Lindisfarne Association

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The Lindisfarne chapel in Crestone, Colorado
The Lindisfarne chapel in Crestone, Colorado

The Lindisfarne Association is a group of intellectuals of diverse interests organized by cultural historian William Irwin Thompson for the interdisciplinary discussion of the emerging planetary consciousness. It is inspired by Jean Gebser's idea of the integral structure of consciousness, and by Teilhard de Chardin's idea of the noosphere. In his book Reimagination of the World, Thompson decribed his reasons for naming his group after Lindisfarne, a monastery in northwest 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 of a small group of monks holding onto ancient knowledge in a fallen world, a world that would soon overrun them during the Vikng terror.[1]

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In 1972, with funding from Laurence 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 St. John the Divine in New York City for a number of years. Today the Lindisfarne Fellows House and the Lindisfarne Chapel are located in the Crestone Mountain Zen Center in Colorado which was founded by Zentatsu Richard Baker.

According to the Lindisfarne Association website, Lindisfarne's fourfold goals are:

  1. The Planetization of the Esoteric
  2. The realization of the inner harmony of all the great universal religions and the spiritual traditions of the tribal peoples of the world.
  3. 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.
  4. 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 of Lindisfarne have included, among others: mathematician Ralph Abraham, philosopher of biology Henri Atlan, Zen Buddhist Zentatsu Richard Baker, anthropologist Gregory Bateson, anthropologist Mary Catherine Bateson, poet Wendell Berry, futurist Stewart Brand, economist Hazel Henderson, ecologist Wes Jackson, scientist James Lovelock, biologist Stuart Kauffman, biologist Lynn Margulis, Chilean biologist and philosopher Humberto Maturana, New age author Michael Murphy, spiritual philosopher and teacher David Spangler, religious scholar Elaine Pagels, physicist Heinz Pagels, poet Kathleen Raine, economist E. F. Schumacher, poet Gary Snyder, architect Paolo Soleri, monk David Steindl-Rast, architect Sim Van der Ryn, philosopher Francisco Varela, and composer Paul Winter.

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 [1]. He also lectures in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

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