The 'Arica School' (also known as the 'Arica Institute', which is its incorporated educational organization, or simply as 'Arica') is a
human potential movement group founded in
1968 by
Bolivian-born philosopher '
Oscar Ichazo' (born in 1931).
The school is named after the city of
Arica,
Chile, where Ichazo once lived and where he led an intensive months-long training in
1970 and
1971 before settling in the
United States where the Arica Institute (incorporated in 1971) has since been headquartered.
Origins
The Arica School's origins began in 1956 when groups of people formed in major cities in South America to study the thoughts that Ichazo was proposing. For fourteen years these different groups studied his teachings. In 1968 Ichazo presented lectures on his theories of 'Protoanalysis' and the Ego-Fixations at the Institute of Applied Psychology in
Santiago, Chile.
Ichazo's theories are based upon such traditional metaphysical questions such as: "What is humankind?"; "What is the Supreme Good of humanity?"; and "What is the Truth that gives meaning and value to human life?"
Enneagram of Personality
Ichazo is considered by many to be the modern father of the
Enneagram of Personality (usually just called the Enneagram) movement that uses the
Enneagram figure (which Ichazo and the Arica School also call the
Enneagon).
Ichazo used the Enneagram figure in connection with his belief in mechanical ego mechanisms which grow out of psychological traumas suffered at an early age in specific aspects of the human psyche. In his theory, these aspects of psyche encompass the sense of well being (Conservation Instinct); the sense of relations with others (Relations Instinct); and the sense of adapting to our environment (Adaptation Instinct). Ichazo's goal is to allow the recognition of repetitive, mechanistic thinking and eliminate the suffering these mechanisms attempt to protect us from but actually tend to perpetuate.
The Arica School believes that most writers on the Enneagram largely misunderstand Ichazo's ideas and only focus on "personality types" which can be used in various ways to make decisions regarding one's life and relationships.
The original branch of this popular use of the Enneagram began principally with
Claudio Naranjo who had studied with Ichazo in Chile but was asked to leave before the intensive 1971 training had finished and who has consequently been estranged from Arica ever since. Aricans (as Ichazo's followers are often called) consider Naranjo's understanding of the Enneagram to be limited and somewhat inaccurate, although Naranjo's ideas about the Enneagram - and those of people to whom he taught the Enneagram, such as prolific author
Helen Palmer - have been more influential in popularizing familiarity of the Enneagram figure than have any available works by Ichazo.
Other influences on Ichazo
The Enneagram, however, is just one component of the Arica system. The Arica School can be considered, as ''
Ramparts'' magazine put it in
1973, as "a body of techniques for inherent consciousness-raising and an ideology to relate to the world in an awakened way." In creating Arica's system and methodology it is sometimes believed that Ichazo took inspiration from the teachings of
G.I. Gurdjieff on consciousness. Ichazo, however, has adamantly denied this.
Elements of the Arica work are, however, similar to and consistent with methodologies and concepts from traditions that include
Sufism,
Tibetan Buddhism,
Yoga,
Zen,
Kabbalah and the
I Ching. A large part of Arica is the study of Classical Philosophy as compared to "modern" philosophy. Ichazo has pointedly asserted his understanding of the Enneagram originated with reading Classical Philosophy and
Plotinus'
Enneads and not as any consequence of any writing or work of
Gurdjieff.
Protoanalysis
The tools that the Arica School teaches are called the “Protoanalytical Theory, System and Method” or "Protoanalysis".
Protoanalysis is believed by Aricans to be the analysis of the complete human being, from the lowest aspects of the human process, progressing systematically to the Higher States of Consciousness where enlightenment can be attained.
The Arica School claims to offer a clearly defined map of the human psyche as a guide for discovering the basis of one's ego process enabling individuals to transcend that process into a Higher State of Consciousness that is found in and available to every person. This state of being is seen as our True Essential Self, experienced as an internal state of great happiness, light and liberation.
The Arica School offers group and individual trainings through sponsorships in a number of countries, or directly from the school.
External links
★
Arica School website
★
Text of a 1992 copyright case filed against Helen Palmer by the Arica Institute