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Grof

Grof, Gróf may refer to:

People:

  • Andrew Grove
  • Bela "Bert" Grof (1921-2011), an Australian forage researcher of Hungarian origin
  • Gróf András István (born 1936), a Hungarian-American businessman and scientist
  • Dávid Gróf (born 1989), a Hungarian association footballer
  • Ödön Gróf (1915 – 1997), a Hungarian swimmer who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics
  • Paul Grof, a psychiatrist and member of the World Health Organization committee that evaluated ecstasy
  • Stanislav Grof (born 1931), a Czech psychiatrist

Other:

  • Grossflammenwerfer, a nickname for a German flamethrower of the First World War

Usage examples of "grof".

By taking the intersubjective space for granted, then the isolated individual subject appears to be having a series of monological experiences, and Grof has given us the phenomenology of many of those experiences.

But these three cosmologies resemble with an awkward, almost embarrassing precision the human perinatal experiences of Grofs Stages 1,2, and 3 plus 4, respectively.

By taking the intersubjective space for granted, then the isolated individual subject appears to be having a series of monological experiences, and Grof has given us the phenomenology of many of those experiences.

But, for the record, let me state quite clearly that although for various reasons I will probably never put quite the same emphasis on F-0 that Grof does, I nevertheless endorse entirely his general conclusions about the nature, the subphases, the formations and malformations, the pathologies, and the possible types of influence of this crucial fulcrum.

However, using my map, if typical individuals at the ordinary ego indeed begin to regress, this map would predict the same general sequence as the Grof map: it would predict ego, Freudian, birth, transpersonal.

Captain Picard and Enrak Grof beamed down to aquiet, nondescript corridor in the tail of the collider.

As Reynolds (1994) summarizes the Grofian view: "The clinical data Grof has collected during therapy sessions of LSD and holotropic breathwork indicates a very fluid accessibility to all the domains of consciousness.

He heard footsteps clomping up the ladder, and he turned to see the rotund, beaming face of Enrak Grof.

Grof has found (and this I find extremely interesting) that the differing imageries of the various world religions tend to appear and to support his patients variously during the successive stages of their sessions.