Lindisfarne Association
Lindisfarne Association
Founded by cultural historian William Irwin Thompson. It was "a contemplative education community devoted to the study and realization of a new planetary culture."1 Can see it as inspiration and precursor of Life Itself.
Had extraordinary set of members e.g. David Steindl-Rast and many more as per https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindisfarne_Association
A bit ahead of its time and probably more head and heart than hand – i.e. less focused on pragmatism and doing.
Also perhaps somewhat new-age e.g.
The Lindisfarne doctrine is closely related to that of its founder, William Thompson. Mentioned as part of the Lindisfarne ideology are a long list of spiritual and esoteric traditions including yoga, Tibetan Buddhism, Chinese traditional medicine, Hermeticism, Celtic animism, Gnosticism, cabala, geomancy, ley lines, Pythagoreanism, and ancient mystery religions.[8]
The group placed a special emphasis on sacred geometry, defined by Thompson as "a vision of divine intelligence, the logos, revealing itself in all forms, from the logarithmic spiral of a seashell to the hexagonal patterns of cooling basalt, from the architecture of the molecule to the galaxy."[9] Rachel Fletcher, Robert Lawlor, and Keith Critchlow lectured at Crestone on the application of sacred geometry, Platonism, and Pythagoreanism to architecture.[10] The exemplar of these ideas is the Grail Chapel in Crestone (also known as Lindisfarne Chapel), which is built to reflect numerous basic geometrical relationships.[11] [From Wikipedia]
Footnotes
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From the blurb of his 1982 book, see https://www.nytimes.com/1981/01/22/books/books-of-the-times-books-of-the-times.html ↩