You can edit almost every page by Creating an account. Otherwise, see the FAQ.

Roger A. Weir

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki


Roger A. Weir
BornRoger Allen Weir
October 14, 1940
Saginaw, Michigan, USA
💀DiedOctober 16, 2018 (aged 78)
Los Angeles, California, USAOctober 16, 2018 (aged 78)
🏳️ CitizenshipUnited States of America
💼 Occupation
🌐 Websitehttps://sharedpresencefoundation.org

Roger Allen Weir (October 14, 1940 – October 16, 2018) was an American scholar and lifelong educator.

Personal Life[edit]

Weir was the only child of Guy Edmond Weir (1914–1994) and Laura Edith Arnshek (1917–1993).[1][2] He was born and raised in Saginaw, Michigan where he attended Arthur Hill High School.[3]

Roger A. Weir and Martha Ann Ricketts were married July 6, 1968 in Alameda County, California – they were residents of Berkeley at the time.[4] Roger and Martha moved to Calgary in 1970 when Roger was recruited by Mount Royal College. In 1974, while living in Calgary, they adopted a newborn baby girl – Sara Nokomis Chellan Weir – who was of indigenous descent. In 1976 the family relocated to Los Angeles. Roger and Martha divorced on April 26, 1984 after more than fifteen years of marriage.[5] Their daughter Sara, 19 years old, was tragically murdered in September of 1993.

In approximately 1986 Weir married Karen Lou Storm (1940–2005). They divorced after six years of marriage in August of 1992.[6]

In 1993 Weir married Nesa Ronn.

Roger A. Weir died unexpectedly on October 16, 2018 at his residence in Los Angeles, only two days after his seventy-eighth birthday.

Education[edit]

Undergraduate Studies[edit]

Weir studied at the University of Wisconsin – Madison, 1958–1963, and graduated with a Bachelor’s of Science (B.Sc.) Degree.[7] He began his undergraduate studies with a focus on Engineering, but shifted mid-course to major in Philosophy. Two of his philosophy mentors at University of Wisconsin were Julius R. Weinberg (Medieval philosophy and Logic), and E. F. Kalin (Aesthetics and Existentialism).[8]

Graduate Studies[edit]

After graduating from University of Wisconsin – Madison, Weir relocated to San Francisco and conducted two years of self-study in architecture and Chinese culture. In preparation for pursuing a Master's Degree, Weir took the Graduate Record Exam (GRE) and scored in the 97th percentile. He applied and was accepted to the Master's program in Interdisciplinary Studies at San Francisco State College.

While attending San Francisco State, Weir was a graduate teaching assistant and had the rare opportunity to develop and teach courses in the Humanities department. It was there that he created and introduced several courses such as "An Inquiry on the History of the Book of Kells," and "Job and Faust: Two Faces of Evil." Weir had the opportunity to study philosophy under the guidance of Jacob Needleman. His Humanities under-professor was Rabbi Alvin Fine (1917–1999), and his academic advisor was Dr. Kai-yu Hsu (1922–1982). Amidst the rioting of 1969, San Francisco State had to be shut down, however, according to Weir’s own reports, he was picked to graduate in spite of the shutdown – in order to send the message that even in times of chaos education must prevail. He attended San Francisco State from 1965 to 1969 and earned both a Master's of Arts (M.A.) Degree and a lifetime California Teaching credential.[7] Additionally, he received a Chinese Scroll degree from Kai-Yu Hsu which was a symbol of Taoist competency to teach.

Extracurricular and Post-Graduate Studies[edit]

During the late 1970s – approximately from 1976 to 1979 – Weir stepped back from teaching. During this time, he studied Vajrayana Buddhism with Karma Thinly Rinpoche (a master of Tibetan Buddhism), Theravada Buddhism with Julius Weinberg, and he also studied other mystic and esoteric traditions. Around this same time period, Weir had plans to resume his studies and work with Dr. Kai–yu Hsu in the San Francisco Bay area but Kai-yu's tragic death in January 1982 due to a landslide in Tiburon prevented this from being realized.[9]

Career[edit]

Academic Professor (1969–1976)[edit]

After graduation from San Francisco State, Weir briefly taught at Chabot College and at the University of California, Berkeley – Extension. In the spring of 1970, he was recruited by Mount Royal College to design, develop, and teach a special interdisciplinary curriculum which would come to be known as ‘General Education: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Study of Man’.[10] Weir created a sixteen-part curriculum over the course of five years, and taught nine of these courses himself. These courses included Symbols and Myth courses amongst others.[10] A guest speaker in his World Mythology course was Hansens Bear Paw of the Siksika Nation. Weir opened his courses to Indigenous Canadians and was instrumental in educating the first Indigenous Canadians to receive degrees at Mount Royal College: Mavis Running Rabbit[11] and her husband Floyd Running Rabbit – grandson of Running Rabbit. While at Mount Royal, Weir achieved tenure. After six years at the school (1971-1976), Weir and his family decided to return to the United States relocating to Los Angeles.[12]

