One Earth – Natural Science (Autumn 1988)
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 8, issue number 3, was originally published in autumn 1988. Inside this magazine you can find such features as Poetry, Politics And The New Biology; Psychology And Spirit: The
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 8, issue number 3, was originally published in autumn 1988. Inside this magazine you can find such features as Poetry, Politics And The New Biology; Psychology And Spirit: The
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 8, issue number 1, was originally published in spring 1988. Inside this magazine you can find extracts of presentations from the October 1987 conference From Organisation…to Organism: a new
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 3, issue number 6, was originally published in August / September 1983. Inside this magazine you can find such features as Pilgrims For Peace; Accounting For Findhorn; and Holistic Macro
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 1, issue number 6, was originally published in 1981. Inside this magazine you can find such features as Politics And Miracles; The Politics Of Consciousness; and New Dimensions In Governance.
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 0, issue number 7, was originally published in summer 1979. Inside this magazine you can find such features as Economics As A Way Of The Spirit; The World Crisis And
What, exactly, is the "Western Mystery Tradition", and what does the Findhorn Foundation Community have to do with it?
In 2017 Ralph White from the Open Centre in New York organised a Western Mysteries Conference. The group travelled to Iona and other Hebridean islands. He then brought them to the Findhorn Foundation to see
...Contrary to popular opinion, the Findhorn Community was not solely founded on beach sand and couch grass, Eileen Caddy’s inner guidance, Dorothy Maclean’s conversations with angels, and Peter Caddy’s heroic efforts with compost and cabbages...
"Suddenly and unexpectedly they appeared from out of the mists of time with a message for the world, and secretly their message interwove itself into the philosophies, religions and sciences..."
It is essential in dealing with mysteries to recognise the importance of the statement, possibly made by Aristotle and adapted by many thereafter, that ‘a mystery is not something to be learned but a path to be trodden.’