David Jay Brown

David Jay Brown (born 1961) is an American writer and scientific researcher.

Brown is the author of four interview collections with controversial scientists and artists,[1][2][3][4] two science fiction novels,[5][6] and a health science book.[7] Brown's scientific research has been in the areas of behavioral neuroscience,[8][9] psychic phenomena,[10][11] unusual animal behavior prior to earthquakes,[12] and medical marijuana[13] He has written dozens of popular essays, magazine articles, and scientific papers, and has made contributions to numerous books.

Contents

Life

Brown was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey in 1961, and he grew up in the nearby town of Somerville. He moved to Tampa, Florida in 1980 to study psychology at the University of South Florida, and attended five other universities in California, New York, and France as part of his formal education. He transferred to the University of Southern California in 1981, and studied at l'université de Dijon in France in 1983. He did his graduate work in psychobiology and behavioral neuroscience at the University of California, Santa Cruz (1984–85), New York University (1985–86), and the University of Southern California (1989–90). Brown currently lives in the Santa Cruz mountains of California.

Career

Brown holds a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of Southern California and a master's degree in psychobiology from New York University. He conducted research in electrical brain stimulation at NYU from 1985–1986, and in learning and memory at the Hedco Neuroscience lab at USC from 1989-1990.

Brown's first book, Brainchild — one of the very first science fiction novels about nanotechnology — was published in 1988 by New Falcon Publications. Mavericks of the Mind, his second book and first collection of interviews, was published in 1993 by Crossing Press. Voices from the Edge, his second collection of interviews, was published in 1995 by the Crossing Press. Both of these books were done with co-interviewer Rebecca McClen Novick.

From 1996-1999 Brown researched the unexplained powers of animals with British biologist Rupert Sheldrake. This work culminated in three scientific papers and was summarized in Dr. Sheldrake's books Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home (Crown, 1999)[14] and The Sense of Being Stared At (Crown, 2003).[15]

In 2002 Brown earned a Certified Massage Practitioner (C.M.P.) certification in massage therapy at Twin Lakes College in Santa Cruz, California.

In 2005 Palgrave Macmillan published Brown's third collection of interviews, Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse. His fourth collection of interviews, Mavericks of Medicine, was published in 2006 by Smart Publications. Brown's seventh book, Detox with Oral Chelation--a health book about chelation therapy, which he coauthored with Garry Gordon, M.D.--was published by Smart Publications in 2008.

In 1993, at the University of California, Santa Cruz, Brown was moderator for "Mavericks of the Mind Live!", a panel debate with Robert Anton Wilson, Stephen LaBerge, Nick Herbert, Carolyn Mary Kleefeld, and others. In 1994, Brown was moderator for "Techno & Psyche", a panel debate with Timothy Leary, John Lilly, Laura Huxley, and others at UCLA. Both of these events were recorded and produced on DVD by Sound Photosynthesis in Mill Valley, California. Brown has appeared as a lecturer and workshop leader at many events and institutions that explore mind sciences and the frontiers of consciousness, including the University of California, Santa Cruz, the Starwood Festival in upstate New York, the Brain and Mind Symposium in Los Angeles, the Health & Life Enrichment Expo in Pasadena, the Electronic Cafe in Santa Monica, and MAPS Benefits in San Francisco. He frequently lectures on the psychology of maverick thinkers and taught a series of workshops in "The Science of Sex and Drugs" with his colleague Annie Sprinkle at the Harvey Milk Institute in San Francisco in 2002 and 2003.

Brown has appeared on numerous television shows, speaking about smart drugs, health & nutrition, the future of technology, unusual animal behavior prior to earthquakes, how drugs effect sex, and psychedelic drug research. He appeared on the PBS show "Nature" (Extraordinary Cats), the HBO show "Real Sex" (episode # 22, about RealDolls), the BBC and the Discovery Channel's "Animal X" (Psychic Animals), the Fox show "A Current Affair" (about smart drugs, on May 3, 1992), and ViaCom's The Montel Williams Show (about smart drugs, on July 10, 1991).