Bookseller (1976–1980)[edit]

After leaving his position at Mount Royal College in 1976, Weir took a break from teaching and became a bookseller. He established the bookstore Bodhisattva Books in conjunction with the College of Oriental Studies (in Los Angeles). Later he purchased Partridge Books (in Hollywood, Los Angeles) in approximately 1978 and operated it until about 1980 when he began lecturing at the Philosophical Research Library.[13] In this new role – as bookseller – Weir was in regular contact with authors from the Golden Age of Science Fiction – including, Theodore Sturgeon and A. E. van Vogt – and the unique Los Angeles creative milieu of the era.

Independent Educator (1980–2018)[edit]

In 1980, encouraged by Theodore Sturgeon to continue his teaching, Weir began lecturing in a number of venues across the Los Angeles metro area, including: The Philosophical Research Society, Whirling Rainbow,[14] Bruchion Center for Art and Gnosis,[15] the Phoenix Bookstore (Santa Monica), the Bodhi Tree Bookstore (West Hollywood),[16] among others. Weir lectured at the Philosophical Research Society from 1980–1990 while Manly P. Hall was still involved in the organization. He would lecture off and on at Whirling Rainbow from approximately 1983–1996.

With the death of his daughter Sara in 1993, Weir stopped teaching for a period of time. Then in 1994, he started teaching again with four lectures called Our New Aion in commemoration of the passing of his daughter Sara, in the Bodhi Tree Bookstore Meeting Room. This was the beginning of Weir’s association with the Bodhi Tree Bookstore.

Starting in January 1996, Weir taught every Saturday in the Bodhi Tree Bookstore Meeting Room until it closed in 2011, and the classes were entirely open to the public. During these years, Weir taught a number of different programs, including: Ecumene (1996–1997, a 2-year course that met weekly); The Learning Civilization (1998–2007, a 2–year course – presented in 2–year cycles – that met weekly); Jesus in Alexandria & Mary Magdalene (January–March 2008, 13 week course); Hermetic America (April–June 2008, 13 week course); Hermetic America Future (July–September 2008, 13 week course); Mary Magdalene & Jesus' Great Way: Shared Presence Transforms of Civilization and Species (October–December 2008, 13 week course); Homo Sapiens Stellaris: Star Wisdom Man (January–March 2009, 13 week course); Shared Presence (April–June 2009, 13 week course); Quintessential Dimensions of Consciousness: An Ecology of Four Dimensions in Complementarity in Spacetime (July–September 2009, 13 week course); Parayana: The Way Beyond (October–December 2009); Our Star Wisdom Humanity (2010, a 1–year course that met weekly); and Science Fiction Vision (2011, a 1–year course that met weekly). After the Bodhi Tree Bookstore closed in 2011, Weir continued to teach every Saturday at a private office in Beverly Hills until the end of 2015 (these presentations were by invitation only and not open to the general public).

Weir's research continued after 2016, focusing on the origins and development of America by artistic and scientific persons such as Benjamin Franklin, and the influence of other cultures such as indigenous peoples of the Americas.

During the years 1987–1995 Weir received financial support from Laurance S. Rockefeller to conduct his research and work.[17] He also received financial support for his work from Spencer Compton, 7th Marquess of Northampton, but the dates of this support are unconfirmed.

His coursework encompassed Chinese, Greek, Egyptian, and other ancient world cultures. He also traced the development of the Egyptian, European, and early American Hermetic tradition, the Taoist tradition, and others, including early Christianity and its development to the present. Weir delivered presentations on a variety of interweaving subject matter that incorporated philosophy, art, history, science, mythology, symbols, and others on a weekly basis, sometimes even three times a week, for nearly four decades, 1980–2016. To aid in creating these works, he gradually developed a vast research library – in part through the direct patronage of Laurance S. Rockefeller and later Spencer Compton, 7th Marquess of Northampton – that today comprises approximately 80,000+ volumes.

Works[edit]

Weir designed, curated, and refined courses focused on history, philosophy, consciousness, and science. As a result of these courses, Weir produced a number of publications and other works. Below is a selected list of these publications and works.

