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 90
Emma Jung was more hopeful here than her husband ; she thought that Freud
would magnanimously accept the facts . ... She took it for granted that Jung would
give his full attention to any important dream a family member had , and the fact ...
Emma Jung was more hopeful here than her husband ; she thought that Freud
would magnanimously accept the facts . ... She took it for granted that Jung would
give his full attention to any important dream a family member had , and the fact ...
Page 166
This line included the words “ the man goes forth and does not return , " which
made him face the fact that , though the whole hexagram “ development ” (
Gradual Progress ) evidently meant that the unconscious was in favor of the
expedition ...
This line included the words “ the man goes forth and does not return , " which
made him face the fact that , though the whole hexagram “ development ” (
Gradual Progress ) evidently meant that the unconscious was in favor of the
expedition ...
Page 336
Actually he himself was much less interested in whether they existed physically
than in the undeniable fact that many people , all over the world , were seeing
round objects in the sky . Roundness is the symbol par excellence for the Self ,
the ...
Actually he himself was much less interested in whether they existed physically
than in the undeniable fact that many people , all over the world , were seeing
round objects in the sky . Roundness is the symbol par excellence for the Self ,
the ...
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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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