Human Potential Movement

The human-potential movement (HPM), a loosely-confederated conspiracy mixture of secular and religious woo, had a certain amount of popularity from the late 1960s to the early 1980s. It incorporated much of what was then fashionable in paranormal and motivational circles, including earlier material from theosophy and other "esoteric" philosophies. It drew heavily from (and in turn influenced) many self-help philosophies of the era. It also drew heavily from the then-mainstream humanistic psychology field, and fed directly into the New Age movement. Parapsychology evangelists researchers at mainstream institutions, like, helped give the woo aspects of "evidence-based" credibility. The human-potential movement focused heavily on the nature and perceived capabilities of "consciousness" (still a common term in the writings of the movement's successors) and (like many other belief-systems of its type) was resolutely vitalist in its view of life.

Followers of the human-potential movement often took seriously the discredited idea that humans use only 10% of their brains, and were often big fans of Uri Geller and other self-proclaimed psychics. Quantum woo got its first big break in this era, with writers (The Tao of Physics) and  (The Dancing Wu Li Masters) taking the strangeness that was the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics and using it as a semi-plausible mechanism for  "mind-over-matter" thinking. In turn, writers associated with the movement wrote books such as and Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and spawned somewhat less fluffy interest in real Eastern religions such as Buddhism, as well as in think tanks and self-help groups such as est, Esalen, Synanon and their spin-offs, many of which had authoritarian and even cultish aspects. A notable subset of the movement promoted new psychological therapies such as primal-scream therapy, encounter-group therapy, and rebirthing, which mainstream psychologists initially regarded with open-minded interest, but which turned out to be useless quackery.

Mainstream science quickly discredited much of the human-potential movement's maunderings. For instance, Rhine's "groundbreaking" work on psychic abilities could not be reproduced, and his lab became disassociated from Duke University. Many Human-Potential advocates shifted into using a more religious and spiritual tone, and the whole rotten mess got absorbed into the New Age movement of the 1980s, though still retaining a somewhat nebulous presence in the overall consciousness of society. As for consciousness, it remains a topic of considerable interest in psychology and artificial-intelligence circles, but the human-potential movement's contributions to the subject have been irrelevant at best.