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Integral Philosophy

Steve McIntosh on “Evolutionary Enlightenment”

by Tom Huston

Integral philosopher Steve McIntosh weighs in on EnlightenNext founder Andrew Cohen’s new book, Evolutionary Enlightenment: A New Path to Spiritual Awakening

Andrew Cohen’s important new book, Evolutionary Enlightenment, demonstrates spiritual evolution on every page. Rooted in the venerable soil of Eastern nondual teachings, while simultaneously expressing an emerging new form of evolutionary spirituality, Cohen’s insights provide rich nourishment for the discerning seeker. Evolutionary Enlightenment clarifies what it means to transcend one’s ego and sheds new light on the true nature of the self. Moreover, this deep yet accessible book effectively integrates the science of evolution and the new integral philosophy of development into a livable form of spirituality that will transform all who practice it.

Even though my personal spirituality is rooted more in the Western theistic tradition than the Eastern nondual tradition, I nevertheless find Cohen’s teachings to be compatible with my own sense of spiritual truth. And I am especially grateful for his discussion of cultural evolution in Part IV of the book, with its emphasis on using our spirituality to catalyze the emergence of a higher form of civilization. Cohen himself has evolved considerably since his last book was published ten years ago, and his current teachings now reflect the leading edge of spiritual evolution in our society. Evolutionary Enlightenment is a modern-day masterpiece—a splendid contribution to the new field of evolutionary spirituality.

Steve McIntosh, author of Evolution’s Purpose, and Integral Consciousness

Learn more about Andrew Cohen’s new book »

Learn more about the work of Steve McIntosh »

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Integral Civic Consciousness (Think About This)

by Ross Robertson

John BunzlJohn Bunzl is a successful UK businessman with a simple yet powerful idea for how to practically address difficult international issues like climate change. It’s called Simultaneous Policy (“Simpol” for short), “a peaceful political strategy to democratically drive all the world’s nations to apply global solutions to global problems.” Sound interesting? It did to us, too. So after meeting Bunzl at EnlightenNext’s Midsummer Renaissance Festival in London this past July, we began to explore some of his fascinating “integral” critiques of progressive politics and the controversial idea of global governance.

According to Bunzl, even people whose lives are deeply informed by “world-centric” values, and who are already familiar with things like integral philosophy and an evolutionary worldview, tend to approach issues of global politics from more limited “nation-centric” points of view. In other words, our “civic consciousness,” as he puts it, often lags behind our perspective on things like economics and technology, whose global forces and dynamics we more easily appreciate. Because of this lack of “integral civic consciousness,” Bunzl explains, many of us typically fail to recognize the deeper systemic nature of seemingly intractable global problems, and therefore misplace our efforts to change things—or simply fall into debilitating cynicism and despair: Continue reading…

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Being CEO of Planet Earth

by Elizabeth Debold

Planet Inc. CEO book I’m sure that more than a few of us, when we ponder the actions of different world leaders, may wonder, “Why don’t they just _________?” Fill in the blank. And some of us may even, half-jokingly, have thought that we could do a better job than so-and-so in running the world.

But what would it actually take to be the CEO of The Planet, Inc.? That’s a half-serious question that two leading integral thinkers, Annie McQuade and Erika Ilves of Source Integral, are answering through a Facebook campaign, book, and series of YouTube videos. As they say on their Facebook page, “Project Planet Inc. is about structuring the global public discourse on the future of our species and building a planetary problem solving network & platform to take on the Super Wicked Challenges of the 21st century.”

An ambitious project, to say the least. But what they are managing to do in the process is teach the perspective of Ken Wilber’s integral theory. Through a series of YouTube videos, they offer instruction on the different knowledge areas that our planetary CEO needs to master in order to lead “Team Human.” First, McQuade and Ilves argue, our Planet Inc. CEO needs to be able to identify with “all of us”–or hold a worldcentric perspective. In a series of seven short videos, they explore the boundaries that one needs to cross in order to embrace all of us who are part of The Planet Inc. Continue reading…

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Alan Watts Meets South Park (Think About This)

by Carter Phipps

The British philosopher Alan Watts was known for bringing the subtleties of Eastern philosophy to a Western audience hungry for mystical insight and spiritual illumination. He was also a charming writer and speaker, able to weave profound nuggets of insight into entertaining stories and metaphors. Among the many who still draw inspiration from his prolific work are the co-creators of the hit television show South Park, Matt Stone and Trey Parker. Inspired by the wisdom of Watts, these two creative partners have taken it upon themselves to set Watts’s teachings to animation. One result is the delightful animated video entitled Prickles and Goo.

