klemens swib's Posts (14)

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A book review of Evan Hanks book A Mid-Life Perspective: Conversations with the Unconscious: A Subjective Study of Science, Religion, and Consciousness

Individuation, the blossoming of individuality, is one of the major themes of Jungian psychology. Jung’s empirical observations of his own and his patients’ interactions with the unconscious contents of the psyche led him to conclude that the concept of individuation was a key to understanding and making sense of this experience. He also recognized the self-realization derived from this phenomenon inevitably gave purpose and meaning to his own and his patients’ lives. Individuation constitutes a force that allows us to develop our potential as both individuals and human beings.

Jung’s empirical observations led him to conclude that the blossoming of individuality particularly occurred during the second half of our existence. I unequivocally agree. I would only ask how can individuality blossom before the individual exists? Ergo, the synthesis of the individual may well constitute the essence of the individuation process in the first half of the human life cycle. I believe Jung implied as much when he wrote about the young sometimes needing to be caustically disillusioned of their fantasies, in order to focus on meeting the demands of adulthood. Establishing ones own ‘individual’ position and place in the world is definitely a Herculean task taken on by the young.

In any event, Jung did not attempt to write a general theory of individuation. He had too much respect for this dynamic living and open ended concept to prematurely limit it to a simple and sterile formula that prospective analysts could memorize and apply by rote. He did, however, leave a record of his own personal encounter with individuation. He did so in his posthumously published Red Book. He also hoped others would follow his lead and record their own experiences with this phenomenon. In this way, a consensus and perhaps even a general theory of individuation could eventually emerge. To that end, he encouraged his patients to document their own personal encounters with the individuation process.

in his book, A Mid-Life Perspective: Conversations with the Unconscious: A Subjective Study of Science, Religion, and Consciousness,
Evan Hanks has taken up Jung’s challenge. He has supplied us with a unique retrospective take on his own personal individuation. It is his effort to make sense and deepen his understanding of the profound personality transformation emanating from that encounter — a subjective one as he indicates in his book title; one that will undoubtedly deepen and extend our understanding of individuation. I will have more to say on Evan’s revolutionary and historic contribution to the study of individuation in due course.

Individuation not only transformed Jung’s personality and character but proved to be a primary source of his creative genius as well. Otherwise, he would not have attributed the genesis of most of his psychological concepts to ideas he originally formulated in the Red Book. The same applies to Evan Hanks. His experience of the individuation process opened up his own unique creative capacity. His metier lies in the realm of narrative poetry. Goethe is his heroic role model. Even a Philistine such as I can sense the beauty inherent in Evan’s poetry. Fortunately he also included a descriptive interpretive framework to support his poetic visualization.

“My head is crowded, night and day are one;
I search in vain the reasons for the things I’ve done.
The lion’s courage in my heart I thought was real
Is now the frightened victim of the pain I feel.
A dark entanglement surrounds the steps I take;
I stumble through the maze of each new choice I make.
Emotions once repressed have broken through their guise;
Faces once familiar I no longer recognize.

A strange force has turned around the world I used to know;
Right is wrong, the sun is gone, the stars are down below.
The mannequin of yesterday lies far behind me:
The tattered remnants of a man who once defined me.

At this point, i would be remiss if i failed to re-emphasize Evan Hank’s work is a retrospective effort to make sense of a life altering psychological transformation. It is a subjective effort, and there are times the reader may temporarily lose sight of the trail. With that said, this particular Philistine’s own incapacity for poetic visualization may be the ultimate source of this critique. If not, individuation is a mystery: a mysterious blossoming of individuality occurring in the second half of the adult life cycle, and one that gives meaning and purpose to an individuals existence. Yet, it is an experience that is so profound, far-reaching and transformative that the uninitiated may not always be able to fully follow the writers effort to integrate it.

So, what makes Evan’s book a revolutionary and historic document? How will he deepen and extend our understanding of individuation? It all stems from the intensity of his poetic perception. That will ultimately provide us with the battering ram to break Jungian psychology out from the ghetto of intellectual containment it currently resides in and into the literary and civilizational mainstream.

In the the first part of the chapter, An Objective Valuation, Evan mercilessly and relentlessly exposed his perceived failings as a human being. His critique was so intense and visceral, it vividly reminded me of another powerful self critique i had previously encountered in the literature. In the Notes from the Underground, Dostoevsky’s central character performed a similar searing self analytical deconstruction. There is no way around it. The persona and the maladapted and collectivist aspect of the ego must give way before individuality can blossom. I fully understand where Evan and Dostoevsky were coming from. However, this led me to wonder whether Dostoevsky documented any other aspects of his own encounter with the individuation process.

