The Portable JungThis comprehensive collection of writings by the epoch-shaping Swiss psychoanalyst was edited by Joseph Campbell, himself the most famous of Jung's American followers. It comprises Jung's pioneering studies of the structure of the psyche—including the works that introduced such notions as the collective unconscious, the Shadow, Anima and Animus—as well as inquries into the psychology of spirituality and creativity, and Jung's influential "On Synchronicity," a paper whose implications extend from the I Ching to quantum physics. Campbell's introduction completes this compact volume, placing Jung's astonishingly wide-ranging oeuvre within the context of his life and times. |
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Page 281
... symbol at this stage of analysis is therefore a mistake . To begin with , however , the method for working out the complex meanings suggested by the symbol is the same as in reductive analysis . The associations of the pa- tient are ...
... symbol at this stage of analysis is therefore a mistake . To begin with , however , the method for working out the complex meanings suggested by the symbol is the same as in reductive analysis . The associations of the pa- tient are ...
Page 315
... symbols hidden in the poet's work . For a symbol is the intimation of a meaning beyond the level of our present powers of comprehension . I raise this question only because I do not want my typological classification to limit the ...
... symbols hidden in the poet's work . For a symbol is the intimation of a meaning beyond the level of our present powers of comprehension . I raise this question only because I do not want my typological classification to limit the ...
Page 381
... symbol . Then and only then can one say that the symbol has lost its " rightness . " Such a process signifies a gradual shift in man's unconscious view of the world over the centuries and has nothing whatever to do with intellectual ...
... symbol . Then and only then can one say that the symbol has lost its " rightness . " Such a process signifies a gradual shift in man's unconscious view of the world over the centuries and has nothing whatever to do with intellectual ...
Contents
The Stages of Life | 3 |
The Structure of the Psyche | 23 |
Instinct and the Unconscious | 47 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
alchemy Analytical Psychology anima animus appear archaic archetype Ascona become Book of Enoch centre character Christ Christian chthonic circle collective psyche collective unconscious complete concept conscious mind creative cryptomnesia dark divine dream dreamer enantiodromia everything evil existence experience external extraverted fact fantasies father feeling Freud function give Gnostic happens Hence hieros gamos human idea individual infantile influence inner instinct intellectual introverted intuition judgment Jung Jung's kind lapis living mandala marriage means Meister Eckhart merely modern moral mother motif mythological nature ness neurosis never object Paracelsus patient peculiar perception possible primitive primordial image problem psyche psychic Psychoanalysis Psychotherapy question rational reality reason religious represented Satan scious seems sensation sense Sophia soul spirit subjective factor symbol temenos things thinking thought tion transcendent uncon unconscious contents understand vision whole woman Yahweh