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Amanda Feilding, Lady Neidpath
New: Can Illegal Drugs Help Depression? Arran Frood interviews Amanda Neidpath. The Times - 23rd August, 2008.
Ketamine for depression and LSD for improving brain power; meet the lady who funds the science that no-one else will do, Amanda Feilding is on a mission to unlock the secrets of the mind
Watch a short clip of Amanda Neidpath's participation on BBC2's Horizon: Is Alcohol Worse than Ecstasy? aired in February 2008.
To watch the whole programme, click here
Amanda in the Beauchamp Club Journal
Amanda Feilding, Lady Neidpath, has had a life long interest in consciousness and its altered states, and is dedicated to furthering the understanding of this still elusive subject. In the early 1960s she studied mysticism and comparative religions at Oxford with Professor R.C. Zaehner, and has since been engaged in the independent study of psychology and neurophysiology ever since.
Amanda originally set up the Foundation to Further Consciousness in the 1990s. In 2000, it was superseded by the Beckley Foundation, which focused more on the science of drug use and the related policy dilemmas, as part of a broader investigation of consciousness and its changing states. The work of the Beckley Foundation reflects Amanda's own position of being interdisciplinary, respecting no borders between science, religion, philosophy, history and politics.
Psychoactive substances have been used since the beginning of human culture as a means of altering consciousness. The use and misuse of such substances has been increasing exponentially in nearly all modern societies, demanding more research into:
- the neurophysiology underlying the effects of the different drugs
- the psychology of why people use drugs
- the societal impact that the use of these substances has
- how best to regulate the use of drugs in order to minimise harm
The Foundation aims to conduct scientific research into the effects that these substances have on the human brain (a field long restricted by their illegal status), and to analyse the effectiveness of current policy with a view to identifying improved methods of regulation.
In recent years, Amanda has taken part in different conferences where she has given the following talks:
Mind States II - Berkeley, California (May 2001), ' Blood & Consciousness 'The Search for Expanded Consciousness from Paleolithic to Modern Man
Exploring Consciousness Conference - Bath (June 2004),'How Altered States of Consciousness Shape Society' or Listen to Amanda's Talk on Mp3.
Trialogue III - Beckley Park, Oxford (December 2004), ' Consciousness & Psychedelics'
International Symposium on Albert Hofmann's 100th Birthday - Basel (January 2006), 'LSD, Precious Key of Neuroscience '
Amanda runs the Beckley Foundation from her Oxfordshire home, Beckley Park. She is married to Jamie Neidpath and has two sons, Rock and Cosmo.
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