Arthur Guy Zajonc (/ˈzeɪ.ənts/ZAY-ənts; born 11 October 1949 inBoston, Massachusetts) is an American physicist and the author of several books related to science, mind, and spirit; one of these is based on dialogues about quantum mechanics with theDalai Lama. Zajonc, professor emeritus atAmherst College as of 2012,[1] has been teaching there since 1978. He has served as the General Secretary of theAnthroposophical Society in America. From January 2012 to June 2015 he was president of theMind and Life Institute.[2][3]
Zajonc received a B.S. in engineering physics from theUniversity of Michigan in 1971. He received an M.S. (1973) and Ph.D. (1976) in physics at the University of Michigan as well. From 1976-1978 he was a research associate at the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics at theUniversity of Colorado and theNational Bureau of Standards, Boulder, Colorado.
Zajonc became an assistant professor of physics at Amherst College in 1978, and was promoted to associate professor in 1984 and full professor in 1991. In 2006 he became anAndrew W. Mellon Professor at Amherst. He retired from this position in 2011, and is now Andrew W. Mellon Professor Emeritus at Amherst College.[4]
From 1981-82 he was a Visiting Associate Professor of Physics at theÉcole Normale Supérieure at theLaboratoire de Spectroscopie Hertzienne in Paris. In 1984 was a Visiting Research Physicist at theMax Planck Institute for Quantum Optics,Garching (Munich), Germany withH. Walther. In 1986 he was a visiting scientist at the Institute for Quantum Optics atLeibniz University Hannover in Germany. In 1991 he was a visiting scientist at the Department of Physics at theUniversity of Rochester with L. Mandel. In 1993 he was aFulbright Professor at theUniversity of Innsbruck, Austria teaching and doing research on the experimental foundations ofquantum physics.
Zajonc was the physics department chairman at Amherst College for three different appointments: 1987–1989, 1998–2000, and 2005–present. Later that same year[when?] he was a Scholar-in-Residence at theFetzer Institute. He was the Senior Program Director of the Fetzer Institute 1995–1997. He was the director for the Academic Program of theCenter for Contemplative Mind in Society from 2004 to 2009, and served as Executive Director from 2009 to 2012. In this role, he focused the organization's work on the development and application ofcontemplative practices within higher education.
Zajonc held a number of dialogues with the Dalai Lama in 1997 which were published in 2004 under his scientific coordination and editorship asDalai Lama: The New Physics and Cosmology. He was moderator for the 2003 dialogue with the Dalai Lama atMIT.