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Spiritual Masters: Steve McIntosh on Jesus of Nazareth

by Bergen Vermette

If your familiar with the work of Steve McIntosh, then you’ve most likely read his ideas about philosophy (His work has been featured in EnlightenNext magazine). McIntosh, who is a Boulder, Colorado-based author and entrepreneur, is known as one of the leading proponents and cataloguers of a new strain in the the history of philosophy called “integral.” In fact, as a founding member of Ken Wilber’s integral institute and the author of the 2007 book Integral Consciousness and the Future of Evolution, he has established himself as one of the preeminent integral philosophers of our time. But even though he has been involved in many dimensions of the progressive and evolutionary spirituality movements, much less is known about his personal spiritual beliefs.

That’s why we’re so excited to be featuring a conversation between McIntosh and EnlightenNext founder Andrew Cohen on March 26th about his deep spiritual relationship to Jesus of Nazareth during the virtual celebration,“Awakening to Your Highest Self.”
Continue reading…

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Spiral Masters: Don Beck on Clare Graves

by Joel Pitney

In addition to the many spiritual masters who will be featured in the “Awakening to Your Highest Self” virtual celebration on March 26th, EnlightenNext founder Andrew Cohen will also be interviewing a handful of people who fall into the category of “cultural visionaries” about the great men and women who inspired them.

One such visionary is “Spiral Wizard” Don Beck. Beck is famous for perfecting and applying a model for understanding personal and cultural change called “Spiral Dynamics.” His work and his character have been deeply influence by his mentor, the great 20th century psychologist Clare W. Graves, with whom he worked very closely during the last 12 years of Graves’ life.

To get a sense of Beck’s work, which was profoundly influenced by Graves, check out this comprehensive interview we did with Beck in EnlightenNext magazine. He gives a full overview of his and Graves’ work.

Click here to read the article.

Click here to register for the free online celebration, “Awakening to Your Highest Self: Tales of Transformation from 25 Spiritual Luminaries.”

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Michael Murphy on the philosophy of Esalen

by Bergen Vermette

The Esalen Institute has been an epicenter of the Human Potential Movement for almost 50 years. Led in part by co-founder Michael Murphy, Esalen still serves as an essential hub for personal transformation and growth with nearly 10,000 visitors per year. It’s also an important centre for social change; from its status as official host to Russian president Boris Yeltsin 1989, to its present work in expanding communication and dialogue between US leaders and their counterparts in China, Iran, and the Middle East.

In the audio interview below, Michael Murphy explains the philosophy behind this pioneering institute, Evolutionary Panentheism. Evolutionary Panentheism isn’t a word you’ll find in most dictionaries. But it describes a perspective on life and the universe that is increasingly common among visionaries who are beginning to reinterpret the meaning and significance of spiritual Enlightenment within the context of evolution. As Murphy says,

“If you’re an Evolutionary Panentheist you believe that the divine involved itself in the big bang and is unfolding in the course of time through the whole entire cosmos. With utterly new formations of matter that have never been seen before and will never be seen again, … creativity and novelty rule the universe. It’s a giant light show of the divine disclosure. But on this planet, now, humans are leading the advance and we’re not going to breakthrough to new realms of consciousness and transformations of the flesh unless we have a vision of such, and practices of such, and communities to support it.”

Esalen, he says, is just such a community, “based in the whole idea that human nature itself is capable of tremendous growth and transformation.”


Click here for the interview with Michael Murphy


If you’re interested in hearing more from Michael Murphy, please join him with EnlightenNext founder Andrew Cohen on a two-day Being & Becoming Virtual Retreat, this February 19-20.

Andrew Cohen will also be giving a free global conference call entitled “The Birth of A New Spirituality” this Saturday, February 12th at 1 pm EST. Click here to register.

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Relative truth vs. Eternal Truth

by Bergen Vermette

In this video Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche offers a compelling example of what we might call an Integral approach to spirituality.

He points out that there are many ways to communicate Eternal Truth, but that it’s important to use language that people can understand. He advocates “using reason as modernists would do, but at the same time accepting the post-modernist view that much of our knowledge is socially conditioned.” Both must be incorporated, he says, and more.