Dostoevsky’s very next major publication was Crime and Punishment. Gone is the 40 year old Underground man, and a university student of exceptional talent emerges onto the stage. Yes, there definitely was a lot more to the underground man’s self-flagellating character than one might first imagine. The new hero’s youthful character is attributable to his individuality which is just beginning to blossom. He lives in an era before the concept of the unconscious was fully elaborated. Thus Dostoevsky placed the struggle to individuate within a real-world temporal context. As Edwin Muir succinctly put it:

“Dostoyevsky wrote of the unconscious as if it were conscious; that is in reality the reason why his characters seem ‘pathological’.”

His hubris and his poverty lead him to commit a morally reprehensible crime. This is literary character you must remember; one which Dostoevsky undoubtedly was using to make sense of his own encounter with the individuation process. Heinous as his crime was, he did not feel guilty over murdering the pawnbroker. He was a superior man — a future Napoleon in desperate need of ‘material’ sustenance — and he would perform many benevolent acts to compensate for his transgression. Yet, his action propels him into an unbearable world of suffering and pain. He doesn’t understand why. How could a superior human being, a veritable Napoleon be tripped up by the exercise of of his own superior prerogative?

During the course of his mad meanderings he meets his beaten-down anima projection, Sonya. She eventually helps him to admit defeat and accept his punishment. Only after he is imprisoned does his rehabilitative transformation begin. He finds his faith and then starts the long journey toward his own resurrection. The Jungian characters are all there: the shadow, along with the moral dilemma that it inspires, the anima, psychological change and turmoil of life altering intensity. Dostoevsky had the genius to depict the life altering transformative state of mind of the individuate. Jung also experienced tremendous psychological turmoil during the initial stages of his own individuation. This turmoil led him to question his own sanity.

Connect Jung’s and Dostoevsky’s acknowledgement and understanding of the individuation process together along with Evan Hanks’ and a host of others individuates’ accounts, and we are well on our way to breaking Jungian Psychology out of the ghetto of intellectual containment created by mainstream academia and the psychological establishment. Evan Hanks pivotal role in the process makes his book A Mid-Life Perspective: Conversations with the Unconscious: A Subjective Study of Science, Religion, and Consciousness, well worth the read.

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shadow dancing

United Nations Climate Czar reveals depopulation plan for humanity 
https://www.intellihub.com/united-nations-climate-czar-reveals-depopulation-plan-for-humanity

(INTELLIHUB) —At a recent Climate One conference, the Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Christiana Figueres, made clear that a leading solution to global warming includes extreme depopulation. 

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The rise of communism in Russia did not lead to the inception of the brotherhood of man but the red terror. The idealists were run over by an unspeakable darkness. So too the environmental movement has its own grotesque shadow lurking just beyond the event horizon. Idealists on the environmental front must be vigilant against the likes of Prince Phillip who have publicly proclaimed we could have the kingdom of heaven on earth if only the population was reduced to a few hundred million. He also wished he could reincarnate as an virus so he could come back and get rid of a large swath of the populace. For some environmentalism is just a code word for population reduction and resources wars. Idealists must always be aware that they are not always dancing with the stars.

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Did Jung Break the Atheist Taboo?

"From the outside looking in, Jung's orientation appeared too mystical and religious, since he used these sources collective symbolism. This may have touched upon an atheist taboo." posted by pioneer in the comments section

http://www.scienceforums.net/topic/51419-freud-liar-and-fraud/

I went off looking for Freud's refusal to travel out of town because one of his wealthy patents might get well in his absence quote and found this interesting page.

here is another example:

"Satanists, for example, teach that happiness comes from liberation of repressed desires - sexually repressed desires particularly. I assume they were doing so long, long, before Fraud graced us with his "thesis". 'Ophiolite posted this comment

Oh and the affair with his sister in law was mentioned as well. 

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The Dionysian Apollonian Dichotomy

The spirit has at least two significant attributes. It is amaterial. Second, it gives order to chaos/matter. Dionysos represents a part of the amaterial aspect of the spirit. Apollo  represents some part of that aspect of spirit which enters the material realm and gives order to matter/materiality. These are two aspects of the same phenomenon. They are not opposite tendencies at war with each other, as Nietzsche maintained but distinctive and purposive aspects of the Spirit that ultimately act in concert. Nietzsche characterization of Dionysos is a chicken picked projection. And why wouldn't it be our classical scholars haven't even noticed never mind determined who Dionysos's first mother was. The riddle of the twice mothered thrice born archetype is barely if at all acknowledged in the classical literature. Unfortunately Nietzshe misdirected Jung in regard to Dionysos.

