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The Lindisfarne Association is a group of intellectuals of diverse interests organized by cultural historian William Irwin Thompson for the "study and realization of a new planetary culture". It is inspired by Jean Gebser's idea of the integral structure of consciousness, and by Teilhard de Chardin's idea of the noosphere.[1] In his book Reimagination of the World, Thompson described his reasons for naming his group after Lindisfarne, an island with a famous monastery (once inhabited by Saint Cuthbert) just off the coast of Northumberland in the North East of England:
"Although I used the word as a symbol of a small group of people effecting a transformation from one system to another, the word also brought with it the archetypical associations of a small group of monks holding onto ancient knowledge in a fallen world, a world that would soon overrun them during the Viking terror."[2]
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History
In 1972, with funding from Sydney and Jean Lanier, and later from Laurance Rockefeller, Thompson founded the Lindisfarne Association, which functioned variously as a sponsor of new age events and lectures, and as a think tank and retreat, similar to the Esalen Institute in California. Lindisfarne functioned through the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York for a number of years. Today Lindisfarne functions as a virtual association of the Fellows and meets once a year at the Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Goals
According to the Lindisfarne Association website, Lindisfarne's fourfold goals are:
- The Planetization of the Esoteric
- The realization of the inner harmony of all the great universal religions and the spiritual traditions of the tribal peoples of the world.
- The fostering of a new and healthier balance between nature and culture through the research and development of appropriate technologies, architectural settlements and compassionate economies for meta-industrial villages and convivial cities.
- The illumination of the spiritual foundations of political governance through scholarship and artistic communications that foster a global ecology of consciousness beyond the present ideological systems of warring industrial nation-states, outraged traditional societies, and ravaged lands and seas.
Members
Members of Lindisfarne have included, among others:
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Current status
Thompson offered a series of seminars in June 2006 ("Poetry and Speculations on the Meaning of Western Civilization") at the Crestone Zen Center in Crestone, Colorado. [3] The Fellows now meet at the Upaya Zen Center in Santa Fe, New Mexico, directed by Joan Halifax-Roshi.
References
- ^ Lindisfarne's original incorporation statement from 1972
- ^ p5
- ^ http://www.williamirwinthompson.org/pages/6/index.htm
External links
- Lindisfarne Association website at williamirwinthompson.org; Internet Archived version)
- Annals of Earth website
- 2007 Symposium Notes from the Wild River Review
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