Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Jan Ehrenwald

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Died
  
15 June 1988

Books
  
The ESP experience, New dimensions of deep analysis, Anatomy of Genius: Split Brains and Global Minds

Jan Ehrenwald (13 March 1900 – 15 June 1988) was a Czech-American psychiatrist and psychotherapist, most known for his work in the field of parapsychology. His work largely focused on extrasensory perception and its supposed implications for psychoanalysis.

Contents

Career

Ehrenwald studied medicine at the University of Prague. He taught psychiatry at the University of Vienna (1927-1931), University Hospital of Brooklyn at Long Island College Hospital (1948-1950) and State University of New York (1950-1953). He was a member of the Society for Psychical Research and was a fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine.

Reception

Ehrenwald's belief that telepathy had been successfully demonstrated was not accepted by the scientific community. Critics state that Ehrenwald's statements were based on conjecture, not solid facts.

His research was well received by parapsychologists. Arthur Deikman, J. B. Rhine and Ian Stevenson have positively reviewed Ehrenwald's books.

Works

  • Telepathy and Medical Psychology, W. W. Norton, 1948
  • From Medicine Man to Freud, 1956
  • Psychotherapy: Myth and Method, 1966
  • New Dimensions of Deep Analysis, 1975
  • History of Psychotherapy: From Magic Healing to Encounter, Jason Aronson, 1976
  • The ESP Experience: A Psychiatric Validation, 1978
  • References

    Jan Ehrenwald Wikipedia