| Ian Stevenson | |
![]() Dr. Ian Stevenson
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| Born | October 31, 1918 Montreal, Canada |
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| Died | February 8, 2007 (aged 88) Charlottesville, Virginia |
| Residence | Charlottesville, Virginia |
| Citizenship | Canadian |
| Nationality | Canada |
| Ethnicity | Caucasian |
| Fields | Psychiatry |
| Institutions | University of Virginia |
| Alma mater | St. Andrews University, McGill University |
| Known for | Reincarnation research |
| Influences | Theosophy |
| Influenced | Dr. Bruce Greyson, Dr. Jim Tucker, Satwant Pasricha |
Ian Pretyman Stevenson, M.D., (born October 31, 1918, in Montreal, Canada, died February 8, 2007, in Charlottesville, Virginia), was a Canadian psychiatrist. His research included reincarnation claims, near-death experiences, apparitions (death-bed visions), the mind-brain problem, and survival of the human personality after death.[1]
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Ian Stevenson was raised in Ottawa, where his father was the Canadian correspondent for the New York Times and his mother influenced her son with an interest in Theosophy. Stevenson studied at St. Andrews University in Scotland and at McGill University in Montreal, where he received a B.S. in 1942 and an M.D. in 1943, graduating at the top of his class.[2] In the 1950s, inspired by a meeting with Aldous Huxley, he became a pioneer in the medical study of the effects of LSD.[3]
Stevenson was the founder of scientific research into reincarnation and was best known for collecting and meticulously researching cases of children who seem to recall past lives without the need for hypnosis. After Professor Stevenson published his first paper on reincarnation in 1960, the inventor Chester Carlson funded his first field visits to India and Sri Lanka. When Carlson died in 1968, he left $1 million to endow a Chair at the University of Virginia, and a further $1 million for Stevenson himself to continue his research into reincarnation.[3]
In 1967, Stevenson was appointed as Director of the Division of Personality Studies (later renamed Division of Perceptual Studies) (DOPS) and, for a period was also Head of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Virginia.[2]
Stevenson went on to conduct additional field research about reincarnation in Africa, Alaska, British Columbia, Burma, India, South America, Lebanon, Turkey, and many other places. The children studied usually started recalling their past life story between the ages of two and four, yet seem to have forgotten it by seven or eight. There were frequent mentions of having died a violent death, and apparently clear memories of the mode of death.[3] Stevenson also gathered testimonies as well as medical records of information on birthmarks, birth defects, and other physical evidence for reincarnation.[4]
Stevenson published only for the academic and scientific community, and his over 200 articles and several books—densely packed with research details and academic argument—are in places difficult for the average reader to follow. His research, over 3,000 study cases, provides evidence suggestive of reincarnation, though he himself was always careful to refer to them as "cases suggestive of reincarnation" or "cases of the reincarnation type."[2]
Professor Stevenson himself recognized one fundamental flaw in his argument for reincarnation: the absence of any evidence of a physical process by which a personality could survive death and travel to another body.[2] Further, some have questioned his methodology and objectivity in drawing conclusions from his research.[5][6]
Professor Stevenson retired in 2002, leaving his work to successors led by Dr. Bruce Greyson. Dr. Jim Tucker, a child psychiatrist, is continuing Ian Stevenson's work with children, focusing on North American cases.[2]
Stevenson married Margaret Pertzoff in 1985. (His previous wife, Octavia Reynolds, died in 1983.) Professor Stevenson died of pneumonia at the Blue Ridge Retirement community in Charlottesville, Virginia, on February 8, 2007.[2]
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