The New Age movement and its societal implications
Abstract
This article examines the essence of the New Age movement: its reservations about the Judaic‐Christian heritage, its pantheistic/monistic orientation, its individualism, its search for the mystical experience, its skepticism of modern science and technology, its openness to androgyny, its ecumenicalism, and its prediction of a new dispensation. The article traces the New Age predecessors and influences: gnosticism, the Catholic potpourri, romanticism, the writings of C.G. Jung, and Theosophy. It speculates that the movement’s influence – given its individualism, skepticism of structure and organization, and hostility toward modern methodology – will be implicit and indirect. Finally, it notes the ambivalence of the core ideology, lending itself to both “progressive” and “non‐progressive” interpretation.
Keywords
Citation
O’Neil, D.J. (2001), "The New Age movement and its societal implications", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 28 No. 5/6/7, pp. 456-475. https://doi.org/10.1108/03068290110360795
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 2001, MCB UP Limited