Brown has also written for many popular magazines and scientific journals, including Scientific American Mind,[16]Nature Medicine,[17] Wired,[18] Tricycle,[19] The Sun, Mondo 2000, High Times,[20][21][22] Fate, Neuroscience Abstracts, the Journal of Parapsychology, Hustler,[23] the International Synergy Journal, the Journal of Psychical Research, and Magical Blend. He is sometimes Guest Editor of the MAPS Bulletin--he has done a series of special theme Bulletins for MAPS (Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies)--and is part of the Erowid Expert Network. He has also written dozens of health science articles for various nutritional supplement company publications—including Smart Publications, Health Freedom Nutrition, Life Enhancement, and International Anti-Aging Systems—and is the author of two health science books.[24][25]

Books

Foreign Translations

Contributions to Other Books and Publications

Notes

  1. ^ Brown, David Jay. Mavericks of the Mind: Conversations on for the New Millennium. Crossing Press, 1993
  2. ^ Brown, David Jay. Voices from the Edge: Conversations With Jerry Garcia, Ram Dass, Annie Sprinkle, Matthew Fox, Jaron Lanier, & Others. Crossing Press, 1995
  3. ^ Brown, David Jay. Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse: Contemplating the Future with Noam Chomsky, George Carlin, Deepak Chopra, Rupert Sheldrake, and Others. Palgrave Macmillan, 2005
  4. ^ Brown, David Jay. Mavericks of Medicine: Conversations on the Frontiers of Medical Research. Smart Publications, 2006
  5. ^ Brown, David Jay. Brainchild. New Falcon Publications, 1988
  6. ^ Brown, David Jay. Virus: The Alien Strain. New Falcon Publications, 1999
  7. ^ Brown, David Jay. Detox with Oral Chelation: Protecting Yourself from Lead, Mercury, & Other Environmental Toxins. Smart Publications, 2009
  8. ^ R.E. Clark, D.J. Brown, R.F. Thompson & D.G. Lavond. "Reacquisition of Classical Conditioning After Removal of Cerebellar Cortex in Dutch Belted Rabbits." Society for Neuroscience Abstracts, vol 16, 1990, p 271.
  9. ^ D.J. Brown. "Paradoxically Motivating Effects of Electrical Brain Stimulation Delivered Via a Single Electrode and Voltage Intensity: A Methodological Review." NYU Master's Thesis, 1986.
  10. ^ David J. Brown and Rupert Sheldrake. "Perceptive Pets: A Survey in North-West California." Journal of the Society for Psychical Research , vol. 62, no. 852, July, 1998, pp 396-406.
  11. ^ David Jay Brown and Rupert Sheldrake. "The Anticipation of Telephone Calls." The Journal of Parapsychology , vol. 65, no. 2, June, 2001, pp 145-156.
  12. ^ Brown, David Jay. "Etho-Geological Forecasting: Unusual Animal Behavior & Earthquake Prediction." www.animalsandearthquakes.com/etho-geo.htm
  13. ^ David Jay Brown, Kenneth Michael Smuland, and Valerie Corral. "Marijuana and AIDS: A Four-Year Study" O'Shaughnessy's Journal of the California Cannabis Research Medical Group, Winter/Spring 2005, www.ccrmg.org/journal/05spr/aids.html
  14. ^ Rupert Sheldrake. Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home: And Other Unexplained Powers of Animals, Crown, 1999.
  15. ^ Rupert Sheldrake. The Sense of Being Stared At: And Other Unexplained Powers of the Human Mind, Crown 2003.
  16. ^ David Jay Brown. "Psychedelic Healing?" Scientific American Mind, December/January, 2008, pp. 66-71.
  17. ^ Brown, David Jay. "The Validity of Alternative Medicine" Nature Medicine, vol. 14, no. 3, March, 2008, pp 238-9.
  18. ^ Brown, David Jay. "Electric Word: Pixel Jamming" Wired, December, 1993, pp 25.
  19. ^ Brown, David Jay. "Stroked by the Guru: An Interview with Ram Dass." Tricycle: The Buddhist Review, Winter, 1999, pp. 75-77.
  20. ^ Brown, David Jay. "On Curing Stupidity...and the FDA's War on Smart Drugs." High Times, September, 1992, pp. 38-41, 54-55.
  21. ^ Brown, David Jay. "Nova Terra Aphrodisia: Exploring the New Prosexual Pharmacology and the Art of Feeling Good." High Times, June, 1996, pp. 44-45, 56, 68.
  22. ^ Brown, David Jay. "Adventures with Mazatec Mint: Exploring the Mind-Bending World of Salvia divinorum." High Times, June, 2009, pp. 64-68.
  23. ^ Brown, David. "The ABCs of Erotic Alchemy: A User's Guide to Mixing Sex and Drugs." Hustler, April 2001, pp. 55-56.
  24. ^ David Jay Brown. Mavericks of Medicine: Conversations on the Frontiers of Medical Research. Smart Publications, 2006
  25. ^ David Jay Brown. Detox with Oral Chelation: Protecting Yourself from Lead, Mercury, & Other Environmental Toxins. Smart Publications, 2009

External links