The Gnostic Jung and the Seven Sermons to the DeadQuest Books, 13 de dez. de 2012 - 267 páginas Jungian psychology based on a little known treatise he authored in his earlier years. |
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... wholeness. Analytical psychology began to appear as a dialogue between the individual and the universe, without destroying the personality or the ego after the fashion of some Buddhist and Hindu theories. The sources of Jung's work ...
... wholeness. Analytical psychology began to appear as a dialogue between the individual and the universe, without destroying the personality or the ego after the fashion of some Buddhist and Hindu theories. The sources of Jung's work ...
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... wholeness. The Gnostics, so Jung perceived, were interested in one thing above all—the experience of the fullness of being. Since this was both his own personal interest and the objective of his psychology, it is axiomatic that his ...
... wholeness. The Gnostics, so Jung perceived, were interested in one thing above all—the experience of the fullness of being. Since this was both his own personal interest and the objective of his psychology, it is axiomatic that his ...
Página 21
... wholeness. While it would have been both impractical and immodest for him to say so, there is no doubt that this Gnostic expression of the urge toward wholeness was duplicated only once in the history of the West, and that was in Jung's ...
... wholeness. While it would have been both impractical and immodest for him to say so, there is no doubt that this Gnostic expression of the urge toward wholeness was duplicated only once in the history of the West, and that was in Jung's ...
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... wholeness. 2. The second conclusion is that this spiritual element carries on an active dialogue with the personal element of ourselfhood through the use of symbols. The spiritual element is not 36 GNOSIS OF C. G. JUNG.
... wholeness. 2. The second conclusion is that this spiritual element carries on an active dialogue with the personal element of ourselfhood through the use of symbols. The spiritual element is not 36 GNOSIS OF C. G. JUNG.
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Conteúdo
1 | |
II VII Sermones ad Mortuos | 44 |
III Dr Jungs Mysterious Treatise | 59 |
Epilogue | 202 |
Appendix | 219 |
Notes | 221 |
Quintessential Gnostic Glossary | 225 |
Selected Bibliography | 227 |
Index | 229 |
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Termos e frases comuns
Abraxas alchemy Alexandria ancient Gnostics androgyny Answer to Job Anthropos appears archetypal Basilides become C.G. Jung called Carl Jung centuries Christian collective unconscious concept consciousness contemporary cosmos created world creative culture darkness dead death declared deity demiurge demons depth psychology Devil differentiation divine dream earth earthly Eros eternal evil existence existential experience expression feminine figure forces freedom Freud Gnosis God-image God’s gods Gospel Gospel of Thomas heaven heavenly Hermann Hesse Hesse holy human psyche individual instinct Jung's Jungian Kabbalah light living Logos magical man’s manifestations masculine meaning microcosm Miguel Serrano mind modern moral mysterious mystic myth nature once opposites Paracelsus persons Phallos philosophical physical Pleroma polar principle psyche psychological qualities reality realm recognized regarded religion religious revealed sciousness selfhood sense serpent Seven Sermons sexuality shadow Sixth Sermon soul spiritual star statement symbolic things tion tradition transcendental transformation true unconscious Valentinus Western wisdom words