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"Edinger has greatly enriched my understanding of psychology
through the avenue of alchemy. No other contribution has been as
helpful as this for revealing, in a word, the anatomy of the psyche
and how it applies to where one is in his or her process. This is a
significant amplification and extension of Jung's work. Two hundred
years from now, it will still be a useful handbook and an inspiring
aid to those who care about individuation." -- Psychological
Perspectives
The collective belief in the End of the World, as described in the
Biblical Book of Revelation, can be seen in public reaction to
terrorist outrages such as those of Sept. 11, in the preoccupation
with disasters, in the obsession with UFO's and the possibility of
encountering extra-terrestrial life, and in the breakdown of social
structures. Edinger argues that this very real psychological force
is vitally important for our times, and he offers an alternative to
catastrophe through understanding the meaning of these radiant
scriptures.
Seminal work by the author of Ego and Archetype, proposing a new
world-view based on the creative collaboration between the
scientific pursuit of knowledge and the religious search for
meaning.
A medical psychiatrist and founding member of the Jung Foundation explores a pivotal part of analytical psychology: encountering the self through individuation.
This book is about the individual’s journey to psychological wholeness, known in analytical psychology as the process of individuation. Edward Edinger traces the stages in this process and relates them to the search for meaning through encounters with symbolism in religion, myth, dreams, and art.
For contemporary men and women, Edinger believes, the encounter with the self is equivalent to the discovery of God. The result of the dialogue between the ego and the archetypal image of God is an experience that dramatically changes the individual’s worldview and makes possible a new and more meaningful way of life.
C. G. Jung saw in the cultural history of Western man a progressive
evolution of its God-image. During the last ten years of his life,
he wrote a series of remarkable letters about the new God-image
which is now emerging through the discoveries of depth psychology.
Dr. Edward Edinger has selected fourteen of these letters to
discuss and has segmented the book into the following three parts:
Epistemological Premises - Modern man's new awareness of
subjectivity; The Paradoxical God - The nature of the new God-image
as a union of opposites; and Continuing Incarnation - How the new
God-image is born in individual men and women.
Penetrating commentary on the Job story as a numinous, archetypal
event, and as a paradigm for conflicts of duty that can lead to
enhanced consciousness.
Title #71. Jung's Aion laid the foundation for a whole new
scholarly discipline that could be called archetypal psychohistory.
It applies the insights of depth psychology to the analysis of
cultural development, here focusing on the idea of the God-image,
or Self, as it has evolved over 2,000 years of Western thinking. An
edited transcript of the lecture series given at the C.G. Jung
Institute of Los Angeles, 1988-89.
Zeus, Aphrodite, Apollo, Artemis, Athena -- do the gods and
goddesses of Greece have anything to say to us that we haven't
already heard? In this book, based on a series of his lectures, the
eminent Jungian analyst and writer Edward F. Edinger revisits all
the major figures, myths, oracles, and legends of the ancient Greek
religion to discover what they can still reveal -- representing, as
they do, one of the religious and mythic foundations of Western
culture. Building on C. G. Jung's assertion that mythology is an
expression of the deepest layers of mind and soul, Dr. Edinger
follows the mythic images into their persistent manifestations in
literature and on into our modern lives. He finds that the gods
indeed continue to speak as we grow in our capacity to listen and
that the myths express the inner energies within all of us as much
as ever. Heracles is eternally performing his labors, Perseus is
still confronting the Medusa, Theseus is forever stalking the
Minotaur, and Persephone is still being carried off to life in a
new realm.
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