Ralph Metzner
Ralph Metzner (May 18, 1936 – March 14, 2019) was a German-born American psychologist and psychotherapist recognized for pioneering research in psychedelics, consciousness studies, and transformative psychology.[1][2]
Born in Berlin to a publishing father and Scottish émigré mother amid World War II disruptions, Metzner earned a BA in philosophy and psychology from Oxford University before obtaining a PhD in clinical psychology from Harvard University.[2][3]
At Harvard, he collaborated with Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert (later Ram Dass) on the Psilocybin Project, conducting experiments to explore psilocybin's effects on perception and cognition, which contributed to early empirical insights into hallucinogens despite subsequent institutional backlash.[2][4]
Metzner co-authored the influential manual The Psychedelic Experience (1964), adapting the Tibetan Book of the Dead to guide psychedelic sessions, and edited Psychedelic Review to disseminate research findings.[2]
Post-Harvard, he authored over a dozen books, including Maps of Consciousness (1971) on comparative mystical states, Green Psychology (1999) linking ecological awareness to psyche transformation, and The Unfolding Self (1998) on personal growth processes, emphasizing shamanic and alchemical frameworks over mainstream therapeutic models.[2][5]
He co-founded the Green Earth Foundation to promote harmonizing human-nature relations through education and rituals, served as academic dean and professor emeritus at the California Institute of Integral Studies, and developed practices like "Vision Circles" for collective healing.[6][2]
Metzner's work bridged empirical psychedelic inquiry with cross-cultural spiritual traditions, influencing transpersonal psychology while maintaining a focus on direct experiential validation amid evolving scientific interest in entheogens.[5][4]