In addition, the Rinpoche argues that though we may recognize these different ways of communicating and knowing, we must resist collapsing into a relativism that denies higher morals or truth. On the contrary, it’s possible to recognize all these differences and still accept an Eternal Truth, beyond the relative.

What is Eternal Truth then? As the Rinpoche describes it: An Eternal Truth is such that if every living being on this planet were dead – it would still be True.

If you’d like to hear more from Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche please join him with Spiritual visionary Andrew Cohen on EnlightenNext’s two-day Being & Becoming Virtual Retreat, this February 19-20.

Andrew Cohen is also holding a live global teleconference on “A New Path to Spiritual Awakening” this Saturday, February 12. Click here if you’d like to join. Registration is free.

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Think About This: The Agony of Emergence

by Carter Phipps

One of the most underappreciated figures in the history of evolutionary spirituality is the German philosopher and linguist Jean Gebser. His masterpiece, The Ever-Present Origin (1949), outlines his unique vision of the emergence of human consciousness. Gebser tracks human history through a series of “mutations,” or structures of consciousness, from the archaic mind of our ancestors to the more contemporary stage of mental focused awareness. In one particularly evocative passage, Gebser reflects on the beginnings of this mental awareness, as represented by the myth of Athena, the Goddess of Wisdom who was born from the head of Zeus. To Gebser, such powerful imagery captures the heroic struggle of human development: Continue reading…

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Jean Gebser: Cartographer of Consciousness

by Gary Lachman

The German-born cultural philosopher Jean Gebser (1905–1973) was one of the most important thinkers of the twentieth century. Yet because only some of his work has been translated into English, he is practically unknown outside of German-speaking countries. This is unfortunate. Gebser’s ideas about the “structures of consciousness” and his belief that we are experiencing the rise of a new form of consciousness, which he called the “integral,” offer some of the most fruitful insights into understanding the state of Western consciousness in the first decade of the twenty-first century. Although writers and thinkers such as Ken Wilber, William Irwin Thompson, Georg Feuerstein, Colin Wilson, Daniel Pinchbeck, and myself have discussed Gebser’s ideas in different ways (I write about him at length in A Secret History of Consciousness), Gebser’s name rings few bells among average readers. This isn’t surprising. Gebser comes out of the Central European intellectual tradition, the stream of Western thought that produced such important yet difficult philosophers as Georg Friedrich Hegel, Martin Heidegger, and Jürgen Habermas—intensely stimulating thinkers all, but not noted for easy reading. Also, Gebser’s untimely death at the age of only sixty-eight meant that, for the most part, his influence was limited to his immediate circle. If a few readers of this article are inspired by it to tackle Gebser for themselves, I’ll consider its purpose fulfilled.

Those inspired readers will certainly face a demanding challenge. Gebser’s magnum opus, The Ever-Present Origin (first published in Germany in 1949 but not translated into English until 1984) is an immense, six-hundred-page exploration into an insight—a “lightning-like inspiration” as he called it—that first came to Gebser in Spain in 1931. This insight, that a new kind of consciousness was beginning to appear in the West, came to Gebser through his study of poetry, particularly that of the Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke. As Gebser unraveled it, he soon saw that evidence for this new consciousness could be found in developments in science too. In fact, the more he thought about it, the more Gebser discovered signs of this new consciousness in practically all aspects of Western culture. For the next eighteen years, he gathered and organized his thoughts on what he called an impending “mutation” in consciousness, the most immediate manifestation of which was what he called the breakdown of the “mental-rational structure” of consciousness, the dominant “scientistic” rationalist reductive paradigm that has held sway over the West for the last few centuries. In 1949, when the first part of The Ever-Present Origin appeared—to be followed soon after by the second—Gebser had marshaled some of the most convincing arguments that a shift in Western consciousness was indeed taking place, and that its consequences would be felt by people of his and the following generations. In other words, us.

Gebser was born in Posen, in what was then Prussia, in a particularly pivotal year. In 1905, Albert Einstein formulated his special theory of relativity, and it was Einstein’s work, along with that of other thinkers and writers, that provided Gebser with powerful evidence for the peculiar shift in our “time sense” that characterizes the new “structure of consciousness” he saw unfolding. A few years earlier, in 1900, Sigmund Freud published his groundbreaking The Interpretation of Dreams. Other seminal developments occurred around the same time. The physicist Max Planck completed his theory of the quantum, which led to the overthrow of classical physics, and the philosopher Edmund Husserl established the foundations of phenomenology, the rigorous investigation of consciousness that would lead to existentialism. For a thinker whose work would focus on sudden shifts in the history of consciousness, Gebser certainly picked an auspicious year to be born.

