In Murphy's Kingdom
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Pioneering Cultural Initiatives by Esalen Centers for Theory
Esalen’s Half-Century of Pioneering Cultural Initiatives 1962 to 2012 For more information, please contact: Jane Hartford, Director of Development Center for Theory & Research and Special Projects Special Assistant to the Cofounder and Chairman Emeritus Michael Murphy Esalen Institute 1001 Bridgeway #247 Sausalito, CA 94965 415-459-5438 i Preface Most of us know Esalen mainly through public workshops advertised in the catalog. But there is another, usually quieter, Esalen that’s by invitation only: the hundreds of private initiatives sponsored now by Esalen’s Center for Theory and Research (CTR). Though not well publicized, this other Esalen has had a major impact on America and the world at large. From its programs in citizen diplomacy to its pioneering role in holistic health; from physics and philosophy to psychology, education and religion, Esalen has exercised a significant influence on our culture and society. CTR sponsors work in fields that think tanks and universities typically ignore, either because those fields are too controversial, too new, or because they fall between disciplinary silos. These initiatives have included diplomats and political leaders, such as Joseph Montville, the influential pioneer of citizen diplomacy, Jack Matlock and Arthur Hartman, former Ambassadors to the Soviet Union, and Claiborne Pell, former Chairman of the U.S. Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee; eminent Russian cultural leaders Vladimir Pozner, Sergei Kapitsa, and Victor Erofeyev; astronaut Rusty Schweickart; philosophers Jay Ogilvy, Sam -
Rolfing: Structural Integration As American Metaphysical Religiosity
Rolfing: Structural Integration as American Metaphysical Religiosity by Sarahbelle Alyson Marsh B.A., Bates College, 2005 A thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Colorado in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts Department of Religious Studies 2011 This thesis entitled: Rolfing: Structural Integration as American Metaphysical Religiosity written by Sarahbelle Alyson Marsh has been approved for the Department of Religious Studies ________________________________________ Dr. Deborah Whitehead And ____________________________________ Dr. Lynn Ross‐Bryant ______________________________________ Professor Nada Diachenko Date The final copy of this thesis has been examined by the signatories, and we Find that both the content and the form meet acceptable presentation standards Of scholarly work in the above mentioned discipline Marsh, Sarahbelle Alyson (M.A., Religious Studies) Rolfing: Structural Integration as American Metaphysical Religiosity Thesis directed by Assistant Professor Deborah Whitehead Dr. Ida P. Rolf and her life’s work of Structural Integration or Rolfing is a product of early twentieth century American metaphysical thought. Rolfing is an American form of somatic bodywork that strives to overcome the Cartesian mind/body split. Through structural work via manual manipulation, Rolfing attempts to achieve physical health and emotional intelligence. This paper explores four major aspects of Rolfing as American Metaphysical religiosity, as defined by Catherine L. Albanese in Republic of Mind and Spirit: A Cultural History of American Metaphysical Religion. The project also explores the origins of somatic bodywork and the metaphysical idea of spiritual transformation through physical change. The Esalen Institute is examined for its part in developing a secular American metaphysical religiosity that fostered and promoted Rolfing. -
Frederic Spiegelberg Papers
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt1h4nf1qd No online items Guide to the Frederic Spiegelberg Papers compiled by Patricia White Stanford University. Libraries.Department of Special Collections and University Archives Stanford, California February 2011 Copyright © 2015 The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. All rights reserved. Note This encoded finding aid is compliant with Stanford EAD Best Practice Guidelines, Version 1.0. Guide to the Frederic Spiegelberg SC0631 1 Papers Overview Call Number: SC0631 Creator: Spiegelberg, Frederic, b. 1897 Title: Frederic Spiegelberg papers Dates: 1916-1994 Bulk Dates: 1936-1994 Physical Description: 20.5 Linear feet (16 boxes) Summary: Collection includes correspondence, lecture notes, course materials, manuscripts, publications, photographs, newsletters, and other materials. Some of the correspondence and publications are in German. Language(s): The materials are in English. Repository: Department of Special Collections and University Archives Green Library 557 Escondido Mall Stanford, CA 94305-6064 Email: [email protected] Phone: (650) 725-1022 URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc This collection was given to the Stanford University Archives by the estate of Frederick Spiegelberg in 1995. Addional materials in accession 2011-184 were received from the California Institute of Integral Studies in August 2011. Information about Access Access: Materials are open for research use; materials must be requested at least 48 hours in advance of intended use. Ownership & Copyright All requests to reproduce, publish, quote from, or otherwise use collection materials must be submitted in writing to the Head of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, California 94304-6064. Consent is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission from the copyright owner. -
