Dr. John Mack Passes Away in London
Date: Tuesday, September 28 @ 13:23:08 CDT
Topic: Archive of stories pre April 2007


NORTHRIDGE (BlackVault) - September 28, 2004 - The Black Vault is deeply saddened to have learned that Dr. John Mack, legendary UFO and Alien Abduction researcher has passed away.

(Courtesy: Linda Moulton Howe: "John Edward Mack, M.D., was Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Cambridge Hospital, as well as Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer for his work on Lawrence of Arabia. Yesterday afternoon in London, he spoke before the T. E. Lawrence Society Symposium, in Oxford, England. According to Will Bueche, Communications Director for the John Mack Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Dr. Mack's presentation was so well-received that he was asked to do a second presentation yesterday evening. Afterward, he went with colleagues to dinner. He had called the family with whom he was staying after 10 p.m. to say he would arrive at their home around 11 p.m., London time. At 1 a.m., the London police confirmed that John Edward Mack, M. D., had been found dead on a street near the Symposium's location ­ apparently killed by a motor vehicle."

More details, when available, will be posted here:

http://www.bvalphaserver.com/article10230.html

But in the mean time, I have started a thread on my message forums for any and all fans to post your comments and letters to Dr. Mack and his family.

Throughout the past few weeks, I have had a lot of contact with the John Mack Institute. I feel so saddened by this news, as I have met with Dr. Mack numerous times in the past few years.

So, please, share your thoughts and experiences online with others. This will be then forward to the John Mack Institute and to Dr. Mack's family.

http://www.bvalphaserver.com/postp281079.html Also, please send any letters of condolences privately to john@greenewald.com with the subject "Dr. John Mack". I will be compiling ALL LETTERS and sending them to the appropriate location.

They can also be mailed to:

John Greenewald, Jr.
The Black Vault Headquarters
18127 Parthenia St. #105
Northridge, Ca. 91325

Thank you all for your support, and Dr. Mack will be sorely missed.


John Mack From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

John Edward Mack, M.D. (born October 4, 1929), professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer, considered to be a leading authority on the spiritual or transformational affects of alleged alien encounter experiences.

Mack received his medical degree from the Harvard Medical School (Cum Laude, 1955) after undergraduate study at Oberlin (Phi Beta Kappa, 1951). He is a graduate of the Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute and is Board certified in child and adult psychoanalysis.

The dominant theme of his life's work has been the exploration of how one's perceptions of the world affect one's relationships. He addressed this issue of "worldview" on the individual level in his early clinical explorations of dreams, nightmares and teen suicide, and in his biographical study of the life of British officer T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia), for which he received the Pulitzer Prize in biography in 1977.

Mack advocated that Western culture required a shift away from a purely materialist worldview (which he felt was responsible for the Cold War, the global ecological crisis, ethnonationalism and regional conflict) towards a transpersonal worldview which embraced certain elements of Eastern spiritual and philosophical traditions.

Mack's interest in the spiritual aspect of human experience has been compared by the New York Times to that of fellow Harvard alum William James, and like James, Mack became a controversial figure for his efforts to bridge spirituality and psychiatry.

This theme was taken to a controversial extreme in the early 1990s when Mack commenced his decade-plus study of 200 men and women who claimed that recurrent alien encounter experiences had affected the way they regarded the world, including a heightened sense of spirituality and environmental concern. Mack's interest in the spiritual or transformational aspects of people's alien encounters, and his suggestion that the experience of alien contact itself may be more spiritual than physical in nature - yet nonetheless real - set him apart from many of his contemporaries such as Budd Hopkins, who advocated the physical reality of aliens.

In 1994 the Dean of Harvard Medical School appointed a committee of peers to review Mack's clinical care and clinical investigation of the people who had shared their alien encounters with him (some of their cases were written of in Mack's 1994 book Abduction). After fourteen months of inquiry and amid growing questions from the academic community (including Harvard Professor of Law Alan Dershowitz) regarding the validity of Harvard's investigation of a tenured professor, Harvard issued a statement stating that the Dean had "reaffirmed Dr. Mack's academic freedom to study what he wishes and to state his opinions without impediment," concluding "Dr. Mack remains a member in good standing of the Harvard Faculty of Medicine."

Mack's explorations later broadened into the general consideration of the merits of an expanded notion of reality, one which allows for experiences that may not fit the Western materialist paradigm, yet deeply affect people's lives. His second (and final) book on the alien encounter experience, Passport to the Cosmos: Human Transformation and Alien Encounters (1999), was as much the culmination of his work with the "experiencers" of alien encounters (to whom the book is dedicated) as it was a philosophical treatise connecting the themes of spirituality and modern worldviews.

Trivia Mack is a student of Grof Holotropic Breathwork, a meditative technique developed by Stanislav Grof.

Mack's life and work was documented in the film Touched by Emmy-nominated filmmaker Laurel Chiten.





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