The
Intentional Quest:
Gurdjieff in the 21st Century
A workshop with Anthony
Blake, author of the Intelligent Enneagram
Friday
and Sunday 3/27/98 - 3/28/98
The Fourth Way was
launched by the remarkable innovator G.I. Gurdjieff soon after the beginning of
this century. It was an attempt to answer the question of how to create a spiritual
life under the conditions of modern life. Foreseeing many of the effects of rapidly
accelerating technology, and the demise of previously isolated and protected environments
in which spiritual practice could be maintained, Gurdjieff argued for a totally
new methodology that integrated the traditional 'ways' in methods that could work
even as we lived our hectic, artificial lives. He went so far as to claim that
there were new methods that could turn the apparent turmoil and distractions of
our environment to advantage.
The Fourth Way did
not depend on blind faith in human creativity, but supposed that there was an
active intelligence or intelligences that was deeply concerned with the evolving
universe in all its details. The higher the intelligence, the greater the concern
with individuality. As John Bennett (one of Gurdjieff's most creative followers)
insisted, all transformational work depended on coming into communication with
higher intelligence. However, the core action is produced whenever people come
together in a state of conscience. We have to utilise our differences of perception
to provide a field in which an intelligence can come into effect.
The
Fourth Way now at the end of the twentieth century appears as an important way
of understanding what humanity is being called upon to undertake. While preserving
our particular inclinations to this or that tradition or practice, it challenges
us to question all received wisdoms. It asks us to go beyond the limits of belief.
It shows us how to take advantage of the energy of the times. It is a way that
is different every time it comes into manifestation. It is no longer to be identified
with the legacy of Gurdjieff's own teachings.
Anthony
Blake, a student and collaborator of John Bennett, will be conducting a workshop
on this ever-renewing methodology. Some of the topics to be addressed are: being
in the body, making consciousness, communication outside space and time, receptivity
to higher influences and the reading of experience. Sometimes we will be talking,
sometimes we will be dancing, sometimes we will be in silence. Most of the usual
distinctions between theory and practice will not apply. The point is to create
a kind of knowledge that proves itself and does not require belief in another
person's words.
You are welcome to join in the enterprise.
But you must be ready to question, attend, wish for your own sake and for the
sake of others as well. One of Gurdjieff's many practical sayings was: All true
initiation is self-initiation.
New York City,
NY
Friday March 27 & Saturday March 28, 1998
Location: The Sufi Bookstore
227
W. Broadway
New York City, NY 10013
(212) 334-5212