3 Holism, Chinese Medicine And
3 HOLISM, CHINESE MEDICINE AND SYSTEMS IDEOLOGIES: REWRITING THE PAST TO IMAGINE THE FUTURE Volker Scheid Int roduction his chapter explores the articulations that have emerged over the last half- Tcentury between various types of holism, Chinese medicine and systems biol- ogy. Given the discipline’s historical attachments to a defi nition of ‘medicine’ that rather narrowly refers to biomedicine as developed in Europe and the US from the eighteenth century onwards, the medical humanities are not the most obvious start- ing point for such an inquiry. At the same time, they do offer one advantage over neighbouring disciplines like medical history, anthropology or science and technol- ogy studies for someone like myself, a clinician as well as a historian and anthro- pologist: their strong commitment to the objective of facilitating better medical practice.1 This promise furthermore links to the wider project of critique, which, in Max Horkheimer’s defi nition of the term, aims at change and emancipation in order ‘to lib erate human beings from the circumstances that enslave them’.2 If we take the critical medical humanities as explicitly affi rming this shared objective and respon- sibility, extending the discipline’s traditional gaze is not a burden but becomes, in fact, an obligation. With that in mind, this chapter seeks to accomplish three inter-related goals. It is fi rst an inquiry into the historical processes whereby Chinese medicine, holism and systems biology have come to be entangled with each other in the present. The term holism is not originally Chinese and was only applied to Chinese medicine from the 1950s onward. -
The Eros of Esalen and the Western Transmission of Tantra
THE ROAR OF AWAKENING: THE EROS OF ESALEN AND THE WESTERN TRANSMISSION OF TANTRA Jeffrey J. Kripal Tyger Tyger, burning bright In the forest of the night; What immortal hand or eye. Could frame thy fearful symmetry? . When the stars threw down their spears And water’d heaven with their tears: Did he smile his work to see? Did he who made the Lamb make thee? William Blake, “The Tyger” The multiple weavings of eroticism and esotericism within the history of the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California—the mother of the Ameri- can human potential movement founded in 1962 by Michael Murphy (1930) and Richard Price (1930–1985)—is a vast half-century tapestry whose multiple patterns, colors, and textures I have woven elsewhere in some detail.1 The present essay is not a summary or replication of that historiographic project. Rather it is a further theorization of and refl ection on the results of it. It is a “standing back” to see one, and only one, of the fi nal weaves or gestalts, in this case an erotic one. Admittedly, the colorful complexities are bright, but also more than a little daunting. There are, after all, many ways into the erotic here, far too many for as brief an essay as this. Anecdotal humor is perhaps the quickest way into the subject, like the scene I witnessed in the Big House in the spring of 2003, when the psychical researcher Marilyn Schlitz and founder Michael Murphy got into an animated discussion about the strange phenomenon of “bodily elongation” during a research 1 Kripal, Esalen: America and the Religion of No Religion. -
Conclusion What Is the Subtle Body?
1 ABSTRACT This dissertation traces the historical genealogy of the term “subtle body,” following it from its initial coinage among the Cambridge Platonists back to the Neoplatonic sources from which they drew, then forward into Indology, Theosophy, Carl Jung, and the American Counterculture, showing the expansion of the term’s semantic range to include Sanskrit, Tibetan, and Chinese materials. 2 Acknowledgements First thanks go to my committee members. I never would have entertained the possibility of doing a project like this were it not for the iconoclastic tendencies of Jeff Kripal and Anne Klein under whom a conventional dissertation would be nigh impossible to write. Thanks Jeff for helping me contact the daimon , and Anne for teaching me to read between the lines, to see the basic space in which text dances. Thanks to Deborah Harter for her careful, aesthetic editorial gaze. Beyond the committee, Bill Parsons’ genealogy of mysticism exerted no small impact on my own method. Niki Clements showed me the cool side of Hegel. And thanks to Claire Fanger, for the esotericism, and April DeConick, for the gnosis. Thanks to Gregory Shaw for the secrets of Iamblichean theurgy and to Michael Murphy for the siddhi camps out of which this genealogy was born. Thanks also to Pierre Delattre for reading an early version and providing magical feedback. I constantly bounced ideas off my infinitely patient classmates: Justin Kelley, Claire Villareal, Erin Prophet, Ben Mayo, Renee Ford, Anne Parker, Justine Bakker, Gregory Perron, Tim Grieve-Carlson, Tommy Symmes, Kassim Abdulbassit, Victor Nardo, Oihane Iglesias Telleria, and Namleela Free Jones. -
Frederic Spiegelberg and the Rise of a Whole Earth, 1914-1968
