Ratings17
Average rating3.7
Illustrated throughout with revealing images, this is the first and only work in which the world-famous Swiss psychologist explains to the layperson his enormously influential theory of symbolism as revealed in dreams.
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Very interesting ideas, but the evidence cited is literally just dreams. And rather than using just a few well-chosen dreams, half this book is the retelling of dreams.
The arguments are inconsistent too. Jung and his colleagues criticize Freud for having a kind of “symbol dictionary,” as in “if a lion appears in your dream, it means this and that.” The Jungians emphasize that dream/symbol interpretation is highly individual. And yet, there are apparently symbols provided by the “collective unconscious.” “A stone often represents the self in dreams.” ???
To reiterate: Jung's ideas are fascinating and entirely deserving of familiarization. But this book does a terrible job of selling/explaining them.
Jung's philosophy of life: “Man becomes whole, integrated, calm, fertile, and happy when (and only when) the process of individuation is complete.”