Like many, several years of my life are filled with spiritual passages. I left Christianity and searched for what might fit for me and ended up with somewhat of a hodgepodge of religious and spiritual thought. As a psychotherapist, the work of theorists in the field studying both Jungian psychology along with Buddism has always fascinated me. Part of this is due to Jung developing his ideas from several disciplines including philosophy, religion, biology, zoology, medicine, anthropolgy and paleontology. Amazing for someone that advanced the study of the unconscious! Then, again, he and Freud as
ethnocists (the term was coined by both along with their contemporaries which became European cultural anthropology.
The Jungian concepts of Anima and Animus come up during our discussions of gender as Jung's ideas about gender were not of the binary. Interesting, given the time era he lived in and all of the Freudian influences in his studies.
Now that we are able to read Jung's
Red Book, how much he was influenced by Eastern philosophy and spirituality is evident. He wrote this after the
big break from Freud, but it was never published until last year.
I am wondering if any other members want to engage in discussion about Jung and Buddism, other spiritual thought such as Native American beliefs?
Some titles that I find interesting are (all are available at amizon.com- there is even a contest to win a hardcover copy of his Red Book!)-
The Essence of Jung's Psychology and Tibetan Buddhism: Western and Eastern Paths to the Heart
Radmila Moacanin
Buddhism and Jungian Psychology by J. Marvin Spiegelman
Jung and Eastern Thought (Suny Series, Transpersonal & Humanistic Psychology) by Harold G. Coward
Jung and Eastern Thought: A Dialogue with the Orient by J. J. Clarke
A book going into Jung, psychotherapy and Native American thought is-
Dancing Between Two Worlds: Jung and the Native American Soul (Jung and Spirituality) [Paperback]
Fred R. Gustafson
On Hindu thought-
http://spirituality-sparks.com/2010/...ddhist-anatta/
Jung’s “Self,” Hindu Atman and Buddhist Anatta
Madhu B. Wangu
Please add to the list! Winter always brings out reading more than usual, so, anything offered to take a look at would be great! Lets just enjoy this- I have no intention of arguing about what anyone believes in terms of their spirituality- or lack of it.