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Sam Harris

Author and neuroscientist

Profile – Sam Harris (b. 1967)

Trained as both philosopher and neuroscientist, Sam Harris has a PhD in cognitive neuroscience from UCLA; has written books on religion and spirituality, meditation, morality, and free will; and runs the Making Sense podcast and the WakingUp app. He is fiercely critical of organised religion and along with Dennett and Dawkins is considered one of the ‘Four Horsemen’ of the new atheism, although, unlike them, he is a long-term meditator, believing that some Buddhist and Hindu traditions offer valuable empirical insights into consciousness. Experiences with psychedelic drugs, including LSD, psilocybin, and MDMA, led him to leave Stanford in his second year to seek spiritual insight without drugs. Travelling to India, he pursued strenuous methods of meditation, including a year on silent retreat, concluding that the key aim is to look into the sense of being a separate self until it dissolves. He thinks that free will is an illusion, that morality can be studied scientifically, that everything we do is for the purpose of altering consciousness, and that Brazilian jiu-jitsu (though having little to do with consciousness) is surprisingly relevant to the illusoriness of the ego.

More biographical information

Sam Harris’s website

Wikipedia

Facebook

Twitter

Publications

His books on Google Books

Quotes on Goodreads

Selected publications relevant to consciousness

Harris, S. (2012). Free will. New York: Free Press. Google Books preview here.

Harris, S. (2014). Waking up: A guide to spirituality without religion. London: Bantam Press. Google Books preview here.

Harris, S. (2014). The marionette’s lament: A response to Daniel Dennett. Full text here.

Video

YouTube channel

Science can answer moral questions. TED talk, February 2010

Contributions on mindfulness and other topics at Big Think

Audio

Waking Up podcast