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Talk:Harold L. Humes

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Untitled

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i removed the stub category and tried to put it into wiki bio format.Immaculata 05:16, 12 June 2007 (UTC) also added some published sources. more to come. the article needs more about his work, his books, his ideas.[reply]

I have started an outline of Doc's life events. Please feel free to add to what is here so far.

Kamileon (talk) 23:41, 1 February 2008 (UTC) Can someone make sense out of the philosophical views section? I don't even know where to start, it looks like someone else's work list. I can find references to Humes and anxiety-tension epidemics, but what do Fido and the microwave have to do with anything?[reply]

Im wondering if any of this would be of any use? http://www.drugs-forum.com/forum/showpost.php?p=78930&postcount=15 I cant find any documentation other than the posts in that thread. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 90.184.161.230 (talk) 19:36, 25 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Removal of Non-factual material

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Work

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I removed material posted on 31 October 2006 by "Oneseventy" for whom no User or Talk page exists. This was his (her?) first contribution to Wikipedia and the last was regarding Sexual addiction in June 2009.

The material in question is so grossly and obviously erroneous, I would tend to lack trust in any other unsourced material posted at this or any other article by "Oneseventy." I'm guessing the Humes material was derived from some very inaccurate oral history.

Although Lysergic acid diethylamide(LSD) was discovered by Albert Hoffman in 1938, patented by Sandoz in 1947, I believe, it was first introduced in the USA, possibly in 1953 by the CIA in its MKULTRA program into subjects without their informed consent. It may have been introduced by an experimenter at Stanford in 1960 or earlier, if memory serves. The Wikipedia article on Tim Leary indicates he didn't arrive at Harvard until 1959. Richard Alpert (Ram Dass) didn't graduate from Harvard until 1962, I think, though he was active in the experiments at least as early as 1961, I believe, as was Ralph Metzner. But Metzner was only 18 years old in 1954 and received his Ph.D from Harvard in 1962. Alpert was only 23 in 1954, so would have best been in graduate school at Wesleyan or Stanford, from which he received his PhD. He didn't teach at Harvard until after a stint at U.C. Berkeley. At about the same time, Dr. Sterling Bunnell, a psychiatrist at what was then the Langley Porter Clinic in San Francisco, conducted similar LSD experiments. Afterward Clinic changed its name and is now known as the Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute. Activist (talk) 17:04, 19 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]

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