jung
8 candidate claims · branch V · biophysics
- mean the fact is that archetypal images are so packed with meaning in themselves that people never think of asking what they really do mean that the gods die from time to time is due to man's sudden— Carl Jung | Archetypes and The Collective Unconscious | audiobook part 1
- something. So and you can say well it's an eternal place. Well that's because this possibility is always there. It never goes away. It's always there. And that's also what makes it archetypal.— 2015 Personality Lecture 07: Depth Psychology: Carl Jung (Part 02)
- wrong for in reality the cause of his Neurosis would lie in the reactivation of the Dual mother archetype quite regardless of whether he had one mother or two mothers because as we have seen— Carl Jung | Archetypes and The Collective Unconscious | audiobook part 1
- Dimensions that is to say a Neurosis three method of proof we must now turn to the question of how the existence of archetypes can be produced since archetypes are supposed to produce— Carl Jung | Archetypes and The Collective Unconscious | audiobook part 1
- geometric proportions underlying it the same is true of the archetype in principle it can be named and has an invariable nucleus of meaning but always only in principle never as regards its— Carl Jung | Archetypes and The Collective Unconscious | audiobook part 1
- time to the mother complex in woman than to its counterpart in man the reason for this has already been mentioned in a man the mother complex is never pure it is always mixed with the anama archetype— Carl Jung | Archetypes and The Collective Unconscious | audiobook part 1
- in 1982 by Jeremy Torture in Los Angeles, a whole new world opened up California I'd never been before. I was invited by Stan Graff to teach in his program at In the Union Societies in Los Angeles and San Francisco invited me to give talks, and I discovered a whole network of union analysts and people influenced by Jung, who were very well disposed towards my hypothesis.— Morphic Resonance After Forty Years
- pre-tonal memory. It's a Jungian thing, I suppose, in that case. Bach's music provides us with the grand summation of all the techniques practiced by the great masters of North European music since the early Renaissance. He stands at the very end of a long line of German and Dutch and Flemish masters who tried to create harmonic vitality out of what must— Glenn Gould Well Tempered Polymath