John Wren-Lewis was a British-born scientist who taught at universities in Great Britain and the United States of America. He became known for his publications ranging over the fields of science, psychology, education and religion. He played a leading part in the so-called "Death of God" movement in Britain. In later life, after a traumatic near-death experience in Thailand in 1983, he wrote and taught about the meaning of mysticism and a broad spectrum of spiritual teachings.
John and Ann left the US to undertake three years of extended travel to India and the Far East. They spent the year 1982 together in Malaysia. Earlier, in her publications relating to dream theory, Ann Faraday had cited writings of Kilton Stewart, who had seen great potential in what he had called "Senoi dream theory", and similarly Patricia Garfield referred to techniques of the Senoi when describing her work on dreams. However, Faraday and Wren-Lewis did not find any evidence supporting the use of dream control education in local culture. In 1983, travelling with Ann, he was nearly poisoned to death in Thailand in the course of an attempt of robbery and underwent a near-death experience which profoundly changed his world view, and which has since been cited as a well-known example of experience of transcendent consciousness. Having been a convinced sceptic up to that point, he changed perspective. He said of the movie Fearless by Peter Weir that it conveyed "the actual feeling of a dimension beyond the life of space and time". He has described his changed view of perception in the words:
Australia and death
In 1984 the couple moved to Australia. He later said of himself that at that moment he was "still reeling" from his experience of a year before. He became honorary associate at the Faculty of Religious Studies at the University of Sydney. He and Ann Faraday together wrote a book The 9:15 to Nirvana about his near-death experience. As recorded in the Ryerson Index, he died on 25 June 2006 at Shoalhaven, New South Wales, aged 82 years.
Views
After his near-death experience, Wren-Lewis was no longer a sceptic of mysticism as such, yet remained critical of endeavours aimed at attaining personal growth and spiritual awakening by following existing paths of practice, in particular when undertaken with the aid of a guru. His change in viewpoint was reflected in his later work: The psychologist Imants Barušs has interpreted this as a notion of a pre-physical substrate with similarity to the implicate order, as it has been postulated by theoretical physicistsDavid Bohm and Basil Hiley. In his book review of Ken Wilber's book Grace and Grit: Sprirituality and Healing in the Life and Death of Treya Killam Wilber, he wrote:
Publications
;Books:
John Wren-Lewis: What shall we tell the children?, Constable, 1971,
Charles Rycroft, Geoffrey Gorer, Anthony Storr, John Wren-Lewis, Peter Lomas: Psychoanalysis Observed, Edited with an introduction by Charles Rycroft, Coward-McCann, 1967 –
C.F.D. Moule, John Wren-Lewis, D.A. Pond, P.R. Baelz: Faith, Fact and Fantasy, Westminster Press, 1966
;Articles:
John Wren-Lewis: The implications of Near-Death Experiences for Understanding Post-Traumatic Growth, Psychological Inquiry, vol. 15 no. 1, 2004
John Wren-Lewis: . First appeared in IONS Review No. 54, December 2000 – February 2001, pp. 16–19
John Wren-Lewis: Death Knell of the Guru System? Perfectionism Versus Enlightenment, Journal of Humanistic Psychology Spring 1994, vol. 34 no. 2, pp. 46–61,,
John Wren-Lewis: Avoiding the Columbus Confusion: An Ockhamish View of Near-Death Research, Guest Editorial, Springer, Journal of Near-Death Studies, 1992, vol. 11 no. 2, pp. 75–81,,
John Wren-Lewis: The Darkness of God. A Personal Report on Consciousness Transformation Through an Encounter with Death, Journal of Humanistic Psychology Spring 1988, vol. 28 no. 2 pp. 105–122,,
John Wren-Lewis: Resistance to the study of the paranormal, Journal of Humanistic Psychology vol. 14 no. 2, Springer 1974, pp. 41–48,,
John Wren-Lewis: Faith in the technological future, Futures, vol. 2 no. 3, September 1970, pp. 258–262
John Wren-Lewis: The Passing of Puritanism I, Critical Quarterly, vol. 5 no. 4, pp. 295–306, December 1963