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9016c isis

Isis was called the Black One because of her association with fate and the mysteries of death.

Isis was called the Black One because of her association with fate and the mysteries of death. Carl Jung Depth Psychology Facebook Group Mysterium Coniunctionis (Collected Works of C.G. Jung Vol.14) Isis was called the “Black One” because of her association with fate and the mysteries of death. The ancient name for Egypt was “Kemi,”… 

Boar headed mother goddess shakti of boar headed Vishnu Relief northern India 7th century

I want to tell you that your horse-boar-monster has had its after effects

I want to tell you that your horse-boar-monster has had its after effects in me. Carl Jung Depth Psychology Facebook Group   Letters of C. G. Jung: Volume 2, 1951-1961 To Peter Birkhauser Dear Herr Birkhauser, 2 November 1960 I want to tell you that your horse-boar-monster has had its aftereffects in me. As a… 

dream

Problems of Life – Anthology

Problems of Life – Anthology I had learned in the meanwhile that the greatest and most important problems of life are all in a certain sense insoluble. [Life’s greatest problems] can never be solved but only outgrown. ~Carl Jung; “Commentary to The Secret of the Golden Flower”, Page 89. You can succeed in going away… 

070 Europe

Carl Jung on “Europe” – Anthology

Carl Jung on “Europe” – Anthology European philosophy must take into account the existence of feminine psychology. ~Carl Jung, , Letters Vol. 1, Pages 69. The hero is the protagonist of God’s transformation in man; he corresponds to what I call the “mana personality.” The mana personality has such an immense fascination for the conscious… 

016 Pauli and Wu in Berkeley between 1941 and 1945.

Wolfgang Pauli: Unlike your own ideas those of Speiser are often difficult to understand.

Wolfgang Pauli: Unlike your own ideas those of Speiser are often difficult to understand. Atom and Archetype: The Pauli/Jung Letters, 1932-1958 Dear Professor Jung: February 2, 1951 Many thanks for sending me the edited version of your manuscript. I paid particular attention to the new version of chap. IV and found that it reflects faithfully…