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Information on C.G. Jung
C.G. Jung's view of the human condition appreciates the unique value of the individual human being. His vision of the human psyche is so vast that we have as yet grasped only some of its implications. Jung's work counterbalanced the one-sided intellectual development of the last centuries of Western civilization. His insight into the spiritual dimension of the psyche has profoundly influenced not only psychotherapy and psychiatry, but also education and the appreciation of religion and the arts. New attitudes and realizations of great importance to the individual and society have arisen from his rigorous and pioneering investigations into the nature of the unconscious. Jung found that the basis of much emotional unease and trouble lay in a damaged relatedness or unrelatedness to the sources of being. In making possible a more conscious relationship with the forces of the unconscious, Jung has immensely widened and deepened the potential scope of human awareness. He showed that modern men and women can accept the reality of the psyche without sacrificing intellectual integrity. On June 6, 1961, Dr. Jung died at his home in Kusnacht. John Freeman’s interview
with Carl Jung, on the BBC program Face to Face. An
interesting article By Erica Goode on how Jung's ideas have
grown in popularity
Links to C.G. Jung
resources
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