The New Myth: Frederic Spiegelberg and the Rise of a Whole Earth, 1914-1968 Ahmed M. Kabil1 Abstract: The present article provides, through the life and teachings of a little-known German scholar of religions named Frederic Spiegelberg (1897-1994), a novel account of some of the unique historical and intellectual developments that converged in the San Francisco Bay Area in the mid twentieth century and subsequently informed and enabled many of the defining chapters of recent global history. Separately, these developments are known as the dissemination in the West of Asian religious perspectives and practices, the San Francisco Renaissance, the rise of the counterculture, the widespread blossoming of environmental awareness, and the information age revolution. Together, they comprise The New Myth: synchronous with and in reaction to the planetary spread of technology and the global experiential horizons such technology discloses, a constellation of holistic integral thought emerged in various domains in the West that was characterized above all by a spatiotemporal emphasis on the ‘Here and Now’ and the realization of unity through the recognition and transcendence of polarity. The origins, afterlives, and implications of this constellation of thought are only now being discerned. The story of Professor Frederick Spiegelberg’s life—little known and largely forgotten—functions as the conduit through which the New Myth’s historical and intellectual contours are traced and thereby rendered intelligible. Keywords: Alan Watts; Counterculture Movement; Cybernetics, Frederick Spiegelberg; Haridas Chaudhuri; Martin Heidegger; Integralism, San Francisco Cultural Renaissance; Sri Aurobindo; Steward Brand; Whole Earth Catalog. The following article presents a vignette of the life and teachings of a little-known and largely forgotten professor of comparative religions named Frederic Spiegelberg (1897-1994). -
Dao of Dasein Final Draft (Image Update)
DAO OF DASEIN A History of the Way of Being, 1893-1968 A Thesis Presented to The Division of History and Social Sciences Reed College In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Bachelor of Arts Ahmed Moharram Kabil May 2011 Approved for the Division (History) Benjamin Lazier Acknowledgments Mom and Dad, there’s you, and then there’s everyone else. So you get the top spot. As the years pass I realize how fortunate I am to have had nothing but love and support from the two of you. Thank you. And Hemaki, dearest brother, wise sage, kind buddha, thank you too. So often my notions of ‘these things’ felt contrived, and in those moments I always knew I could turn to you for your spontaneous, pure and genuine understanding. The inspiration for this thesis came from several sources: I was serendipitously assigned readings of Heidegger and Zhuangzi at the same time in two different classes (later learning Zhuangzi was one of Heidegger’s principal albeit secret influences); an email from Stewart Brand, where I read the name Frederic Spiegelberg for the first time after asking who showed him the Way; Benjamin Lazier’s Whole Earths and World Pictures classes, in which we applied Heidegger’s theories to Brand’s example without being aware of the deeper historical and philosophical connections; and my experience of the altered states Reed has kindly bestowed upon me, from the throes of beatific rapture to the secret blessings of bad trips to all the illusory highs and lows to the open space of meditative zazen. -
Encyclopedia of Hinduism J: AF
Encyclopedia of Hinduism J: AF i-xL-hindu-fm.indd i 12/14/06 1:02:34 AM Encyclopedia of Buddhism Encyclopedia of Catholicism Encyclopedia of Hinduism Encyclopedia of Islam Encyclopedia of Judaism Encyclopedia of Protestantism i-xL-hindu-fm.indd ii 12/14/06 1:02:34 AM Encyclopedia of World Religions nnnnnnnnnnn Encyclopedia of Hinduism J: AF Constance A. Jones and James D. Ryan J. Gordon Melton, Series Editor i-xL-hindu-fm.indd iii 12/14/06 1:02:35 AM Encyclopedia of Hinduism Copyright © 2007 by Constance A. Jones and James D. Ryan All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the pub- lisher. For information contact: Facts On File, Inc. An imprint of Infobase Publishing 132 West 31st Street New York NY 10001 ISBN-10: 0-8160-5458-4 ISBN-13: 978-0-8160-5458-9 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Jones, Constance A., 1961– Encyclopedia of Hinduism / Constance A. Jones and James D. Ryan. p. cm. — (Encyclopedia of world religions) Includes index. ISBN 978-0-8160-5458-9 1. Hinduism—Encyclopedias. I. Ryan, James D. II. Title. III. Series. BL1105.J56 2006 294.503—dc22 2006044419 Facts On File books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk quantities for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions. Please call our Special Sales Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or (800) 322-8755. -
THE POSSIBILITIES FCR PSYCHIC EVOLUTIOO Michael Murphy It's A
