We are please to be able to provide this unifying link. As life on Earth becomes both global and holistic, in the sense that what was specialized before is now merging in a unified understanding, there is an important need and movement to merge science and Spirit. Charles Tart, Ph.D., is providing a great service with TASTE and everything it means. We hope you will enjoy it!

 

THE ARCHIVES OF SCIENTISTS' TRANSCENDENT EXPERIENCES (TASTE)

http://www.issc-taste.org
 

Over the years many scientists, once they've realized I'm a safe person to talk to, have told me about unusual and transcendent experiences they've had. Too often I'm the first and only person they've ever spoken to about their experiences, for fear of ridicule from their colleagues and adverse, prejudicial effects on their career. Such fears have, unfortunately, too much of a basis in fact. It's not that there are a lot of scientists with nasty intentions deliberately trying to suppress their colleagues, it's just the social conditioning of our times. I want to change that, and I ask your help in doing so.

Scientists today often occupy a social role like that of "high priests," telling laypeople and each other what is and isn't "real," and consequently what is and isn't valuable and sane. Unfortunately, the dominant materialistic and reductionistic psychosocial climate of contemporary science (what sociologists long ago named scientism, an attitude different from the essential process of science), rejects and suppresses a priori both having and sharing transcendent, transpersonal and altered states (or "spiritual" and "psychic," to use common words, in spite of their too vague connotations) experiences.

From my perspective as a psychologist, though, this prejudicial suppression and rejection psychologically harms and distorts both scientists' and laypersons' transcendent (and other) potentials, and also inhibits the development of a genuine scientific understanding of the full spectrum of consciousness. Denial of any aspects of our nature, whatever their ultimate ontological status, is never psychologically or socially healthy.

The Archives of Scientists' Transcendent Experiences (TASTE), that I have just opened, is intended to help change this restricted and pathological climate through the operation of a World Wide Web site in a journal form which will allow scientists from all fields - from anthropology through botany through mathematics through physics through psychology through zoology, to name just a few - to share their personal transcendent experiences in a safe, anonymous, but quality controlled space that almost all scientists and the general public have ready access to. Specifically TASTE will, to various degrees:

Please take a look at the TASTE site. If you find it valuable, please pass this information on to friends and colleagues. I have no budget for advertising, so must depend on word of mouth to get this information around.

If you have a web site of your own that it would be suitable to link from to TASTE, thank you! Feel free to copy one of the TASTE experiences as an example on your web site, if you like.

In terms of more conventional, slower publicity, if you can recommend any journals I should send notices to, please let me know. If you are the editor of any publication, you have my permission (and thanks!) to print this notice in your publication. Thank you!

 Charles T. Tart, Ph.D., Editor
Professor Emeritus, Psychology
     University of California at Davis
Professor, Core Faculty
     Institute of Transpersonal Psychology, Palo Alto, CA
 
 

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