Jung, His Life and Work: A Biographical MemoirThis full-scale study of Jung's life and work is written by a close student, friend, and associate of more than thirty years. It is a lucid, penetrating account of his career, stressing the essential wholeness of the man and tracing the difficult path that led to that wholeness. From his earliest years to his death, through the crowded inner and outer events of his long ifetime, Hannah presents a view of the real Jung, not the creature of legend and cult. She treats his theoretical apparatus as well as such personal matters as his relationship with Toni Wolff and his supposed flirtation with Nazism. Here we see Jung's humanity and his genius as a "navigator of the unconscious." |
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Page 161
It is not primarily the idea that man can influence God ( for the Indians , the sun )
that is strange to us , but the idea that man can help God . Our prayers are all
directed to asking favors of God ; the Indian has far more dignity , for he thinks
with ...
It is not primarily the idea that man can influence God ( for the Indians , the sun )
that is strange to us , but the idea that man can help God . Our prayers are all
directed to asking favors of God ; the Indian has far more dignity , for he thinks
with ...
Page 163
When he first went to the Middle West , some years before his journey to the
Indians , he stood one day with an American ... He remarked to his friend that he
had never imagined the percentage of Indian blood in Americans to be so high .
When he first went to the Middle West , some years before his journey to the
Indians , he stood one day with an American ... He remarked to his friend that he
had never imagined the percentage of Indian blood in Americans to be so high .
Page 243
4 In fact , such an opportunity for introversion was a godsend in the extraverted
rush of his journey to India . This journey necessarily followed the program
arranged for the delegates to the Indian Science Congress at Calcutta . In view of
their ...
4 In fact , such an opportunity for introversion was a godsend in the extraverted
rush of his journey to India . This journey necessarily followed the program
arranged for the delegates to the Indian Science Congress at Calcutta . In view of
their ...
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Contents
Preface | 7 |
The Swiss Soil | 11 |
Early Impressions 18751886 | 19 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
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