Myth Maketh Man

Myth Maketh Man

This philosophical primer on the writings of Carl Gustav Jung is designed to introduce the lay philosopher to Jung's vast body of work, comprehensively covering his core concepts, his extensive body of publications, and his relevance to today's zeitgeist. From 1902 until the month of his death in 1961, Jung published a vast body of work in German, Italian, French, and Latin, covering a dizzying array of topics from clinical psychology to metaphysics. Many scholars have spent a lifetime studying his writings, and Jung's heavier works have historically been inaccessible to those who do not work in academia and have the time to read thousands of pages of dense philosophical texts (particularly works like Aion or the Red Book). This introduction to Jungianism collects primary-source analysis and engagement with each of his texts in one coherent volume. The commentary includes his views on Religion as they evolved in opposition to Freud's Pessimistic views, including commentary on his Zurich Lectures on Ignatius of Loyola, illustrating his view on Catholicism. Beyond symbolism and archetypal thinking, Jung has deeply influenced the modern world through his contributions to personality science as the founding father of analytical psychology-including the concepts of introversion and extroversion-and his perspectives on morality, politics, and religion. His repudiation of Materialism, Modernist and indirectly Postmodern philosophy through his life-long opposition to his former friend Sigmund Freud is still acutely relevant today.

This critical companion guide covers topics such as his work with the Allies during World War II; his relationship with Albert Einstein including the impact of their dialogue on both of their works (Synchronicity and Space-Time as Archetype); the Gnostic, Hermetic, and Manichean elements in his work; unique views on alchemy, and his broader cosmopsychic philosophy. This is a primary source window into the enigmatic Psychologist of Symbolism.

All of Jung's concepts are organized across four chapters:

Jung the Psychologist: The Problem of Neurosis
Jung the Philosopher: The Problem of Evil
Jung the Mystic: The Problem of Reality
Jung the Believer: The Problem of Meaning

C.G. Jung is one of the most enigmatic and influential figures in the history of psychology and modern philosophy. His work transcended the boundaries of academia and left a lasting imprint on Western thought, culture, and society that continues to this day. While Freud's name may be better known, it is Jung's concepts - such as the unconscious, extroversion & introversion, archetypes, and the processes of individuation - that have become part of everyday language and modern understanding of how the human psyche works. Jung's ideas about the deep structures of the mind, the collective unconscious, and the importance of myth and symbolism continue to shape fields as diverse as psychotherapy, literary criticism, religious studies, and even popular culture. Lay intellectuals and academics alike continue to actively engage with his ideas.

Despite the breadth and academic complexity of his work, Jung was also deeply concerned with the practical implications of psychology in civilization, believing that insights gleaned from the unconscious mind could offer solutions to both individual neuroses and societal crises (including the groupthink on display in World War II). He functions not only as a psychologist, but also as a moralist and almost religious figure. His work is both abstract and practical at the same time, an element that makes his life's work particularly acute. There is something in Jung for the materialist as well as the metaphysician, for Jung takes on a different face for different people; Jung the scientist, the mystic, the philosopher; the psychologist, the prophet, or the physician.

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The Optimistic Metaphysician