By the time he was ten, all of Europe had erupted into the First World War, and Gebser’s childhood was filled with chaos and disruption. Early on, he had an experience that helped him deal with a world thrown into confusion. While at preparatory school, Gebser jumped from a high dive into a deep pool. He felt that the leap into the pool was also a leap into the unknown, and it was then that he lost his “fear in the face of uncertainty.” “A sense of confidence began to mature within me,” he wrote, “a confidence in the sources of our strength and being and in their immediate accessibility.”[1] Gebser christened this confidence Urvertrauen, “primal trust,” a change from the Urangst, or “primal fear,” that characterizes much of our experience of life.

Gebser’s “primal trust” helped him negotiate many future leaps into the unknown. One occurred when he abandoned an apprenticeship at a bank for an uncertain career in literature. In his early twenties, Gebser started a literary journal and publishing company with a friend. Many of his first poems saw print then, and throughout his life Gebser continued to write poetry, finding in language a way into the mysteries of consciousness; it was also around this time that he discovered Rilke. The collapse of the Weimar Republic devastated Gebser’s family and provided yet another confrontation with uncertainty; they lost their savings and were brought to ruin, and Gebser himself felt the effect of the growing strength of Hitler’s National Socialism firsthand. It was Rilke’s vision of a state of being in which one could affirm everything—the “praise in spite of” embodied in the Angel of the Duino Elegies—that helped Gebser through this time and banished the thoughts of suicide that oppressed him. Yet by 1929, the campaign of political violence unleashed by Hitler’s Brown Shirts convinced Gebser it was time to make another leap.

For the next few years Gebser lived as a kind of European “internal exile,” moving about from Italy, back to Germany, then to Paris, then southern France, and finally settling in Spain in 1931. It was here, as noted, that his original insight into the “structures of consciousness” occurred, yet Spain too was only a temporary haven. These were the years when Generalísimo Franco’s fascists overthrew the legitimate socialist government, and in 1936, Gebser barely missed being killed when he left Spain for France just hours before his Madrid apartment was shelled. As it was, he was almost executed at the border. In Paris he moved among the artistic elite and became friends with many of them, including Pablo Picasso. But Paris was no home either. In August 1939, Gebser crossed from France into Switzerland two hours before the borders were closed; not long after, the Nazis marched through the Arc de Triomphe.

As it did for so many others, Switzerland proved a safe haven for Gebser, and it was here that he settled down to his life’s work. For the next thirty-three years, Gebser devoted his life to unpacking his ideas about the changes taking place in Western consciousness, lecturing, among other places, at the Institute of Applied Psychology in Zurich. Here he met and befriended the psychologist C.G. Jung, with whose work his own has much in common; this led to Gebser lecturing at the C.G. Jung Institute, and also to his becoming a familiar contributor to the annual Eranos Lectures held in Ascona, Switzerland, where his name became associated with those of other thinkers like Mircea Eliade, Gershom Scholem, Erich Neumann, Henry Corbin, and Jung himself, who presided over the gatherings.

After World War II, Gebser traveled, visiting India and the Near East, as well as North and South America. Although Gebser’s work is for the most part focused on the cultural and collective expressions of the current “mutation” in consciousness, in Sarnath, India, he had a mystical experience that moved him deeply. His “satori experience,” as he called it, was so profound that he was reluctant to speak of it; he kept it a secret until 1971, when he revealed it to his biographer and interpreter Georg Feuerstein. Gebser wrote to Feuerstein that it was a “transfiguration and irradiation of the indescribable, unearthly, transparent ‘Light.’” It was, he said, a “spiritual clarity, a quiet jubilation, a knowledge of invulnerability, a primal trust,” linking this new affirmation of life with his first, youthful leap into the unknown. After it, he felt “recast inwardly”: “Since Sarnath everything is in its proper place.” [2]

