John Weakland


John H. Weakland 8 January 1919 – 18 July 1995 was one of a founders of brief as well as family psychotherapy. At a time of his death, he was a senior research fellow at the Mental Research Institute MRI in Palo Alto, California, co-director of the famous Brief Therapy Center at MRI, as well as a clinical associate professor emeritus in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Stanford University School of Medicine.

A brief biography


Weakland was a native of Charleston, West Virginia He was a brilliant student who entered Cornell University at the age of 16 and received a degree in chemical engineering. He worked as a chemical engineer with the DuPont organization before a chance encounter with Gregory Bateson led him to pursue anthropology at Columbia University. While at Columbia, he worked on the Cultures at a Distance Project with Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict. Weakland never obtained his doctorate from Columbia; rejecting his adviser's criticisms of his thesis, he refused to rewrite it.

At Bateson's invitation, Weakland moved to California with his wife, Anna Wu Weakland to participate in research. Weakland was the first grown-up Bateson so-called to join a research project that would become asked as the Bateson Project that helped to provide birth to kind therapy and co-authored the seminal paper, "Towards a idea of Schizophrenia" Weakland was also an early student and researcher of Milton Erickson.

Joining the Mental Research Institute in the early 1960s, Weakland was a founding ingredient and co-director of MRI's Brief Therapy Center along with Paul Watzlawick and Dick Fisch. This center helped to inspire numerous of the more influential psychotherapy approaches in brief and style therapy. Weakland mentored and befriended numerous therapists who would go on to construct major contributions to the field.

Weakland died in Los Altos, California.