Jacobo Grinberg
Jacobo Grinberg | |
---|---|
Born | Jacobo Grinberg Zylberbaum December 12, 1946 Mexico City, Mexico |
Disappeared | December 8, 1994 (aged 47) |
Status | Missing for 29 years, 11 months and 1 day |
Jacobo Grinberg Zylberbaum (born 1946), known as Jacobo Grinberg, is a Mexican scientist, neurophysiologist and psychologist who disappeared in December 1994. He studied Mexican shamanism, Eastern disciplines, meditation, astrology and telepathy, using his own interpretation of a scientific method. He wrote more than 50 books about these subjects.[1]
Biography
[edit]Jacobo Grinberg-Zylberbaum was born in Mexico City in 1946. Grinberg decided to study the human mind when he was 12 years old, after his mother died from a brain tumor. He studied psychology at the Faculty of Psychology of UNAM.[2] In 1970, he went to New York City to study psychophysiology at the Brain Research Institute. He earned a Ph.D. at the E. Roy John Laboratory.[2] His Ph.D. focused on the electrophysiological effects of geometric stimuli on the human brain.
When he went back to Mexico, he founded a laboratory of psychophysiology at the Universidad Anáhuac. He installed another laboratory of this kind in UNAM in the late 1970s. He founded the Instituto Nacional para el Estudio de la Conciencia (INPEC) in 1987,[1] financed by UNAM and CONACYT. Jacobo published several of his books through INPEC.[2] Grinberg wrote more than 50 books about brain activity, witchcraft, shamanism, telepathy, and meditation.[1]
Grinberg put his reputation as a scientist in danger when he tried to use the scientific method in shamanism studies.[3] He combined the two in his professional work, always trying to understand the "magic world."[1] Grinberg attempted to change the way that the relationship between science and consciousness is understood. His work was rejected by fellow scientists as "psi assumption", the premise that any deviation from chance represents a case of telepathy.[4]
Disappearance
[edit]Since December 8, 1994, Jacobo Grinberg has been missing. On December 12, his family prepared a party for him to celebrate his 48th birthday, but he did not show up.[1] It was common for him to make spontaneous travels or just not answer his phone for days, which is why his disappearance did not seem odd to his family in the beginning.[1] There are many conspiracy theories surrounding Grinberg's disappearance. Ominously, exactly one year later, his second wife, Teresa, also mysteriously disappeared. Apart from a possible sighting made by a worker at a gas station in New Mexico, the couple have not been seen or heard from since.[5]
The Sintergy Theory
[edit]Grinberg's sintergy theory states that there is a continuous space of energy and the common human can only perceive a part of it. The result of this process is what everyone understands as "reality".[6] This theory tries to answer the question of the creation of the experience.[3] The book where it is mentioned, El Cerebro Consciente, was translated into seven languages.[7]
See also
[edit]- List of people who disappeared
- List of people from Morelos, Mexico
- TV series exploring a fictional account of Jacobo's disappearance
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Cherem S., Silvia (September 18, 1995). "Jacobo Grinberg, desaparecido". Reforma.
- ^ a b c "Faculty of Psychology UNAM". www.psicologia.unam.mx. Retrieved 2022-05-20.
- ^ a b Attie, Leah Bella (December 17, 1995). "No debemos olvidar". Reforma.
- ^ "Paul Clark's review of Entangled Minds". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2021-12-11.
- ^ Cuarto Milenio Spanish television mysteries program; 21/04/2024; Cuatro (TV channel)
- ^ Martínez González, Roberto (2007). "Lo que el chamanismo nos dejó: Cien años de estudios chamánicos en México y Mesoamérica". Anales de Antropología.
- ^ Jose (2021-09-03). "Nada. Por Oriol Pérez Treviño". nosolocine (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-12-13.
- 1946 births
- 1990s missing person cases
- Mexican psychologists
- Mexican people of Russian-Jewish descent
- Mexican people of German-Jewish descent
- Mexican Jews
- Missing people
- Missing person cases in Mexico
- People from Mexico City
- Mexican people of Jewish descent
- 20th-century psychologists
- 20th-century Mexican scientists
- 20th-century Mexican writers
- 20th-century Mexican male writers
- 20th-century Mexican Jews