GIR VOL IV, NO. 1; FALL 2000: Gurdjieff International Review
2000. 76 pages. Focuses on Gurdjieff Himself, on his writings, and also includes several articles on Prominent pupils. More
2000. 76 pages. Focuses on Gurdjieff Himself, on his writings, and also includes several articles on Prominent pupils. More
2001. 60 pages. Contains first English text printing of the 1976 Documentary film the life and teachings of Gurdjieff; A review of 'Meeting with Remarkable Men' by Manuel Rainard; 'Essence Friend' by Louise Welch; 'Louise Welch', a poem by Martha Heyneman; An interview with Jacob Needleman; Notes from a member..... More
48 pages. Contains an anonymous commentary, 'On Listening to the Gurdjieff / de Hartmann Music' by a senior member of the Gurdjieff Society of London; 'The Sound of Gurdjieff' by Laurence Rosenthal; An introduction to the first two volumes of the complete piano music of Gurdjief & de Hartmann by..... More
1998. 60 pages. Contains 'The Forest Philosophers', an article by C.E. Bechhofer Roberts which first appeared in 1924; 'A Visit to Gourdyev' by Dennis Saurat; 'An Experiment at Fontainebleau' by Dr. James Carruthers Young; 'Taking the Life Cure in Gurdjieff's School' by Maud Hoffman; 'Some Memories of the Prieuré' by..... More
2005. Contents include a editorial by guest editor James Opie, observations on money by Gurdjieff, recollections of Gurdjieff's use of money to teach by several students. The issue also contains an essay by John Pentland on Religion and Money, shared publicly for the first time. Also, 'Our Money has No..... More
2003. 80 pages. A central premise of an authentic teaching is to understand the essential vitality of the teaching through the emergence and re-emergence of its living vibration, leaving room for its intrinsic message to freely continue its passage, its movement of transmission, at the individual and communal level, in..... More
Los Altos: 2020. 90 pages. Gurdjieff taught that in nature everything is alive and connected within the vast network of consciousness and lawful exchange. Since Gurdjieff's death seventy years ago, earth's ecosystems have been, and continue to be, increasingly disrupted and transformed through the actions of our species. How do..... More
2012. Contributions from Gurdjieff, Jeanne de Salzmann, Michel de Salzman, William Segal, Rene Daumal, Willam Nyland, Mary Stein, Jacob Needleman, James Opie and others; 84 pages. More
Guest editor Ellen Dooling Draper; 74 pages. Includes six selections from Gurdjieff on the movements; Historical articles on the movements by John Bennett, Anna Butkovsky-Hewitt, Louise Welch, Rene Daumal, C.S. Nott and Pierre Schaeffer; and articles by movements treachers and students Jessmin Howarth, Pauline de Dampierre, Henri Tracol, Paul Reynard..... More
2003. 80 pages. A review of the oral tradition begun by Gurdjieff and how it was carried forward by direct pupils. Contribution by or abour Hugh Ripman, Helen Adie, Paul E. Anderson, Louise March, Edwin Wolfe, William Welch & Don Hoyt. More
London: Arkana, 1991. 212 pages. More
New York: Weiser, 1977. 212 pages. More
New York: Weiser, 1970. 212 pages. More
London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1977. 212 pages. More
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Later printing. Oxford Studies in Western Esotericism Series; [xvii] 326 pages. Writers have for the most part passed over in silence the contemplative exercises presented in Gurdjieff's writings. Although Gurdjieff had intended them to be confidential, some of the most important exercises were published posthumously..... More
Sherborne: Coombe Springs, 1974. First edition. Transformation of Man Series, Number 1; 47 pages. More
New York: Weiser, 1990. 90 pages. More
New York: Weiser, 1984. 90 pages. More
Sherborne: Coombe Springs, 1969. 70 pages. More
New York: Harper & Row, 1973. First U.S. edition. 320 pages. Presents Gurdjieff's early life and the sources of the higher knowledge he acquired. Bennett raises the question: "Why is man here?" and expands it to "What is required of man?" More
New York: Harper & Row, 1973. First U.S. edition. 320 pages. Presents Gurdjieff's early life and the sources of the higher knowledge he acquired. Bennett raises the question: "Why is man here?" and expands it to "What is required of man?" More
New York: Harper & Row, 1973. First U.S. edition. 320 pages. Presents Gurdjieff's early life and the sources of the higher knowledge he acquired. Bennett raises the question: "Why is man here?" and expands it to "What is required of man?" More
New York: Stonehill, 1973. First printing. 162 pages. More
New York: Stonehill, 1973. First printing. 162 pages. More
Austin: Karnak, 2023. 179 pages. More