Suzanne Gieser -Dream Symbols of the Individuation Process- Introduction

Suzanne Gieser -Dream Symbols of the Individuation Process- Introduction: He also mentions the Dreamtime concept of Aboriginal Australians and their beliefs in healing objects, the Apollonian and Dionysian cults of ancient Greece, Nordic mythology, Pythagoras and Pythagoreanism, and the Khidr in the Koran. From the world of literature, he refers to Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Goethe’s Faust, and Meyrink’s The Golem. He also discusses the Exercitia of Ignatius Loyola and the visions of Zosimos. The connections to Jung’s further work on these topics is provided in the notes. In summary, we see here many of the budding themes that germinated during the years 1937– 57 in the ongoing development of Jung’s psychology of religion. From his initial studies in mythology and religion from 1912 onward, in the early 1930s, Jung drew his comparison principally from Eastern esoteric practices, such as Kundalini Yoga and Daoism. After this, his focus shifted to the Western tradition, principally medieval alchemy and Christian symbolism.

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