The book includes a good deal of material about the original  conception
of Radical Centrism. Today's RC is different in a number of  respects,
some of them important, but Ferguson showed the way.
BR
 
 
------------------------------------------------
 
 
LA  Times
 
Marilyn Ferguson, 70, dies;  writer's 'The Aquarian Conspiracy' was pivotal 
in New Age movement 

 
 
 
By Elaine Woo  
November 2, 2008

Marilyn Ferguson, the author  of the 1980 bestseller "The Aquarian 
Conspiracy" and a galvanizing influence on  participants in scores of 
alternative 
groups that coalesced as the _New  Age_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/arts-culture/genres/new-age-(genre)-01011000246.topic)
  movement, died Oct. 19 at 
her home in Banning. She was 70.  


The cause was  believed to be a _heart  attack_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/health/physical-conditions/heart-attack-HEISY000062.topic)
 , said her 
son, Eric, of the adjacent Riverside County city of  Beaumont.

In 1975, Ferguson turned an interest in human potential into an  
influential monthly newsletter, Brain/Mind Bulletin, which reported on new  
discoveries in neuroscience and psychology. That work led her to discern that a 
 
massive "cultural realignment" was occurring, a conspiracy in the root sense of 
 
disparate forces all breathing together to produce personal and social  
change.

"The Aquarian Conspiracy" was the era's first comprehensive  analysis of 
seemingly unconnected efforts -- scientists investigating  biofeedback, 
midwives running alternative birthing centers, politicians  encouraging 
creative 
government, a Christian evangelist promoting meditation, an  astronaut 
exploring altered states of consciousness -- that were "breathing  together" in 
their break from mainstream Western practices and beliefs in  medicine, 
psychology, spirituality, politics and other fields.

The book's  message was optimistic. "After a dark, violent age, the 
Piscean, we are entering  a millennium of love and light -- in the words of the 
popular song 'the Age of  Aquarius,' the time of 'the mind's true liberation,' 
" Ferguson wrote.  Aquarians, by her definition, were people who sought a 
revolution in  consciousness, to "leave the prison of our conditioning, to 
love, to turn  homeward. To conspire with each other and for each other."

Some critics  found her views simplistic. R.C. Bealer wrote in the journal 
Science Books &  Films that Ferguson offered "hyperbole of the 'positive' 
thinking  huckster."

Others accused her of undermining Christianity by embracing  alternative 
religions. The book was a favorite target of Lyndon LaRouche, the  political 
extremist whose followers held public protests against it and called  it "a 
challenge to the nation's grasp on reality."

But as the activities  she chronicled moved from the fringe of society 
toward its center, Ferguson was  embraced as a beacon. Her book became "the 
most 
commonly accepted statement of  Movement ideals and goals," wrote J. Gordon 
Melton in the New Age  Encyclopedia.

"Marilyn Ferguson was a very important communicator and  networker in this 
whole movement" to create an alternative consciousness,  Fritjof Capra, the 
Berkeley physicist and New Age figure who wrote "The Tao of  Physics," said 
last week. Capra's 1975 book fueled the new thinking by showing  parallels 
between modern physics and Eastern mysticism.

Ferguson grew up  in modest circumstances in Grand Junction, Colo., where 
she was born April 5,  1938. Her father was a bricklayer who was also a 
concert pianist; her mother was  a homemaker who later ran an antiques store.

Ferguson attended Mesa  College in Colorado for two years and the 
University of Colorado for one year  before launching herself as a freelance 
writer. 
Her first book, "Champagne  Living on a Beer Budget" (1968), offered 
financial advice and was co-written  with her then-husband, Michael Ferguson. 
She 
also wrote short stories and poems  that were published in women's magazines 
such as Cosmopolitan and  Mademoiselle.

After moving to Los Angeles in 1968, she began studying  psychology and 
collecting the information that formed the basis of her next  book, "The 
_Brain_ (http://www.latimes.com/topic/health/human-body/brain-HHA00008.topic)   
Revolution" (1973), which explored new research on such topics as hypnosis,  
meditation, extrasensory perception, memory and genetics. She began 
practicing  transcendental meditation herself.

As she expanded her contacts with  others who were engaged in similar 
practices, she found herself becoming a  clearinghouse for "everything from 
more 
humane attitudes to holistic medicine,"  she told The Times in 1980.

She began to publish the Brain/Mind Bulletin,  which at its peak had an 
eclectic mix of about 10,000 subscribers who included  academics, celebrities 
and pizza parlor operators. For 21 years, until she  ceased publication in 
1996, it compiled news from journals and conferences and  featured interviews 
with vanguard figures, including Capra.

"It was  tremendously helpful because it bound people together and informed 
us of each  other's work," Capra said. "Marilyn Ferguson's main achievement 
-- and it was a  tremendous achievement -- was that she sustained this 
networking of the  alternative culture and New Age movement long before there 
was an  Internet."

Another subscriber was publisher Jeremy Tarcher, who  specialized in books 
about health, philosophy and human potential. He was  fascinated by her 
reports. "I called Marilyn and said, 'What else have you got?'  " Tarcher 
recalled. "She said, 'I've got a folder with stuff I'm not quite sure  what to 
do 
with.' "

Tarcher remembers clearly how he reacted when she  showed him the 
information she had collected: He began to cry.

"I had one  of those moments of epiphany when you feel you are hearing or 
reading something  that is going to be a guide for a significant part of your 
life," he said. "That  doesn't happen to publishers every day."

After she turned those notes  into "The Aquarian Conspiracy," readers 
shared with her a similar reaction. She  received thousands of letters from 
people who were relieved to discover that  others shared their passion for 
Sufism, dream journals, Rolfing or solving world  hunger. The most common 
reaction, she told the Christian Science Monitor in  1984, was "Thank heavens 
you 
wrote that book! I thought I was crazy until I read  it."

As she began to lecture around the world, she found loyal readers in  a 
surprising range of fields. As she told the Boston Globe in 1988, one night  
she addressed 500 farm wives in Alberta, Canada, and the next morning she gave 
a  lecture for members of Congress. _Al  Gore_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/government/al-gore-PEPLT007322.topic)  
was a fan of the book and 
invited Ferguson to the _White  House_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/topic/politics/government/executive-branch/white-house-PLCUL000110.topic)
 , her son said.

Ferguson lived in Los Angeles for 37 years,  until 2005, when she moved to 
San Bernardino. That year she also released a  follow-up to "The Aquarian 
Conspiracy," called "Aquarius Now." Last year she  moved to Banning to be 
closer to her son.

She is also survived by two  daughters, Kris Ferguson of Los Angeles and 
Lynn Lewis of Oakland; and six  grandchildren

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