistically uninhibited in his creative imaginative than was Huxley, etc. He believed that the psychedelics potentially could be employed as sacramental "medicaments" that could be used in traversing all the major life-cycle transitions. He envisioned them as catalystic agents in a life-long theraphy of growth through the major life-stages, not only as a tool for liberation from the fear of death, etc. Gerald and Aldous were close collaborators in exploring the human and transpersonal potentials of the psychedelics, and of course, Aldous knew of Gerald's recording of 'Rebirth', so it is likely that Aldous's decision to take LSD as a sacrament in his last hours of dying of cancer (while his wife, Laura, intoned parts of the Tibetan Book of the Dead) was directly inspired from Gerald's extensive research into proper psychophysical rituals to enhance such life-cycle transitions."

The 'Re-Birth' LP:

"Gerald's brilliantly creative imagination envisioned a wonderfully theatrical high-tech ritual (complex lighting, sound effects, music, choral performance, etc.) to form a soul-stirring liturgy for those making an "intentional" conscious, aware transition to the next dimension of Reality."

Regarding the connection to the similar Leary/Alpert/Metzner project, Cody points out that Gerald Heard did in fact review their 1964 "Psychedelic Experience" book, which is based on the very same ideas as his 1961 album. The review can be found in the Psychedelic Review, issue #5, pp 110-118. Heard uses "Re-Birth" in the heading for this review, probably a deliberate pointer to his own, earlier work.

"Re-birth' was later published and distributed as a cassette recording around 1976. The World-Pacific record producer and jazz aficionados who produced about 6 of Gerald's various 33 rpm recordings at WP are part of this story. There is an important LSD connection here since one of the record producers was initiated into LSD through Gerald Heard, who personally "invigilated" (watched over) this producer during his first session."

An excellent introduction to Gerald Heard, written by John Cody, can be found in Gnosis magazine, Winter 1993 issue.

EXPLORATIONS, 3 LP box-set

Original release: World Pacific 1413, US 1961

Produced and engineered by Richard Bock

Written and narrated by Gerald Heard

Sleeve notes by Jay Michael Barrie

Music written by Jay Michael Barrie

Singers: William Sutherland, Jay Michael Barrie

Organ: Dr Irma Glen

Comments: The closing "Re-birth" part of this spoken word 3-LP box set is a bit of a revelation as the legendary Mr Heard (read "Storming heaven" for clues) invokes the Tibetan Book of the Dead and goes into a full trip/death/rebirth guide mode, preceding the Leary/Alpert/Metzner project by a full 3 years. Psychedelic history must be rewritten! The occasional music consists of crudely recorded church organ chords upon which classically trained vocalists spell out advise to the "nobly born" limbo traveller. Heard doesn't explicitly mention psychedelic drugs on the LP, but the unexpected psychout in the third part only makes sense if the listener would drop acid between LP #2 & 3. Those who weren't in on this secret must have thought it one weird LP back then. "Re-birth" was the last recording he ever made, written during 3 months in Hawaii.

The first two discs - Survival & Growth - are more lecture-oriented and fairly entertaining, with Heard's voice sounding like an uptight professor, but the contents and purpose of his lectures are pretty far out. Like any acidhead he enjoys wordplay and long etymological parables that show how wrongheaded modern society is. Some of it is obviously influenced by the Bomb and the cold war. There is also a preoccupation with the process of ageing and the fate of senior citizens. Great testament to a brilliant man - they don't make'em like that anymore.
Record Label: Unsigned

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