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      Acid Brothers: Henry Beecher, Timothy Leary, and the psychedelic of the century.

      Perspectives in biology and medicine
      Project Muse

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          Abstract

          Henry Knowles Beecher, an icon of human research ethics, and Timothy Francis Leary, a guru of the counterculture, are bound together in history by the synthetic hallucinogen lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD). Both were associated with Harvard University during a critical period in their careers and of drastic social change. To all appearances the first was a paragon of the establishment and a constructive if complex hero, the second a rebel and a criminal, a rogue and a scoundrel. Although there is no evidence they ever met, Beecher's indirect struggle with Leary over control of the 20th century's most celebrated psychedelic was at the very heart of his views about the legitimate, responsible investigator. That struggle also proves to be a revealing bellwether of the increasingly formalized scrutiny of human experiments that was then taking shape.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Perspect Biol Med
          Perspectives in biology and medicine
          Project Muse
          1529-8795
          0031-5982
          2016
          : 59
          : 1
          Article
          S1529879516100080
          10.1353/pbm.2016.0019
          27499488
          121b5644-ab9a-4f60-9f20-d9ce9f418832
          History

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