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aker:books_and_literature:modern_man_in_search_of_a_soul [2015/11/14 23:28] – created janus | aker:books_and_literature:modern_man_in_search_of_a_soul [2015/11/14 23:56] – janus | ||
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Jung, C. G. (1933) Modern Man in search of a Soul. A Harvest Book • Harcourt, Inc. San Diego New York London | Jung, C. G. (1933) Modern Man in search of a Soul. A Harvest Book • Harcourt, Inc. San Diego New York London | ||
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+ | p2-3 "My own experience confirms this view inasmuch as I have found that dreams not infrequently bring to light in an unmistakable way the unconscious contents that are causal factors in a neurosis." | ||
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+ | p4 "We here come upon a characteristic of dreams that must take first place in any discussion of the applicability of dream-analysis to the treatment of neuroses. The dream gives a true picture of the subjective state, while the conscious mind denies that this state exists, or recognizes it only grudgingly. ... It presents the subjective state as it really is." | ||
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+ | p6 "A purely causalistic approach is too narrow to do justice to the true significance, | ||
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+ | p8 " | ||
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+ | p10 "The analyst who wishes to rule out conscious suggestion must consider any dream interpretation invalid that does not win the assent of the patient, and he must search until he finds a formulation that does." | ||
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+ | p11 "It is certain that consciousness consists not only of wishes and fears, but of vastly more than these, and it is highly probable that the unconscious psyche contains a wealth of contents and living forms equal to or even greater than does consciousness, | ||
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+ | p13 "The " | ||
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+ | p14 "But since it is probable, as I have shown in a few examples, that dreams contain more than practical helps for the doctor, dream-analysis deserves very special consideration. Sometimes, indeed. it is a matter of life and death." | ||
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+ | p16 "As far as present knowledge goes, there is only one way of doing this : there must be a thorough-going, | ||
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+ | p17 "The unconscious is not a demonic monster, but a thing of nature that is **perfectly neutral as far as moral sense**, aesthetic taste and intellectual judgement go." <fc green> | ||
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+ | p17 "The relation between conscious and unconscious is compensatory. | ||
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+ | p18 "This is why every dream is a source of information and a means of self-regulation, | ||
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+ | p19 "In reality, the relation between consciousness and the dream is strictly causal, and they interact in the subtlest of ways." | ||
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+ | p20 "It is of the first importance for the assimilation of dream-contents that no violence be done to the real values of the conscious personality." | ||
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+ | p21 "Just as the interpretation of dreams requires exact knowledge of the conscious status quo, so the treatment of dream symbolism demands that we take into account the dreamer' | ||
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+ | p23 "As already remarked, it frequently happens at the very beginning of a treatment that a dream reveals to the doctor, in a wide perspective, | ||
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+ | p26 " The dream speaks in images, and gives expression to instincts, that are derived from the most primitive levels of nature. Consciousness all too easily departs from the law of nature; but it can be brought again into harmony with the latter by the assimilation of unconscious contents. By fostering this process we lead the patient to the rediscovery of the law of his own being." |