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Inscendence: A Participatory Enquiry into Awareness, Presence and Place
September 10 @ 7:00 pm – September 17 @ 2:00 pm CEST

0 people are attending Inscendence: A Participatory Enquiry into Awareness, Presence and Place
Inscendence: A Participatory Enquiry into Awareness, Presence and Place
September 10 โ 17, 2026
Speakers: Jonathan Code and Alistair Duncan
Location: Pari, Italy
Ticket Prices:
Private Accommodation
Price: 1800.00 euros
Shared Accommodation โ Private Room with shared bathroom
Price: 1650.00 euros
which includes:
- a 7-night stay;
- breakfast, lunch and dinner at the local restaurant featuring locally sourced produce and traditional dishes;
- water, wine, and coffee are provided with lunch and dinner;
- programmed lectures, activities and materials
There is a limited amount of accommodation in Pari and you will be placed on a first-come, first-served basis. We will also be using accommodation just outside of the villageโwithin 3 kilometres. If you are housed outside Pari, a shuttle to and from the village will be provided.
Event: The event starts with dinner on Thursday September 10 at 19:00 and ends after lunch on Thursday September 17.
Download information, terms and conditions for this course.
About the Event
Why Inscendence?
In a time riven by fragmentation, dislocation and conflicting narratives, this programme invites a collaborative enquiry into ways of knowing and thinking that will delve deeply into the field where land, body and consciousness meet.
Inscendence proposes an opportunity for re-orientation by attending to participative awareness, heightened sensory perception and the wisdom of the body-mind.
In resonance with Pari, its landscape, history, and community, we will engage with many of the Centerโs core themes seeking to open up a creative ground from which new forms of insight, relationship and action can emerge.
Inscendenceโthe impulse not to rise above the world but to climb into it, to seek its core.
Thomas Berry, via Robert Macfarlane
Programme Themes and Practices
Over the course of a week in Pari, we will engage with:
Embodied and Perceptual Investigation:
- Explorations into how breath-work, movement and posture can expand and transform perceptual awareness
- Working with our experience of the traditional elements of nature: earth, water, fire, air and ether in a contemporary way
- Heightening the sensitivity of our physical senses: sight, sound, touch, taste, smell, as entry points into deeper experience
- Understanding the body-mind as a phenomenological instrument
Fieldwork in the More-than-Human World:
- Immersive sessions engaging with the plants, stones, weather and landforms of the Tuscany landscape
- Exploration of a range of ways of knowing including Goethean observation and nature-connection practices
- Attending to artefacts, stories and built structures as relational presences
Creative and Collaboratives Explorations:
- Creative writing, journaling, and drawing as practices of attending to lived experience
- Sitting in Council / dialogue will allow us to share insights and integrate personal experience into collective understanding.
- Conversational โtutorial-styleโ sessions will be used to explore the intersection between experience and theory
Daily Rhythmsโeach day will include four main elements:
- Outdoor sessions exploring a range of practices and experiences
- The seeding of โmicro-practicesโ that will provide the opportunity for moments in the day to become an opportunity for conscious awareness
- Sitting in Council, โtutorialโ circles and creative sessions to collectively reflect on our unfolding experience and its implications
- Personal reflection time supported by the quiet rhythms of the village
Theoretical Context:
With an emphasis on experiential forms of enquiry, Inscendence is nevertheless inspired by the insights and practices of a wide range of thinkers from both East and West. These perspectives provide lenses through which our lived experience can be shared and articulated.
Some of these sources of inspiration include:
- The Implicate / Explicate / Holoflux (David Bohm)
- The implications of brain hemisphere modes of attention (Iain McGilchrist)
- The nature of participatory consciousness (Owen Barfield,)
- The idea of Authentic Wholeness (Henri Bortoft, J.W. Goethe)
- The unity of Mind and Matter from (Gregory Bateson)
- The explorations of language, sensory perception and the new animism (David Abram, Robin Kimmerer)
- Philosophical Taoism
- Non-dual Shaiva Tantra
What May Emerge:
- A refined capacity for attentional flexibility and resonance
- A deeper sense of participation in the implicate wholeness of the cosmos
- Insight into how perception constructs (and reconstructs) the world
- A felt understanding of new grounds for coherent action and relationship
- A more integrated experience of self within the context of a conscious whole.
