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 22
Jung spoke of this to me more than once , but I did not receive the impression that
he took the rumor seriously . Rather , the existence of this singularly persistent
idea - against all the external evidence — was exceedingly interesting to him in ...
Jung spoke of this to me more than once , but I did not receive the impression that
he took the rumor seriously . Rather , the existence of this singularly persistent
idea - against all the external evidence — was exceedingly interesting to him in ...
Page 159
It was of these that Jung almost always spoke , for they seem to have made by far
the strongest impression upon him . But the trip was more extended than one
would gather from the “ Extract of an Unpublished MS . " which is all that appears
in ...
It was of these that Jung almost always spoke , for they seem to have made by far
the strongest impression upon him . But the trip was more extended than one
would gather from the “ Extract of an Unpublished MS . " which is all that appears
in ...
Page 237
Jung was immensely impressed by the Maine coast and felt it to be still virgin
country on which man had made little or no impression , living more in its past
than in the present . At that time the island had far fewer houses than it has today
, and ...
Jung was immensely impressed by the Maine coast and felt it to be still virgin
country on which man had made little or no impression , living more in its past
than in the present . At that time the island had far fewer houses than it has today
, and ...
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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
able accept Africa already appeared asked Basel became become began beginning Bollingen called club collective completely concerned conscious course deal death difficult doctor dream early English entirely everything evidently existence experience face fact father feeling felt Freud gave German give heard human Ibid idea important impression Indian individual interesting journey Jung Jung's knew known lake later learned lectures live longer looked meaning Memories mother nature never once opposites particularly patients personality possible practice probably problem psychology published pupils realized remained remember seemed seen seminar side soon speak stay stone Swiss Switzerland symbol things thought told Toni took unconscious understand University usually wanted whole writing wrote Zürich