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Undiscovered Self (Updated with a New Introductio)
Undiscovered Self (Updated with a New Introductio) | Carl Gustav Jung, C G Jung
Together for the first time in one paperback volume are two of Jung's major late works, in the version published in The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, as rendered by Jung's official translator. "The Undiscovered Self" (1957) integrates many of Jung's lifelong social and psychological concerns and addresses the uneasy relation between the individual and mass society. The survival of civilization, he maintains, depends on individual awareness of both the conscious and unconscious aspects of the human psyche. The exploration of the unconscious, in particular, leads to self-knowledge and with it recognition of the duality of human natureits potential for evil as well as for good. Jung believes that it is this self-knowledge that enables the individual to resist the collective power of mass society and the state and to cope with their possible threats. Jung's reflections on self-knowledge and the exploration of the unconscious carry over into his essay "Symbols and the Interpretation of Dreams, " completed shortly before his death in 1961. (It is the original version of his introduction to the symposium Man and His Symbols, conceived as a popular presentation of Jungian ideas.) Describing dreams as communications from the unconscious--as expressions of aspects of the individual that have been neglected or unrealized--Jung explains how the symbols that occur in dreams compensate for repressed emotions and intuitions. In a world dehumanized, in Jung's view, by scientific "progress" and the loss of emotional participation in natural events, symbols recall our original nature, its instincts and peculiar way of thinking. This essay brings together Jung's fully evolved thoughts on the analysis ofdreams and the healing of the rift between consciousness and the unconscious, in the context of his system of psychology.
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Tex2Flo
The Undiscovered Self | Carl Gustav Jung
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gradcat Okay, I‘m loving finding that I have so much in common with other Littens: 9, 13, 19 ✅; like Rodrigue because New Orleans, obviously, but I don‘t collect them; 14 makes me laugh 😂 while I cry 😢; & well, 20–all I can say is yay...another #olderthandirtlitten! I love it 🥰 (edited) 5y
Tex2Flo @gradcat long live the old Littens! 5y
Crazeedi Fellow boomer! Great list! 5y
KarenUK Think I knew everything except #14 🦆🦶💕😊 5y
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nairy_fstukh

"The more power man had over nature, the more his knowledge and skill went to his head, and the deeper became his contempt for the merely natural and accidental, for all irrational data - including the objective psyche, which is everything that consciousness is not."