[Oe List ...] FW: Landmark Education News

Herman Greene hfgreene at mindspring.com
Mon Oct 4 12:43:10 CDT 2010


A week ago Sunday I was out running and an old friend recognized me and
stopped his car. He said he was on his way to a Landmark Presentation that
he was leading on my street and asked me to come over. I didn't know what it
was about, but thought I would stop in after my run. I ran pass the house he
was in and he saw me and came out to the street and asked me to come in
right then. I said to myself, "Who knows, maybe this is something I should
know about." In my sweaty running clothes I went in and there were two other
newcomers. We were asked to right down problem areas in our life and share.
About five minutes into that I said, "I'm feeling this is not where I should
be this afternoon" and left.

 

These guys were a little like RS-I recruiters.

 

Herman

 

  _____  

From: oe-bounces at wedgeblade.net [mailto:oe-bounces at wedgeblade.net] On Behalf
Of W. J.
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 12:55 PM
To: Order Ecumenical Community
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] FW: Landmark Education News

 

Yes, ICA was mentioned in the Hunger Project materials. Maybe Joe Thomas did
that. Don't remember exactly, so don't hold me to it.

I think the point of the Hunger Project was if they talked enough about
eliminating global hunger and raised enough money to keep talking about it
more and more, then that alone would raise consciousness enough to eliminate
global hunger. Or something like that. Voila! Gone. Amazing.

A.M. Novel used to be very big on Landmark Education. Wonder what he thinks
of it now.

Marshall

 

  _____  

From: frank bremner <fjbremner at hotmail.com>
To: Dialogue OE <oe at wedgeblade.net>
Sent: Sun, October 3, 2010 11:45:39 PM
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] FW: Landmark Education News

Dear colleagues
 
There was a rumour around, in the late 70s, that Werner Erhard (originally
Jack Rosenberg) had done RS-I.  I found no reference to this in any of the
books about est (Erhard Seminars Training, or Latin for "it is"?) or Werner
Erhard that I came across at that time.  But he did do a lot of homework
before setting up his organisation.
 
 
I took the est  training in late 1978 or early 1979, in Chicago.  The same
things that impressed Beret and Ron impressed me.  Of course, at that time
anything remotely psychological was O:E/EI/ICA heresy.
 
I did a followup course in Philadelphia in 1979-80, and another one in
Adelaide in 1980-81.  They were disappointing, with very litle new content
or processes.  They assumed that doing another course was the only "next
step" that was OK, while successive courses just concentrated on doing more
courses, and on recruiting people to the basic est  training.  The volunteer
and paid assistants were very poor at participating in discussion or
dialogue around the edges - they behaved like the "est-ies" of the various
caricatures and sendups of them in the movies.  Very much "Join our movement
- it's the best!" in style.
 
So: at least one good event, but a crap organisation.  [I remember an
Anglican clergyman saying something similar about EI about 1973:  "Great
ideas, great courses, but I don't think much of the organisation."]
 
Worth reading: Luke Rinehart's Book of Est, and Bill Bartley's book about
Werner Erhard.  Nothing else I came across took "the work" seriously enough
to do a thorough commentary and critique - most articles and books never got
inside the est  mindset, and its interplay of Zen Buddhist thought,
psychology, and the middle-class audience, to be worth much.  I was trying
to write some papers on "the consciousness movement" at the time, before
Peter Russell or Marilyn Ferguson achieved any prominence, and I came across
so much sensationalist garbage in my research.  A colleague said recently:
"All organisations and movements have their blind spots".
 
I have heard little about Landmark Education, as the organisation is now
known.  The est Seminar  has been replaced by The Forum, and has a small (?)
Australian presence.
 
In the 1980s, the library at the high school where I was teaching received a
thick volume about global hunger, as thanks for letting someone speak to a
lunchtime meeting about The Hunger Project, an endeavour set up by the est
organisation.  It covered a variety of approaches, including comprehensive
community/human development.  And in one of the Project's newsletters I saw
a mention of the ICA work in Maharashtra State, India; so there was some
information transferred there - did Werner of somebody visit India?.  One of
the Project's themes was "the possibility of eradicating hunger".  Now there
are T-shirts and so on on this theme - if smallpox can be eradicated, why
not hunger?  Etc.
 
Cheers
 
Frank Bremner

  _____  

Date: Sun, 3 Oct 2010 22:17:07 -0500
To: oe at wedgeblade.net
From: beretgriffith at charter.net
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] FW: Landmark Education News

I don't think there was any connection between RS-1 and EST. Ron and I took
the EST training in Chicago in 1976 or 1977. Marshall's take is on target.
Ron and I both felt the EST training was a unique avenue to getting people
to look at their lives rather than escaping from life. It was far more
aggressive than any thing EI/ICA did with people and I think it was an
avenue of transformation of many people. There were about three hundred
people in the training we took. The trainers were outstanding. In any EST
event I attended trainers used no notes, the set-up impeccable, and no
excuses were accepted for anything. While at the EST training we became
acquainted with an interesting couple. We brought them over the Kemper to
see the ICA. They were more interested in getting us to go to additional
programs than in the ICA. We did not keep up the connection with them. The
EST enrollment tactics were high pressure. 

