Will Keepin

Mathematical Physicist & Spiritual Teacher
The deepest healing of our world requires the reconciliation between the masculine and feminine principles, not just between men and women, but within each of us and within our institutions and societies.

William Keepin is a mathematical physicist, spiritual teacher, and co-founder of the Gender Equity and Reconciliation International project who has dedicated his career to bridging science and spirituality while addressing gender healing and reconciliation across cultures worldwide. Widely published in fields including sustainable energy, global warming, archetypal cosmology, comparative mysticism, and the intersection of science and spirituality, Keepin has presented testimony to European and Australian parliaments and the US House of Representatives, and became a whistleblower in nuclear science policy as recounted in “The Cultural Creatives” by Paul Ray and Sherry Anderson. He co-founded the Satyana Institute and, with Reverend Cynthia Brix, organized five international conferences facilitating dialogue, interspiritual practice, and collaboration across major religions and science. Keepin holds a Ph.D. in applied mathematics, M.S. in mathematical physics, M.A. in East-West psychology, and an honorary doctorate from California Institute of Integral Studies, while training extensively in spiritual traditions East and West and facilitating Grof holotropic breathwork since 1989. Author of “Divine Duality: The Power of Reconciliation Between Women and Men” and “Belonging to God: Spirituality, Science, and a Universal Path of Divine Love,” he has co-authored works including “Women Healing Women” and “Song of the Earth: The Emerging Synthesis of Spiritual and Scientific Worldviews.” As a Fellow of the Findhorn Foundation, Keepin continues pioneering work that demonstrates how rigorous scientific training and deep spiritual practice can inform each other in service of planetary healing and gender reconciliation.

Why their voice matters: Keepin demonstrates how scientific rigor and spiritual depth can combine to address systemic healing, particularly in gender relations, showing that reconciliation work requires both practical facilitation skills and understanding of archetypal forces that shape collective consciousness, while proving that personal transformation and social justice work are inseparable aspects of planetary healing.