ABOUT NOSTOS
Our mission & its roots

Our rich cosmologies
Nostos is an old Greek word which indicates a homecoming, the return to a home that was lost – usually after a long journey. It’s most often used in association with Odysseus’ quest to find his way back to Ithaka, after many years lost at sea following the Trojan War. Here at the Nostos Institute, we wanderers are retracing our own steps, coming home to a beautiful old philosophical and spiritual tradition steeped in myth, creativity and the imagination.
These old mythologies, cosmologies and philosophies of the West are rich, complex and beautiful. They reveal to us a world in which everything is not only alive but has purpose and intentionality of its own. A world into which each soul chooses to be incarnated, for a reason, and to express a unique way of being human through relationship with and participation in that intimately entangled, animate universe.
These ancient wisdom traditions communicate timeless truths which help us to understand our place in the cosmos, and to uncover the deeper meaning of human life. They show us how the powers of imagination, creativity and contemplation can connect us not just to our own souls and the natural world – but also to the Divine, while furnishing tools to live by and a system of ethics that’s free of cant and dogma.
Why now?
Platonic and Neoplatonic philosophical traditions have, for two and a half millennia, inspired and nourished contemplatives, mystics and other seekers of truth, but they themselves are no longer the primary foundations for meaningful spiritual practice. At the Nostos Institute, we want to revive and reimagine these traditions for our rapidly changing world.
Many of us are very familiar with the spiritual void at the heart of the contemporary West, but we can’t find the answers we’re looking for in patriarchal religions that are wedded to an excess of dogma, embedded in institutions that are often difficult to trust or respect. On the other hand, it’s hard to find alternative European traditions that are coherent and authentic, and which offer us the rigour and depth we yearn for. Because of this lack, spiritual seekers have increasingly turned to Eastern traditions which have their roots in very different lands, cultures and histories. Others have tried to satisfy themselves with practices that have been lifted out of these traditions, such as meditation, bodywork and breathwork. But activities that are primarily aimed at wellbeing or ‘self-improvement’, divorced from the context of community, ethics, an identified cosmological worldview and focused sense of the sacred, can’t fill our need for deeper meaning and purpose.
At a time when many feel spiritually unanchored, the Nostos Institute provides something rare: a rooted, intellectually rigorous and deeply imaginative path to personal and collective re-enchantment.


An adventure in the mythic imagination
'The task is to give birth to the old in a new time.'
~ Carl Jung, The Red Book
The originality and power of our Nostos program arises from the marriage of this long lineage of Western philosophy and spirituality to the perspectives and practices provided by contemporary Jungian and post-Jungian depth psychology – because wisdom is born from the depths, and from an ability to discern what lies beneath and beyond the surface both of consciousness and of physical reality. Wisdom comes from curiosity, from embracing creativity, from an understanding of myth, dreams and the rich symbolic languages that saturate our surroundings and reveal the world of meaning that always seems to lie just out of reach. It also arises from a perception of the world as alive and just as full of soul as we are. Wisdom centres the imagination, above all. And so our unique curriculum offers up a practical wisdom to live by: a mythopoetic, contemplative, mystical wisdom, rooted in nature and the wild beauty of the sacred cosmos.

The voice of the sacred in the hooting of an owl
The ideas and practices that we work with at the Nostos Institute don’t require us to live according to the tenets of one book and repel all others, everything reduced to rules, or to believe in one truth to the exclusion of all others. They require us rather to find joy in the mystery of not-knowing. To look up at the richness of the night sky and recognise the divine in the twinkle of a star and the shape of the constellation it belongs to; to stand still in the forest and hear the voice of the sacred in the hooting of an owl. They require us not to slavishly follow but to take responsibility and think for ourselves. To embark on a journey of discovery, to wake up. To remember who we are. These ideas and practices, then, speak to our longing to rediscover our mythic ground, to re-enchant ourselves and find a sense of deeply embodied belonging to this beautiful, animate Earth.
Beauty, Truth & the Good
At the Nostos Institute, we welcome anyone who wants to learn about these traditions. We’re committed to the practice of philosophia – literally, the love of wisdom – and to exploring fundamental questions about the nature of reality, existence, knowing and the ways in which we form our values. But our content, although firmly grounded in the scholarly and professional expertise of our teachers and the validity of our sources, is neither overly abstract nor heavily academic. Rather, it’s focused on a search for the images, stories, ideas and grounded, embodied practices that call us to know ourselves – and then, with joy and with commitment to the old Platonic ideals of beauty, truth and the good, to transform our lives.
Who is Nostos for?
The Nostos Institute welcomes everyone, whatever your spiritual orientation or religious background. There are many paths which can lead to a genuine apprehension of the sacred; we can learn from them and they’re worthy of respect. But today, many of us remain spiritually unhomed, and what we’re looking for is a new path: a creative but challenging and coherent system of study and practice, rooted in a pre-existing Western tradition which already has a long lineage.
In some ways, we’re going back to basics, to the early philosophical ideas which influenced so many other spiritual traditions – to see if we can forge from them a different path: one that’s relevant to our current reality, and the challenges and opportunities of the world we find ourselves in today.