There is a film out on his life which I have seen. Enjoyed it. There is a
site with his quotes.A sample: 


"Happiness is a function of accepting what is. Love is a function of
communication. Health is a function of participation.  Self expression is a
function of responsibility."


-Werner Erhard
 
I think Erhard is an interesting character. Here is a bit on him from
http://www.wernererhard.net/ 
For nearly 40 years Werner Erhard has been the creator of innovative ideas
and models of individual, organizational, and social transformation.  His
ideas and models have been the source of new perspectives for thinkers and
practitioners in fields as diverse as business, education, philosophy,
medicine, psychotherapy, third world development, conflict resolution
<http://www.masteryfoundation.org/peace/ireland/blockanderhard/> , and
community building.  He has created new ways of seeing things in areas where
progress has stalled or where breakthroughs would make a significant
difference.  A majority of the Fortune 100 companies and many foundations
and governmental entities have used his ideas and models.  Fortune
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortune_(magazine)>  Magazine's 40th
anniversary issue (May 15, 1995), in examining the major contributions to
management thinking, recognized Erhard's ideas as one of the major
innovations of the last few decades. 

While Werner Erhard <http://www.wernererhard.com/>  may be best known to the
general public for applications derived from his models including The
<http://erhardseminarstraining.com/>  est Training and The Forum of the
1970s and 1980s, currently Erhard commits his time and intellectual effort
almost exclusively to the academic world.  Werner Erhard's recent research
and writing, and lectures and courses can be found on his author page in the
Social Sciences Research Network <http://www.ssrn.com/>  -
http://ssrn.com/author=433651.  More than two million people around the
world have participated in the public, corporate and academic programs and
courses he has created.  Social scientist Daniel
<http://www.danyankelovich.com/>  Yankelovich said of a study he conducted
of participants of The Forum: "Several of the study's findings surprised me
quite a bit, especially the large number of participants for whom The Forum
proved to be 'one of the most valued experiences of my life'. This is not a
sentiment that people, especially successful, well-educated people, express
lightly."  

Werner Erhard is largely self-educated, albeit with tutoring from some
important thinkers of his time, Sir Karl
<http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/popper/>  Popper, Hilary Putnam
<http://www.webalice.it/af_gazzola/putnam/home.htm> , Michel
<http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/foucault/>  Foucault, Humberto Maturana
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humberto_Maturana>  and Richard Feynman
<http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1965/feynman-bio.html>
to name a few.  Professor of Philosophy, Michael E. Zimmerman
<http://www.colorado.edu/ArtsSciences/CHA/profiles/zimmerman.html>  said of
Erhard "He had no particular formal training in anything, but he understood
things as well as anyone I'd ever seen; and I've been around a lot of smart
people in academia.  This is an extraordinary intellect I saw at work."  In
recognition of his humanitarian work around the world Werner Erhard was
awarded the Mahatma Gandhi Humanitarian Award. 

There is a site with his more recent papers. I'm going to take a look.
Beret Griffith

At 06:41 PM 10/3/2010, you wrote:



I choked and gagged reflexively when I read that RS-1 in any way birthed
Werner Erhard's EST. [pardon me while I throw up]. 
The only similarity I can think of might be the style of boxing people into
a weekend format and forcing them to deal with something rather than
escaping into their favorite avoidance patterns. 
Hmm, sound familiar?
Or maybe this one: "There ISN'T any Messiah..."
Marshall
And I don't think we made people hold it until they wet their panties--a
famous Erhard tactic.


From: "slottaglobalnews at earthlink.net" <slottaglobalnews at earthlink.net>
To: Order Ecumenical Community <oe at wedgeblade.net>
Sent: Sun, October 3, 2010 4:04:14 PM
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] FW: Landmark Education News

I think Landmark Education is a spin-off from RSI through the work of Werner
Erhard. Once called EST it became Landmark Forum and then Landmark
Education. It is still recruited pretty much like RS-I.

On Oct 2, 2010, at 10:10 AM, KarenBueno at aol.com wrote:




That looks like a dynamite organization.  I wonder if they have plans to
replicate it.
 
Karen Bueno
 
In a message dated 10/2/2010 8:29:53 A.M. Mountain Daylight Time,
amnoel at comcast.net writes:

the following video that has impacted my family and 3 million lives

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