24. THE POSSIBILITIES FCR PSYCHIC EVOLUTIOO Michael Murphy It's a pleasure to talk about the possibilities ofpsydUc evolution here in Canada where the terms ''psychedelic'' and "cosmic consciousness" were invented. In fact, Dr. Maurice Bucke who was once president of the CanadiRn Ps,ychiatric Associatian,was one of the first people to think seriously about this whole notion that sOOlehow the mind was involved in an evolutionary process, and his book has been much discussed in our programs at Esalen. (Bucke, 1901) I want to start with a definition tonight. This is kind of a formidable term, "Psychic Evolution." In-a way it is the lea.st of several even worse possibilities. Our language in this area is poor. Let me begin and give some negatives before I get arouni to talking about the subject itself. First, by psychic evolution I do not mean the older kind of theosophical definitions which include, or are limited to, table rappings and messages from Tibet. Also, I won't want to limit the definition to traditional mysticism, although we are drawing increasingly, I think, upon the traditions of Eastern thought and western mysticism, but these definitions are incomplete. The behavioristic and Freudian -definitions, too, are insufficient. Most positivistic and behavioristic conceptions of human becoming simply don't give enough place to, and are not subtle enough in, the descrlptions of inner experience, or they don't even pay any attention to them. The Freudian definitions generally do not deal with higher levels of human functioning. INFOOMATION ON AUTHOR: A talk given by Michael Murphy,President, Esalen Institute, Big Sur Hot Springs, California, as part of a series of special events on Man's Potential: Vision Unlimited, sponsored by the Department of University Extension, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. -
SACRED SEXUALITY from the Ancient Sumerians To
Studies in Spirituality 20, 355-379. doi: 10.2143/SIS.20.0.2061155 © 2010 by Studies in Spirituality. All rights reserved. ANTOON GEELS SACRED SEXUALITY From the Ancient Sumerians to Contemporary Esalen SUMMARY — The aim of this article is to show that ideas pertaining to sacred sexuality or sacred marriage are as old as Sumerian culture. While mainstrean Christianity developed an alternate view on sexuality, the Jewish Kabbalah transmitted similar ideas. In Asia, sacral sexuality has been an integrated dimension of Hinduism and Buddhism. All these spiritual traditions came together in 18th century London, where we also encounter new influences from the Moravian Church and the Swedish visionary Emanuel Swedenborg. London became a crucible for all tradi- tions mentioned. The British artist and mystic William Blake came in touch with these ideas and he was heavily influenced by them. The arti- cle ends with a presentation of the contemporary Esalen Institute in California, USA, known for the human potential movement. At Esalen, sacred sexuality belongs to the main themes being discussed. The notion that human sexuality is a mirror image of divine relations is prob- ably as old as mankind. Ancient Sumerian clay tablets from Mesopotamia exhibit erotic cuneiform texts concerning conjugal intimacy between Innana, the Divine feminine, and the Shepherd or vegetation god Dumuzi. Several texts refer to their sacred marriage (hieros gamos). In one hymn Innana, called Ishtar in later Babylonian culture, expresses her love and longing for Dumuzi, the Babylonian Tammuz: My vulva, the horn The boat of Heaven, Is full of eagerness like the young moon. -
Integral Review Vol 8 No 1 July 2012 Full Issue Bahman Shirazi California Institute of Integral Studies, [email protected]
Digital Commons @ CIIS Founders Symposium Conferences and Symposia 7-2012 Integral Review Vol 8 No 1 July 2012 full issue Bahman Shirazi California Institute of Integral Studies, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.ciis.edu/founderssymposium Part of the Civic and Community Engagement Commons, Educational Leadership Commons, Higher Education Commons, Leadership Studies Commons, Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons, and the Sociology of Religion Commons Recommended Citation http://integral-review.org/backissue/vol-8-no-1-jul-2012/ This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Conferences and Symposia at Digital Commons @ CIIS. It has been accepted for inclusion in Founders Symposium by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ CIIS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. July 2012 Special Issue Volume 8, No 1 Spirituality, Religion, Contemplative Practices, and Socially Transformative Service in the 21st Century Table of Contents Special Issue Introduction ........................................................................ 1 Special Issue Editor Bahman A. K. Shirazi Peer Reviewed The Need for Interreligious Dialogue in Higher Education ..................... 5 Joseph L. Subbiondo New Religious Movements, Western Esotericism, and Integral Consciousness ........................................................................................ 14 Constance A. Jones Rethinking the Future of World Religion: An Interview with Jorge N. Ferrer ......................................................... 20 Bahman A. K. Shirazi Transformative Body Practices and Social Change: The Intersection between Spirituality and Activism .............................. 35 Don H. Johnson The New Myth: Frederic Spiegelberg and the Rise of a Whole Earth ... 43 Ahmed M. Kabil The Future History of Consciousness .................................................... 62 David Hutchinson Sri Aurobindo’s Lila: The Nature of Divine Play According to Integral Advaita ....................