The Loose-Leaf Fairy Tale Book II
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- Last Updated: Sunday, 27 October 2013 20:37
- Written by Gary V. Hartman
More accurately, this book should carry the subtitle, "The Parallel Tales," for its true purpose lies in providing parallel stories.
More accurately, this book should carry the subtitle, "The Parallel Tales," for its true purpose lies in providing parallel stories.
The Age of Pisces dawned with the story of a man who rose from the dead, but was no ghost. He could eat bread and drink wine, and still had the marks of the nails in his hands.
This time-line resulted from my search for the fundamentals of Jung's psychology: I wanted to discover for myself where Jung started and how he got to that model of the psyche which we today call "Jungian Psychology."
Origins of this [the Self], the keystone concept for both Jung's theory of psychic energy and his theory of psychic structure are as obscure as any of his other constructs.
The relationship between depth psychology and Eastern spiritual disciplines is commonly misunderstood. Sigmund Freud viewed all forms of religious experience as the childish "obsessional neurosis of mankind" - illusory, regressive and pathological.