Therefore one can say he [Wotan, RR] is very similar to the Thracian Dionysos, the god of orgiastic enthusiasm(Jung, 1997 [1934], p. 196). - See more at: http://www.depthinsights.com/Depth-Insights-scholarly-ezine/e-zine-issue-3-fall-2012/jungs-reception-of-friedrich-nietzsche-a-roadmap-for-the-uninitiated-by-dr-ritske-rensma/#sthash.PhYduJlx.dpuf

In a quick search of google I saw wotan as being equatable to Zeus, Mercury, a war God. A mighty whack of projections huh? And Jung added another one when he said Wotan was similar to the Thracian Dionysos. 

 
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Analytic Talk Therapy Technique in Jeopardy

SAMSUNG'S SMART TVS ARE COLLECTING AND STORING YOUR PRIVATE CONVERSATIONS

http://www.blacklistednews.com/Samsung%27s_Smart_TVs_Are_Collecting_And_Storing_Your_Private_Conversations/41670/0/38/38/Y/M.html

You better watch out as the control freaks are working over time to digitalize electric stoves radios clocks coffee pots et al.. They are not satisfied with having the capacity to record your conversations over the smart TV or the I phone I pad i pod android et al

Now who is going to come into the the analytic session thinking the russians the chinese the americans the british the israelis et al are not potentially listening in on his anamnesis, recording it and making it available to the computer program that might be instructed to assemble your data file for its masters. Not everyone at the nsa is wasting their time pursuing porn pictures and spying on their significant others et al you know... Is this the future. The ego gods are getting absolutely everything under their control. Tongue in cheek?  Perhaps partially huh? You never know. 

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"They find me a new and original spirit in that I proceed by analysis and not synthesis,i.e. I plunge into the depths and while analyzing every atom I search out the whole." Dostoevsky[1]

On the other hand Jung had to build his concept of wholeness from his empirical studies. Ergo Dostoevsky was able to place  psychological revelations into a detective story accessible to all. Whereas Jung formulated and built his ideas on wholeness in an intellectual construct which many find difficult to decipher...

sorry for the misfire.... with the first half finished blog

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WHY A FAKE ARTICLE TITLED "CUCKOO FOR COCOA PUFFS?" WAS ACCEPTED BY 17 MEDICAL JOURNALS 
A HARVARD SCIENTIST WANTED TO SEE EXACTLY HOW EASY IT IS TO GET MEDICAL RESEARCH PUBLISHED. IN SOME CASES, $500 IS PRETTY MUCH ALL IT TAKES. 
BY ELIZABETH SEGRAN 
As a medical researcher at Harvard, Mark Shrime gets a very special kind of spam in his inbox: every day, he receives at least one request from an open-access medical journal promising to publish his research if he would only pay $500. 
http://www.fastcompany.com/3041493/body-week/why-a-fake-article-cuckoo-for-cocoa-puffs-was-accepted-by-17-medical-journals 

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this kind of devolution is not limited to the medical establishment. It can be found in the pay to publish experimental psychology industry as well...

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Jung's Silence in regard to Dostoevsky

Over the years I have often wondered why Jung rarely if ever wrote about Dostoevsky. How could one of the most preeminent psychological thinkers of the 20th Century fail to have recognized the greatest psychological thinker of the 19th Century. Freud was certainly aware of him. Did Jung either consciously or unconsciously elect to omit the mention of Dostoevsky in his writings.  

http://bjp.rcpsych.org/content/200/3/181.full

I don't have a definitive answer to this question. I do have some observations to make however. Dostoevsky was impassioned by his faith. He was a forceful and blind believer with an almost unparalleled psychological acuity. On the other hand, Jung's genius was in good part deployed on an individual and most definitely rationally based quest to recreate a connection to his inner being. Inner being being faith the Godhead the Unconscious the Self Religion or whatever. Either consciously or unconsciously Jung may have viewed Dostoevsky as being a fanatical alien whose approach to the psyche did not fit into the modern rational world. If so he may have failed to acknowledge or account for Eastern Christendoms inevitable contribution to the Great Crystal Palace Western Christendom has created. Building the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth however wondrous it may be is an act of futility until it is contextualized with the Kingdom of Heaven within us... 

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