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 67
... people will often do their utmost to ignore its existence . Jung , on the other
hand , although he always did his best to find a rational explanation ( he was not
at all credulous or willing to accept anything but proved facts ) , when this turned
out ...
... people will often do their utmost to ignore its existence . Jung , on the other
hand , although he always did his best to find a rational explanation ( he was not
at all credulous or willing to accept anything but proved facts ) , when this turned
out ...
Page 90
27 I need hardly add that it was Breuer ' s refusal to accept Freud ' s totalitarian
claim with regard to sexuality that led to the final break after twenty years of
friendship . Be all this as it may , Jung had already realized in America that if he
was to ...
27 I need hardly add that it was Breuer ' s refusal to accept Freud ' s totalitarian
claim with regard to sexuality that led to the final break after twenty years of
friendship . Be all this as it may , Jung had already realized in America that if he
was to ...
Page 124
Jung who also always needed experience before he could accept anything , had
this in mind when he made his much quoted remark : “ I don ' t believe , I know . ” '
John Freeman had asked him in the B . B . C . television interview in 1959 ...
Jung who also always needed experience before he could accept anything , had
this in mind when he made his much quoted remark : “ I don ' t believe , I know . ” '
John Freeman had asked him in the B . B . C . television interview in 1959 ...
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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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