Like his early experience, the insight at Sarnath helped Gebser to deal with his growing ill health, a demanding workload, and the recognition that the West had moved again into a dangerous time of uncertainty. The Cold War was heating up, and Gebser was convinced that “the crisis we are experiencing today . . . is not just a European crisis.” It was “a crisis of the world and mankind such as has occurred previously only during pivotal junctures.”[3] In 1966, Gebser’s health collapsed; asthma, which had troubled him throughout his life, worsened, and he was forced to curtail his travels and abandon new projects. He never fully recovered from an operation for a stomach complaint, but he continued to write and he was aware of the new interest in consciousness and spirituality that had arisen in the “mystic decade” of the sixties and early seventies. Speaking to a younger generation of readers eager to know more about different forms of consciousness and familiar with the work of Sri Aurobindo and Teilhard de Chardin (two other thinkers concerned with the evolution of consciousness), in a preface to a new edition of The Ever-Present Origin, Gebser wrote that “the principal subject of the book, proceeding from man’s altered relationship to time, is the new consciousness, and to this those of the younger generation are keenly attuned.” By the time Gebser wrote this, in 1973, ideas of a new consciousness had spread throughout the counterculture and the attempt to launch a new paradigm—known variously as the Aquarian Age, the New Age, the Aquarian Conspiracy, and other titles—had taken root. Gebser died the same year, convinced that a new kind of consciousness was being born. It would be a difficult labor, however, and there was no guarantee against miscarriage.

What is the new consciousness Gebser saw on the rise? Here it’s impossible to give more than a brief indication of what he spelled out in meticulous and fascinating detail in The Ever-Present Origin, and readers wanting a good introduction to his work should find a copy of Georg Feuerstein’s excellent Structures of Consciousness (Integral Publishing, 1987) or my own A Secret History of Consciousness. Gebser believed that consciousness has moved through four previous “structures,” each achieving a further separation and distinction from an atemporal, immaterial, spiritual source that he called “origin.” This is not a simple, temporal beginning, but an eternal “presence,” an “ever-present reality” that is by nature “divine and spiritual,” “before all time,” and “the entirety of the very beginning.”[4] For readers who are already scratching their heads, I should point out that one of the difficulties in reading Gebser is that he unavoidably uses language based on our present consciousness structure to speak about types of consciousness that precede or transcend it. With this in mind, a comparison of Gebser’s “origin” with the “implicate order” of the physicist David Bohm may be helpful. Bohm’s “implicate order” is also an atemporal unity out of which our present universe of spacetime emerges, and the process of this emergence is rather like those Japanese paper pellets that, when dropped into water, unfold into various shapes. For Gebser, the “pellet”—“origin”— contains within itself, in a form of “latency,” the further consciousness structures that unfold over time. “Latency” is a central idea in Gebser, embodying the “demonstrable presence of the future.”

The first consciousness structure to unfold is the archaic. In essence, it isn’t appreciably different from origin. It is, Gebser says, “zero-dimensional,” being little more than the first slight ripple of difference between origin and its latent unfolding. Here consciousness is identical with the world; it’s a state of “complete non-differentiation between man and the universe.”[5] Out of this, the magical structure unfolds. This doesn’t differ greatly from the archaic, but the separation from origin has increased. Where in the archaic structure there is identity between consciousness and the world, in the magical structure there is unity between them. At this stage, our ancestors lived in a kind of group or tribal consciousness, which was still strongly linked to nature. Gebser speaks of a “vegetative intertwining of all living things” during this stage, and he links Jung’s notion of “synchronicity”—“meaningful coincidence”—and the effects, aptly, of “magic” to this structure. Gebser makes clear that all of the previous consciousness structures are still present in consciousness today, and that the magical structure is at work in all experiences of “group consciousness.” Sadly, for Gebser, the most immediate expression of group consciousness were the Nazi rallies that drove him out of Germany, and today, many people who believe they are entering “higher” states of consciousness by receding into a “tribal” mode are actually simply sinking into an uncritical acceptance of the magical structure.

Out of the magical comes the mythic. Here consciousness achieves a further differentiation; it is characterized by polarity. Here for the first time appear yin and yang, earth and sky, male and female, space and time, and the other binary oppositions that constitute our experience. Here the “soul”—an interior, “inner space” in contrast to an external “outer” one—appears. Gebser associates this structure with the Greek myth of Narcissus, the youth who fell in love with his own reflection. The soul first sees itself “reflected” in the outer world in this structure, and the dominant mode of experience here is feeling, which is expressed through the ancient myths. Thought, as we understand it, had yet to appear.

