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Why do the Sixties remain so devilishly fascinating to us today?
Is it the sense of an opportunity lost, or a vision brought to
life?
For our elders, is it nostalgia for a golden age?
I've always thought of that period as a second Renaissance; where
in 15th century Florence the lost knowledge and art of the ancient
Greece and Rome was reintegrated into Western culture, in San
Francisco in the 60s the introduction of non-Western ideas and
philosophies began to widen our culture into something truly global;
a very necessary development, if we want our species to survive
the next century without self-destructing.
Heres Allen Cohen, the publisher of the SF Oracle:
The predominant feeling among hippies
from about 1965 through the summer of '67 was that we were agents
and witnesses of a dawning of a new age. An age in which the warrior
spirit, that had vaulted western man to the domination and potential
destruction of creation, would be dissolved in the spiritual transcendence
of the saint. Ghandi and Martin Luther King were our heroes, and
we had turned to the rich heritage of Asian mysticism and metaphysics
for our inspiration and our practice. We leaped across oceans
and through time to pre-Christian mythologies like the American
Indian, the Egyptian and the occult and pagan philosophies of
Europe. We studied with Buddhists and Indian gurus, native shamans,
witches and yogis. We turned from Aristotelian and Christian dualism
to the four pronged logic of Vedanta philosophy. We studied the
Upanishads, the Tao Te Ching, Alan Watt's books on Zen Buddhism,
and Hesse's novels, especially Siddhartha. We wouldn't leave the
house without consulting the I Ching, or our Tarot cards or our
astrological charts. We were becoming world citizens. Peace and
love weren't just slogans but states of mind and experiences that
we were living and bearing witness to. Living in harmony with
the earth was an ideal that we felt and perceived as real experience.
Thats
how many of us saw it then; how do we see it now?
How have the values, ideas and practices that meant so much to
us then
pertain to our lives today? To help answer some of these questions,
were inaugurating an oral history project.
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