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| title | chunk | source | category | tags | date_saved | instance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Western esotericism and psychology | 6/9 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_esotericism_and_psychology | reference | science, encyclopedia | 2026-05-05T03:13:08.247145+00:00 | kb-cron |
=== Parapsychology (boundary-field interface) === Nineteenth-century psychical research evolved into twentieth-century parapsychology, which pursued experimental and survey studies of anomalous cognition (e.g., telepathy, clairvoyance) at the boundary of psychology proper. In this article parapsychology is treated as a historical interface with psychology—linked to case-genres on automatism and dissociation and intersecting selectively with transpersonal psychology debates on non-ordinary states—rather than as a psychological school; genealogical description is kept distinct from evidential claims.
== Popular psychology and coaching ==
From the late twentieth century, repertoires associated with Western esotericism circulated widely through self-help and coaching markets. An American strand often labelled New Thought—later echoed in formulations such as the law of attraction—provided vocabularies of mental causation and affirmation that were readily repackaged as techniques for self-knowledge, motivation and optimisation. Historians read these idioms within the broader late-modern dynamics of occulture and the cultic milieu, which situate diffusion through publishing, workshops, retreats and media rather than through academic psychology. Early twentieth-century popular psychology also popularised relaxation-through-attention methods. Writers such as Annie Payson Call taught guided relaxation and posture–breath discipline for “nerves” and self-regulation in non-clinical settings, combining moral reform with bodily awareness (see relaxation techniques, guided imagery). Her work, including Power Through Repose (1891), translated the harmonial and mind-cure milieux—shaped in part by Swedenborgianism, mesmerism and American metaphysical religion—into a psychophysical programme of self-culture. Historian Mark Singleton characterises her method (analytically) as “salvation through relaxation”, and argues that its emphasis on proprioceptive awareness and repose prefigured twentieth-century relaxation therapies and fed into Western receptions of “yoga-like” breath and relaxation practices. In this sense, Call exemplifies how harmonial religion prefigured the modern psychologization of esoteric ideas about inner harmony and divine influx. Historians note that the "breath culture" repertoire systematized by William Walker Atkinson (as "Yogi Ramacharaka") drew largely on Western hygienic and psychological currents subsequently reframed in Indic vocabulary; scholarship interprets this as a case of Western re-signification rather than direct transmission from South Asian sources. In parallel, the Mazdaznan movement propagated a “religion of breathing” that blended Theosophical, neo-Zoroastrian and popular psychophysiological motifs, illustrating early esoteric reinterpretations of respiratory discipline within the American harmonial field. Among late-1960s self-help and human potential offerings, José Silva’s Silva Method (originally “Silva Mind Control”) packaged relaxation/auto-hypnosis and guided imagery— including exercises with “inner guides” (imaginal counselors)—together with the era’s alpha-training discourse and New Thought-style autosuggestion, while also invoking elements of ESP in a parapsychological key. Reference works place the program in the self-religion/auto-help milieu rather than clinical psychotherapy and note Silva’s autodidactic background (psychology, yoga, modern Rosicrucian doctrines) and the model’s international diffusion via seminars and books. A second conduit was personality typing. The Myers–Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), inspired by Jungian typology, achieved wide uptake in education, management and pastoral guidance despite sustained methodological criticism concerning reliability, temporal stability of “types” and predictive validity; overviews recommend caution regarding its use for selection or diagnosis. By contrast, the modern Enneagram took shape in late twentieth-century esoteric–therapeutic milieus (e.g., Oscar Ichazo's system and later adaptations by Claudio Naranjo), before diffusing into counselling and coaching; academic surveys emphasise its recent genealogy, heterogeneous evidence base and cultural vigency rather than established efficacy. Communication-focused packages—commonly grouped under NLP—combined elements from humanistic psychotherapy, Ericksonian communication and popular linguistics to offer toolkits for persuasion, reframing and self-change. While not esoteric in doctrine, such programmes circulated in the same workshop economies as symbolic counselling and energy-themed practices, and at times repackaged esoteric maps (archetypes, “energy”, transformation) in optimisation language. Systematic reviews report insufficient evidence for robust effects and note pervasive methodological limitations. Educational and pastoral counselling contexts also served as diffusion channels: personality typologies (MBTI; the modern Enneagram) and symbolic counselling devices were adopted for guidance and self-exploration, often framed under values education or spiritual accompaniment. Within this translation, symbolic/interpretive uses were normalised over realist–occult claims. At the edges of popular psychology, ritualised or dramaturgic formats were marketed for personal change. The term “psychomagic” has been used for symbolic–ritual interventions in advice literature and workshops, with genealogical ties to esoteric repertoires and mythopoetic narratives; scholarly treatments read these as cultural phenomena within contemporary occulture rather than as established clinical modalities. Likewise, family constellations circulate in coaching and group-work settings with strong dramaturgic elements; reviews highlight mixed evidence and methodological concerns, advising caution and clear framing when used in para-clinical contexts. Some masculinity coaching and men’s-group ecologies drew selectively on Jungian archetypal vocabularies and, in some milieus, on neo-tantric, neidan, or polarity of “energy” (Sulphur or Sun-masculine/Mercury or Moon-femenine from alchemy, Shiva/Shakti, yin and yang) rhetorics, illustrating how symbolic repertoires are operationalised in advice genres outside formal clinical frameworks. Across these formats, the article maintains an analytic distinction between provenance (genealogical links to esoteric repertoires) and evidence (empirical appraisal of outcomes). Symbolic/interpretive framings—sometimes glossed as “as-if real”—are reported with attribution and kept distinct from realist–occult assertions; cultural visibility in wellness and coaching markets does not constitute clinical validation. Energy-labelled offerings (e.g., reiki-style sessions in coaching or as complementary add-ons) likewise illustrate how subtle-body vocabularies circulate in para-clinical niches; historians frame these under occulture/market diffusion rather than academic psychology.