The Portable Jung

by Carl G. Jung

Other authorsJoseph Campbell (Editor), R. F. C. Hull (Translator)
Paperback, 1976

Status

Available

Call number

150.195408

Publication

Penguin (Non-Classics) (1976), Paperback, 704 pages

Description

Presents a compilation of writings by the Swiss psychoanalyst.

User reviews

LibraryThing member nieva21
Review while reading for each section:
Section 1: The Stages of Life
This section refers to the dynamics of psyche according to Jung. Yes, there is psychoanalysis, incorporated but it's all through symbolic constructs. He speaks of a physiological change in flux with a psychic revolution, meaning
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that man's physiology can't not be insinc with man's true instincts. He speaks about the process of thinking (or thoughts) how this is confusing to man, as man continues to change from childhood-to adolescence and then to adulthood. But more importantly, Jung claims somewhere either centered or periphery in our thoughts there are primordial images or archetypes. This is the beginning of what he explains to us as how we are all essentially the same. He uses examples later about hypochondriacs and schizophrenics explaining that though their cognition starts out the same, how they deal with this images isn't.
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LibraryThing member mykl-s
Good selections of some of his thought, some down-to-earth, some almost mystical.

Language

Original publication date

1971

Physical description

704 p.; 7.09 inches

ISBN

0140150706 / 9780140150704

Local notes

Started reading in 2007. Will finish eventually.
Page: 0.6442 seconds