Our aim is not to provide answers to the complex challenges of our time but to cultivate a new ground of explorationโa place from which thought, relationship and creativity may unfold with greater coherence and sensitivity.
Participating in an event at the Pari Center is more than joining a program, it is entering an experience unlike any other. This is no ordinary conference in a city hotel, nor a retreat hidden within a bustling resort. Instead, it is an invitation to step into an unspoilt medieval village in the Tuscan hills, where time slows and life unfolds at a rhythm that allows you to think, feel, and reconnect.
At the Pari Center, learning becomes a way of being. David Peat often described Pari as an alchemical vesselโa transformative space designed for reflection, renewal, and personal growth. It is a rare and welcoming environment for anyone seeking something deeper.
You will share traditional Tuscan meals and conversation with presenters and fellow participants, taste local wines, mingle with the villageโs tiny community, and take in the beauty of the surrounding countryside. All of this unfolds within a gentle way of life, far removed from the hurry of work and the noise of city living.
The Pari Center gathers world-renowned thinkers, scholars, and innovators from diverse disciplines and traditions. Our mission is to explore the mysteries woven into everyday life: the subtle, essential questions that shape who we are and who we are becoming. Through rigorous inquiry, creative dialogue and participatory activities, we aim to illuminate the origins, nature, and possibilities of human experience.
We invite you to discover why so many visitors regard the Pari Center not only as a place of learning, but as a place of personal transformation.
Please contact Eleanor if you would like more information about this event at: eleanor@paricenter.com
Jonathan Code
During a childhood and youth spent in Southern Ontario, regular immersion in and on the freshwater lakes of Frontenac Park fostered in me a deep ecological and place-based awareness of the natural world. I am to this day never more at home than in a canoe on a lake at dawn, paddling out as the sun rises and the loons call forth the day.
My ecological interests grew and deepened through encounters with the work of Goethe, Schumacher, Vine Deloria Jr., and Steinerโwhose contributions to education, medicine, human development, and agriculture (Biodynamic farming) continue to inform my teaching, research, and writing to this day.
I am particularly interested in the contribution that Goethe can make to ecological thinking (which I addressed in a study of Goetheโs method of exact imagination as applied to the Showy Milkweed (Asclepias speciosa)) and in how the Biodynamic preparations are not only stimulants for good composting processes but are also catalysts for a deepening of agricultural consciousness (which I address in Muck and Mind: Encountering Biodynamic Agriculture, 2014).
I am currently engaged in a study of traditional fire-craft and its affordances for educational philosophy and praxis. This study grows out of a deep concern for education in the twenty first century (see Crafting: Transforming Materials and the Maker, 2019)โa concern that what is too often left out in many of our educational endeavors is a sense for who a human being isโฆand what we can (potentially) become.
Alistair Duncan
After a first career as a systems programmer, architect and programme manager in technology for a couple of global corporations, fifteen years ago I jumped ship. Since then I have worked as an eco-psychologist, workshop facilitator/educator and therapist across a number of contexts particularly in universities, disadvantaged communities and with conservation organisations.
My passion is weaving together concrete practices from contemporary psychology, embodiment modalities and therapies as well as the spiritualities of east and west. Then, using them to make experiential and practical, the insights that arise from a range of fields across philosophy, science and spirituality.
To define my context with a few names. I would cite David Bohm, Owen Barfield, Martin Heidegger, Gregory Bateson, Henri Bortoff, Michael Washburn, David Abram and Kenneth White as my current key co-ordinates. And I am drawing practices from a wide palette, but the core is found in indigenous tracking methods, Non-dual Shaiva Tantrism, Taoism, and Neuro-linguistic Programming (NLP).
I have a first degree in Biology and a Masters in Philosophy, and have trained in several coaching and therapeutic modalities.
Everything I do nowadays is based in nature. Itโs my current conviction that exploring a deeper sensorial resonance and reciprocity between the human body-mind and the more-than-human cosmos is the starting point for a lived experience of wholeness and a connection into the deep consciousness of the cosmos. And that, from there, we may be able to discern a better way to live in these times.




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