This happens in the “mental-rational” structure, the next to arrive. Undoubtedly, by now readers are wondering exactly when these different “structures” appeared. Admittedly, Gebser is less than clear about dates. For the mental-rational structure’s earliest appearance, he suggests 1225 BCE; the previous structures, the archaic and the magical, reach far back, into our distant pre–Homo sapiens beginnings, and the mythic to around the time the earliest civilizations arose after the last ice age. While, as noted, all previous consciousness structures remain active, if obscured, in our present consciousness, the mental-rational structure is the one we are the most familiar with, given it is our own. In this structure, thinking as we understand it begins. Here the separation and differentiation from origin is complete. Consciousness—the ego—is on its own, and this is expressed in an increase in violence and a loss of community. Here the notion of “time” in a linear sense arrives. For the archaic and the magical, there is no time as we know it, only a kind of intermittent “now,” with long stretches of unconsciousness in between. For the mythic, there is the cyclical time we associate with the eternal round of the seasons, and the perpetual circling of the stars. With the mental-rational structure, “straight line” time appears, and with it a profound awareness of death. Needless to say, it’s out of the mental-rational structure and its ability to narrow its attention and focus on details in experience rather than participating in the whole—as the archaic, magical, and mythic structures do to different degrees—that science, with all its achievements and problems, arises.

Gebser argues that prior to the emergence of a new structure, the previous structure enters a “deficient” mode characterized by its breakdown; what had previously been a “credit” and an advantage now becomes a “deficit” and a handicap. Gebser believed that the mental-rational structure entered its “deficient” mode in 1336 AD with rise of perspective and the switch from the “two-dimensional” “embedded” vision of the world common in the Middle Ages (think of tapestry) to the acute awareness of distance and space embodied in the paintings of the early Renaissance (think of landscape paintings). Here, he believes, consciousness achieved its complete “liberation” from origin.

The “deficient” mode of the mental-rational structure reached its most radical extreme in the nineteenth century with the triumph of the rationalist-reductive paradigm mentioned earlier, and Gebser believed that throughout the twentieth century it was in the process of deconstructing itself. The clearest evidence for this, Gebser argued—aside from all the global problems we have inherited—was a profound change in our sense of time. As mentioned, he points to Einstein’s relativity as one example, but there are many more, taken from art, literature, philosophy, music, and other cultural forms. On a more mundane level, however, I can offer one example unknown to Gebser, in which time as we previously knew it has been abolished. Anyone who uses TiVo or listens to podcasts is no longer bound by the idea of a certain television program or radio broadcast being on at a certain time. The whole internet experience, in fact, has altered our way of thinking about both time and space. There is the constant “stream” of information, and nowadays, people “connect” over vast distances instantaneously; many of us have more “contact” with people on the other side of the planet than we do with our actual neighbors. On a less innocuous note, the many crises affecting us today—ecological, social, economic, political—can all be traced to the effects of the mental-rational structure of consciousness entering its deficient mode.

This breakdown, Gebser believed, was a kind of clearing away, a making space for the new consciousness structure, the “integral,” to arrive. As its name suggests, in this structure, the previous four structures are integrated. The integral structure is characterized by what Gebser calls an “aperspectival” awareness, a transcending of the “perspectival” in the same way as that was a transcending of the “pre-perspectival.” In the integral structure, origin becomes perceivable, the spiritual “concretized,” and the “uncreated light” manifest. Gebser’s Sarnath insight, in which he experienced satori, is an example of what he means by the integral structure of consciousness. As with all shifts from one structure to another, the transition is by no means guaranteed, and the experience, both individual and collective, is traumatic. Recent developments in the world economy, brought about by the short-sighted greed for immediate gain associated with the deficient mental-rational mode, would have only convinced Gebser that he was right.

This brief summary is light years away from doing Gebser’s ideas justice, and I can only hope that it motivates some readers to seek him out for themselves. He is difficult, but then so is anything of value. To my mind The Ever-Present Origin presents some of the most convincing evidence that at the present time, the West—the entire planet, in fact—is facing a perilous leap into the unknown. It also suggests ways in which we can make that leap, as Gebser did, with primal trust.

_____________
1 Quoted in Gary Lachman A Secret History of Consciousness (Lindisfarne: Great Barrington, MA, 2003) p. 223.
2 Ibid. p. 229–30.
3 Ibid. p. 230.
4 Ibid. p. 236.
5 Ibid. p. 239.

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