Jordan, Pacual (1902-ca. 1982)
Jordan, Pacual (1902-ca. 1982)
Physicist who was concerned with the relationship of physics, psychology, and parapsychology. Jordan was born on October 18, 1902, at Hanover, Germany, and studied at Göttingen University (Ph.D., 1924). He was professor of theoretical physics at the University of Rostock (1929-44) and later a professor of theoretical physics at the Universities of Berlin and Hamburg. Jordan conducted joint research with Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg in quantum mechanics and in 1942 won the Max Planck Medal for his work in physics. He also won the Gauss Medal of the German Physical Society in 1955.
Through the 1950s Jordan manifested an interest in parapsychology. He contributed articles to the Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, including one on "Quantum Field Theory." He was a member of the International Conference on Philosophy and Parapsychology, St. Paul de Vence, France, 1954, where he lectured on "New Trends in Physics and Their Relation to Parapsychology."
Sources:
Jordan, Pacual. "New Trends in Physics and Their Relation to Parapsychology." Parapsychology Foundation Newsletter (July-August 1955).
——. Verdrängung and Komplementarität (Repression and Complementarity). N.p., 1951.