Brian Regal | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Historian |
Title | Associate Professor for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine |
Board member of | Editorial Board,Endeavour |
Academic background | |
Thesis | Terrible Monkeys: Henry Fairfield Osborn, Race, and the Search for the Origins of Man (2001) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | History |
Sub-discipline | History of science |
Notable works | Pseudoscience: A Critical Encyclopedia |
Website | sites |
Brian Regal is an Americanhistorian of science,skeptic and writer. He is anassociate professor of the history of science atKean University inNew Jersey.[1][2]
Regal is the author of an encyclopedia of pseudoscience, as well asSearching for Sasquatch: Crackpots, Eggheads and Cryptozoology, a scholarly study oncryptozoology.[3][4] He has also written on the history of theJersey Devil.[5]
Regal grew up inNewark's Ironbound neighborhood, in aCatholic family. He developed an early interest for science and the mysterious, which he attributes to television series such asJonny Quest and laterIn Search of....[6]
Discouraged from pursuing higher education by a high school guidance counselor ("kids like you don't go to college"), Regal joined the armed forces, serving as atank commander.[7]
Going to college after his military career, he graduated with a B.A. in History fromKean University in 1995, then a M.A. in American History and Literature atDrew University (1996) and a Doctorate in Modern History and Literature from Drew University (2001). He teaches at Kean University, where he holds the title of Associate Professor for the History of Science,Technology andMedicine.[8]
Regal has long been interested on how theories of human evolution have been received by the public and by religious authorities. His first two books,Henry Fairfield Osborn: Race and the Search for the Origins of Man andHuman Evolution: A Guide to the Debates, explore that theme.[9]
In 2005, he realized thatGrover Krantz's estate donated his notes and papers to theSmithsonian Institution after his death in 2002, where they remained unread. Within the collection, Regal found a significant amount of source documents on the founding of Americancryptozoology. Those documents were the starting point forThe Secret History of the Jersey Devil.[10]
As of 2021, he was working on a book about variousalternative theories of Europeans coming to North America before Christopher Columbus and how those theories relate to the sociopolitical context of the period when they appear.[6][8][10]
He is a member of the history journalEndeavour.[11]
Books
Selected papers
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