Search results
Helen Cohn Schucman (born Helen Dora Cohn, July 14, 1909 – February 9, 1981) was an American clinical psychologist and research psychologist. She was a professor of medical psychology at Columbia University in New York from 1958 until her retirement in 1976.
May 15, 2014 · Frankfurt's higher regional court this week ruled that the late American psychologist Helen Schucman, and not Jesus Christ, should be regarded the legal author of a book that Schucman claimed...
A Course in Miracles (also referred to as ACIM or the Course) is a 1976 book by Helen Schucman. The underlying premise is that the greatest "miracle" is the act of simply gaining a full "awareness of love's presence" in a person's life.
In 1975 at the request of Kenneth Wapnick, Helen Schucman expanded and updated a self-written literary version of her remarkable life, an autobiography she felt would offer a satisfactory but unpublished biographical account of herself.
Considered one of the miracles of the Century, A Course in Miracles is now a phenomenal, quiet bestseller worldwide. Helen Schucman, Ph.D., was a most unlikely person to scribe A Course in Miracles, as was William Thetford, Ph.D., the person to assist her.
Autobiography of Dr. Helen Cohn Schucman. Download Helen’s autobiography (pdf format): English. Spanish. In 1975, at the request of Dr. Kenneth Wapnick, Helen’s trusted friend and colleague, she expanded and updated a life story that she had originally composed many years before.
Helen Schucman, the psychologist and channel who received the material later incorporated into A Course in Miracles (ACIM), the most successful channelled work of the late twentieth century, was born Helen Cohn, the daughter of Sigmund Cohn, a chemist.