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A
Brief History of the Enneagram
By
Jerome Wagner
A recently popularized typology which is moving into the
mainstream in personal growth, therapy, spirituality, education and business
arenas is the ENNEAGRAM (Any-a-gram). In Greek Ennea means nine and gram
means point . The word refers to a circle inscribed by nine points which
is used as a symbol to arrange and depict nine personality styles. In its
current formulations, the Enneagram brings together insights of perennial
wisdom and findings of modern psychology. The Enneagram figure is derived
from arithmology while the nine personality styles are validated by experiential
observations.
The roots of the Enneagram are disputed. Some authors
believe they have found variations of the Enneagram symbol in the sacred
geometry of the Pythagorians who 4000 years ago were interested in the
deeper meaning and significance of numbers. This line of mystical mathematics
was passed on through Plato, his disciple Plotinus, and subsequent neo-Platonists.
Some believe this tradition found its way into esoteric
Judaism through Philo, a Jewish neo-Platonist philosopher, where it later
appears as the Tree of Life in the Cabalistic symbolism of ninefoldness.
Variations of this symbol also appear in Islamic Sufi
traditions, perhaps arriving there through the Arabian philosopher al-Ghazzali.
Around the fourteenth century the Naqshbandi Order of Sufism, variously
known as the "Brotherhood of the Bees" (because they collected and stored
knowledge) and the "Symbolists" (because they taught through symbols) is
said to have preserved and passed on the Enneagram symbol.
Speculation has it the Enneagram found its way into esoteric
Christianity through Pseudo-Dionysius (who was influenced by the neo-Platonists)
and through the mystic Ramon Lull (who was influenced by his Islamic studies.)
On the frontispiece of a textbook written in the seventeenth
century by the Jesuit mathematician and student of arithmology Athanasius
Kircher, an Enneagram-like figure appears.
More recently George Gurdjieff (1879-1949), a Russian
teacher of esoteric knowledge and a contemporary of Freud, used the Enneagram
to explain the laws involved in the creation and unfolding of all the aspects
of the universe. He alludes to his introduction to the Enneagram in the
1920's during his visit to the Sufi Sarmouni monastery in Afghanistan.
This is the site of the Naqshbandi Order mentioned earlier. Quite appropriately,
it is located near a great East-West trade route, where not only goods
but also ideas crossed regularly.
In yet another culture and part of the globe, the Enneagram
was taught by Oscar Ichazo (1976; 1982) as part of his Arica Training in
South America. He found that the Enneagram (or Enneagon, as he calls the
nine-sided figure) organizes comprehensively the various laws operating
in the human person. So while Gurdjieff applied the Enneagram's process
to all of reality, including a rudimentary application to the human person,
Ichazo made use of the Enneagram figure and dynamics to explain more fully
the functioning of the human psyche. Ichazo claims to have arrived at his
understanding of the Enneagram through his own independent studies and
research.
Claudio Naranjo (1990; 1994), a Chilean psychologist,
learned the tradition from Oscar Ichazo and brought the Enneagram further
into Western psychology by reframing its concepts in contemporary psychological
language. Naranjo elaborated and codified Ichazo's explorations of the
human personality still further.
In the early 1970's Robert Ochs, S.J. and Helen Palmer
(1988; 1995) studied the Enneagram system of personality with Naranjo.
Through Ochs the Enneagram was introduced to various Christian communities,
where Jerome Wagner, Maria Beesing, Robert Nogosek, and Patrick O'Leary
(1984), Don Riso (1987; 1990), Richard Rohr and Andreas Ebert (1990; 1992),
Kathleen Hurley and Ted Donson (1991; 1993), Suzanne Zuercher (1992; 1993),
et. al. became acquainted with it. These and other authors promulgated
the Enneagram to a broader spiritual, psychological, educational, business
and commercial audience.
While the trail of the Enneagram grows less distinct before
Ichazo, and the exact transmission of the symbol remains unclear, what
becomes evident is that the parameters of the person as viewed through
the lens of the Enneagram theory have been recognized in some fashion across
ages and centuries and across cultures, races, and genders. The Enneagram
taps into something universal in the nature and functioning of human beings.
The fact that people from such varied places as Africa, Japan, Korea, India,
Europe, North and South America, Russia, et. al., can recognize these nine
styles in their native cultures speaks to the generalizability of the Enneagram
system.
About the Contributor:
Jerome Wagner, Ph.D. teaches at Loyola University and additionally
provides individual and group counseling. He also gives Enneagram workshops
and seminars all across the US and consults directly to corporate clients.
You can find more information like this, his books, and his tapes at his
website here.
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