  • Hermetic America – Our Critical Heritage: Abraham Lincoln (2020, ISBN 9781735876900 Search this book on .)
  • Rumi Mirroring Flames: A Cycle of 50 Poems (translation by Roger A. Weir, 2016)
  • San Francisco 60s Poetic (2016; audiobook read by Doug Martinez)
  • Tao Te Ching (translation by Roger A. Weir, 2016)
  • Jesus in Alexandria & Mary Magdalene: The Origins of Shared Presence (2012)
  • Our New Aion (2001, first edition; 2012, second edition)
  • Paideia: An Education Ecosystem (1993)

Legacy[edit]

The Shared Presence Foundation, founded in 2010, is driven to preserve and publicly disseminate Roger Weir's teachings and coursework. The Foundation has compiled, documented, and archived his voluminous work in order to make it available to current and future learners.[18]

Notes[edit]

  1. There is a discrepancy on the spelling of his middle name. His high school yearbook spells it ‘Allen’ while on his marriage certificate from 1968 it is spelled ‘Allan’, and his death certificate only includes a middle initial ‘A’. Priority has been given to the earliest form – 'Allen'.
  2. The marriage certificate for Roger Weir and his first wife, Martha Ricketts, indicates he was born in Michigan to Guy Weir and Laura Arnshek. State of California, Department of Public Health. Certificate of Registry of Marriage between Roger Allan Weir and Martha Ann Ricketts, #68-087005 (July 8, 1968).
  3. Legenda [yearbook]. Saginaw, Michigan: Arthur Hill High School. 1958. p. 100. Retrieved September 16, 2020. Search this book on
  4. The marriage certificate indicates the license was issued on July 5, 1968 and the marriage ceremony was conducted on July 6, 1968 (State of California, Department of Public Health, Certificate of Registry of Marriage between Roger Allan Weir and Martha Ann Ricketts, #68-087005, 8 July 1968).
  5. State of California. "Roger A. Weir." In California, Divorce Index, 1966-1984. [microfiche] Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California. Also available in digital form via Ancestry.com: Ancestry.com. California, Divorce Index, 1966-1984 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007.
  6. Records from Los Angeles City Hall of Records.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Mount Royal College. Mount Royal College Calendar, 1971-1972 (Calgary, 1971): p. 213.
  8. Julius Rudolph Weinberg (September 3, 1908 – January 17, 1971) and E. F. Kalin were both American philosophers and university professors.
  9. Belcher, Jerry (January 6, 1982). "New Slides Engulf a Dozen Homes: Ben Lomond, Sausalito Hit; Death Toll 22". Los Angeles Times, page A1. "In nearby Tiburon, one of the Bay Area's most exclusive residential communities, 59-year-old Kai-yu Hsu, professor of Chinese literature and language at San Francisco State University, died in a mud slide that swept into his home."
  10. 10.0 10.1 Mount Royal College. Mount Royal College Calendar, 1970–1971 (Calgary, 1970): p. 47.
  11. "Remembering the life of Mavis Theodora Running Rabbit 1941 - 2017". calgarysun.remembering.ca. Retrieved 2020-09-16.
  12. Weir’s name appears in the Mount Royal College Academic Calendars starting in 1970–1971 and ending in 1975–1976.
  13. Partridge Books was located adjacent to the famous Hollywood bookstore, Pickwick Books (or Pickwick Bookshop).
  14. Whirling Rainbow was located at 2029 Hyperion Ave, Los Angeles, California and served as Weir’s residence and presentation venue for a number of years during the 1980s and early 1990s. It also housed a library which, in 1985, contained more than 30,000 volumes, and served as a resource to support Weir’s work and complement his presentations.
  15. According to an undated course catalogue for activities at Bruchion, the organization was originally founded in Malibu, California in 1983 by Liv and Jan Saether, and at the time of the catalogue was currently located at 3264 Motor Avenue, Los Angeles, California (https://sites.google.com/site/bruchion/documents/Bruchion_katalog.pdf).
  16. Bodhi Tree Bookstore was located at 8585 Melrose Avenue, West Hollywood, California. According to conversations between the editor and one of the co-founders and former owners of Bodhi Tree, Weir delivered his lectures at the Bodhi Tree Bookstore Meeting Room which was located adjacent to the bookstore. Historical details about the Bodhi Tree Bookstore were outlined in an article in the Los Angeles Times on December 30, 2011 – https://www.latimes.com/local/la-xpm-2011-dec-30-la-me-bodhi-20111231-story.html.
  17. Laurance S. Rockefeller, "Gifts – Weir, Roger," Laurance S. Rockefeller General Files, 1992–1996, RG 43 (Sleepy Hollow, New York: Rockefeller Archive Center). Finding aid available here: https://dimes.rockarch.org/xtf//media/pdf/ead/FA1325/FA1325.pdf
  18. "Shared Presence Foundation". Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)

External Links[edit]


This article "Roger A. Weir" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Roger A. Weir. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.