Thursday, May 13, 2010

The Red Book Of C.G. Jung

Modern men in the throes of a midlife crisis have been known to overhaul their careers, their relationships—even their bodies. Few, though, intentionally induce hallucinations in order to commune with demons and deities and end up creating a text transforming—at least indirectly—the entire field of psychology.

The Red Book Of C.G. Jung - owned by 3 libraries in Nassau, plus Great Neck
The Hammer Museum - at UCLA
Philemon Foundation - is preparing for publication the Complete Works of C. G. Jung. 

Carl Gustav Jung was 37 when by most accounts he lost his soul. As psychological historian Sonu Shamdasani explained, "Jung had reached a point in 1912 when he'd achieved all of his youthful ambitions but felt that he'd lost meaning in his life, an existential crisis in which he simply neglected the areas of ultimate spiritual concern that were his main motivations in his youth."

In fact, the dilemma was so profound it eventually caused the father of analytical psychology to undergo a series of waking fantasies. Traveling from Zurich to Schaffhausen, Switzerland, in October 1913, Jung was roused by a troubling vision of "European-wide destruction." In place of the normally serene fields and trees, one of the era's pre-eminent thinkers saw the landscape submerged by a river of blood carrying forth not only detritus but also dead bodies. When that vision resurfaced a few weeks later—on the same journey—added to the mix was a voice telling him to "look clearly; all this would become real." World War I broke out the following summer.

These experiences prompted Jung to question his own sanity. But they also motivated him to embark on what turned out to be a 16-year self-seeking journey documented in a red leather journal titled "Liber Novus" (Latin for "New Book"). It features ethereal, often unsavory passages and shocking yet vibrant images expressing what Jung himself termed a "confrontation with the unconscious."

As Jung explained on the final page: "to the superficial observer, it will appear like madness." Yet Mr. Shamdasani says Jung was engaged in a clearly controlled experiment. "There wasn't anything like a psychosis," he insists. In fact, what emerged during what many describe as a crippling depression were Jung's groundbreaking theories on archetypes, the collective unconscious, and the process of individuation—the interior work one must engage in to become a person or individual.

1 comment:

  1. In his last work, "man and his symbols" Jung
    states that "as any change must begin somewhere
    it is the single individual who will experience
    it."
    Jung, based on his work with the Nobel laureate
    physicist, Professor W. Pauli, concluded that
    the 'natural numbers' are a tangible connection
    between the spheres of matter and psyche. As
    he said: "it is here that the most fruitful
    field of further investigation might be found."

    I share this experience which has appropriate
    comments from senior researchers at Princeton
    University, regarding number archetypes and
    precognition. (synchronicity principle.)

    Bx Times Reporter
    http://www.webspawner.com/users/cosmic/

    In all probability, the star Kochab has
    gone supernova, (exploded) in the past.

    Kochab is long known in mythology, with
    references dating to 2467b.c.e. It, and
    a companion star are called: The Guardians
    of the Pole.

    One meaning listed for the term Kochab is:
    Waiting Him Who Cometh....

    "such is the nature of reality, that anyone
    can experience that which is least understood."

    Chaldean numerology:
    http://www.crystalinks.com/numerology.html

    Worth reading:
    http://plus.maths.org/issue51/reviews/book1/index.html

    entelekk-numomathematics
    New York

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