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From Tradition to Triunity proposes an evolutionary framework for transpersonal healing grounded in Pier Luigi Lattuada’s Biotransenergetica (BTE) and its core Triunity model (0–1–2–3). Drawing on ancient spiritual traditions—including shamanism, yogic and alchemical paths, Christian mysticism, Sufism, and Buddhism—the article traces a shared archetypal intuition: healing as a process of return to wholeness through the integration of polarity within a sacred field of Being. While traditional healing systems preserved this wisdom through myth, ritual, and initiatory experience, modern psychology fragmented the human being into body, mind, and spirit, often losing the dimension of meaning and transcendence. The transpersonal movement emerged as a response to this split, yet has at times oscillated between spiritual bypass and clinical reductionism. The Triunity framework offers a phenomenological and clinically applicable synthesis that bridges ancient cosmologies with contemporary psychology. It articulates transformation as a dynamic process: Zero (Essence, the sacred field of presence), One (Individuation and witnessing consciousness), Two (Polarity, conflict, and shadow), and Three (Integration through transcend-and-include). This process reframes pathology not as dysfunction, but as a meaningful expression of consciousness seeking coherence. By redefining the practitioner’s role as a participant in a shared field of presence, Triunity restores the sacred dimension of healing without abandoning scientific rigor. The article argues that Triunity represents a maturation of ancient spiritual traditions into a transpersonal methodology capable of addressing the psychological, somatic, and existential challenges of contemporary clinical practice.
Published in: Integral Transpersonal Journal
Volume 24, Issue 24, pp. 13-13