-Caveat Lector-

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This fellow was a buddy of Timothy Leary, and also did LSD research.

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F. X. Barron, Who Studied Science of Creativity, Is Dead at 80

October 13, 2002
By ERICA GOODE






Frank X. Barron, a psychologist whose work on creativity
influenced a generation of researchers, died on Oct. 6 in
Santa Cruz, Calif. He was 80.

The cause was complications from a fall, his family said.


Psychology has become increasingly specialized over the
years, but Dr. Barron, an emeritus professor at the
University of California at Santa Cruz, stood out as a
scholar who blended the scientific study of personality
with the less readily quantified insights of philosophy,
religion and the arts, his colleagues said.

He was best known for the intensive studies of highly
creative people - writers, architects, mathematicians -
that he and his colleagues carried out in the 1950's and
1960's at the Institute for Personality Assessment and
Research, more widely known as IPAR, at the University of
California at Berkeley.

Creative people in the various fields, ranked for their
originality by their peers, were brought to the institute
for four or five days of rigorous interviews and extensive
psychological testing.

Dr. Barron once described the highly creative person as
"both more primitive and more cultivated, more destructive,
a lot madder and a lot saner than the average person."

In the studies at IPAR, the most creative participants, Dr.
Barron and his colleagues found, appeared highly neurotic
on personality tests but also showed high levels of
ego-strength, a trait that allowed them to channel their
pathology into creative work. They resisted conformity and
demonstrated a willingness to take risks.

Significant creative advances, Dr. Barron held, required a
high tolerance for disorder and a preference for
complexity, combined with the ability to extract order from
chaos.

Dr. Barron's own style, his colleagues noted, reflected
many of these characteristics.

"He worked in a way that might seem, if you hadn't followed
it for very long, to be casual and without any particular
focus," said Dr. Harrison Gough, an emeritus professor at
Berkeley who worked with Dr. Barron. "But after a few years
it became clear that there was an inner compass that guided
him and continued to guide him for all of his life,
really."

Two of Dr. Barron's books, "Creativity and Psychological
Health" (1963) and "Creativity and Personal Freedom"
(1968), are considered classics in the field.

He also developed the Barron Ego-Strength Scale and other
personality tests still in wide use.

At Berkeley, Dr. Barron, a graduate school classmate of
Timothy Leary, helped conduct some of the earliest
experiments with psychedelic drugs, including psilocybin
and LSD.

At the time, LSD was legal, and its use was confined
primarily to research settings. Dr. Barron later expressed
great ambivalence about those years and about the
widespread use of LSD, his daughter Brigid Barron said.

"He never would have anticipated that so many people would
be hurt by drugs," she said.

Dr. Barron's friends included not only leading
psychologists like Dr. Paul Meehl and Dr. Donald McKinnon,
the director of IPAR, but also many counterculture
luminaries of the 1960's, including Dr. Leary, Allen
Ginsberg and Michael Murphy, the founder of the Esalen
Institute, the healing retreat with sulphur hot springs in
Big Sur, Calif.

"He was always someone who straddled the sciences and the
humanities," said Dr. Alfonso Montuori, a philosopher at
the California Institute of Integral Studies.

Francis Xavier Barron was born in Lansford, Pa. He
graduated from La Salle University in 1942 and began a
graduate program at the University of Minnesota, but his
studies were interrupted by the war. He served as an Army
medic in Europe.

In 1948, he completed his master's degree at Minnesota, and
two years later he received his doctorate from Berkeley. He
continued his work as a researcher at IPAR, leaving to join
the faculty at Santa Cruz in 1969.

In addition to his daughter Brigid, of Palo Alto, Calif.,
Dr. Barron is survived by his wife, Nancy Jean Barron; a
son, Frank Charles Xavier Barron; and another daughter,
Anthea Rose Maeve Barron, all of Santa Cruz.

In the last days of his life, Dr. Barron began planning a
book about attitudes toward death. One chapter, Brigid
Barron said, was to be about "how hard it is to live when
you're dying."

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/13/obituaries/13BARR.html?ex=1035511051&ei=1&en=9f2a3f434ea9efdf



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