James later applied the theories of
Rudolf Steiner to the family estate at Kent. In 1939 he travelled to
Switzerland to visit the leading exponent of
biodynamic agriculture,
Ehrenfried Pfeiffer. The outcome of that visit was that he hosted, at his farm in
Kent, the
Betteshanger Summer School and Conference, the first biodynamic farming conference to be held in
Britain. but Northbourne explicitly denied this. In a letter to Ned Halley of the Rodale Press, he wrote: "I was certainly not the first to apply the word 'organic' to farming or gardening. I have never known the ideas and practices involved under any other name". While he is certainly one of the central figures of the early organic movement, it is arguable that
Albert Howard was of greater importance. Northbourne published
Look to the Land in 1940, which raises many of the issues current to discussions of organic agriculture. After reading
Look to the Land, the philosopher and author
Marco Pallis contacted Northbourne and later introduced him to the writings of the
Traditionalist (also known as
Perennialist) philosophy. Northbourne eventually integrated this thinking into his own writings and life, and became a correspondent with many of the most prominent writers of this school, as well as with
Thomas Merton. He was also a frequent contributor to the quarterly journal
Studies in Comparative Religion, which dealt with
religious symbolism and the
Traditionalist perspective. Lord Northbourne was the English translator for the works of several fellow Traditionalists including
René Guénon's major work,
The Reign of Quantity and the Signs of the Times,
Light on the Ancient Worlds by
Frithjof Schuon, and
Sacred Art in East and West by
Titus Burckhardt. ==Bibliography==