Sublime
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Dans Aiôn, études sur la phénoménologie du Soi, Jung cite la phrase de Clément d’Alexandrie dans le Pédagogue (III, I) : « Si un homme se connaît lui-même, alors il connaîtra Dieu. » L’unicité de sa personnalité, en unissant à la fois les mondes collectif et individuel et les mondes inconscient et conscient, lui permettra d’accéder aux vérités esse
... See moreFrédéric Lenoir • Jung, un voyage vers soi (French Edition)
Jung discusses this in volume eight of the Collected Works in his distinction between personal complexes and what he calls “spirit complexes.”
Robert L. Moore • Facing the Dragon: Confronting Personal and Spiritual Grandiosity
Freudian etiology is a psychology of possession, and eventually it arrives at determinism. Adlerian psychology, on the other hand, is a psychology of use, and it is you who decides it.
Ichiro Kishimi, Fumitake Koga • The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness
My basic argument is simply that humans need to get rid of the overload on their psychic circuits. There is a certain amount of this energy that you want to be connected with. It is a connection, not a separation. We do not want to lose touch with this energy because it is like an umbilical cord. It is a life-giving, nourishing connection with the
... See moreRobert L. Moore • Facing the Dragon: Confronting Personal and Spiritual Grandiosity
Beyond the perinatal layer is a broad category of experiences that Grof termed the transpersonal or Jungian layer of the psyche, because Jung was one of the first major Western psychiatrists to integrate transpersonal themes in his understanding of the psyche. During transpersonal experiences, people have access to material normally considered beyo
... See moreRenn Butler • Pathways to Wholeness: Archetypal Astrology and the Transpersonal Journey
Analyst P. Kugler discusses this dream, pointing out that Jung shifts his interpretation of the dream from a subjective to the objective level because his approach ‘had become tired, worn out, and monotonous’ and that in his older age spirits became ‘experientially real’ for him.
Stephani L. Stephens • C. G. Jung and the Dead: Visions, Active Imagination and the Unconscious Terrain
