1. Some Implications of Jung's Understanding of Mysticism
- Author
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Dourley, John
- Abstract
For Carl Jung, the imagery depicting religious experience represented a valued extemalization of the deepest energies and structures of the psyche, energies and structures in which humanity universally participates. In reference to what he considered to be his discovery of the psyche as author of religious experience, Jung refers to his ‘demonstration of the psychic origin of religious experience.’ In continuity with his understanding of the intra-psychic origin of religion, his fascination with mystics of many traditions was grounded on his conviction that their experience and imagery were immediate and particularly intense experiences of the archetypal, and thus religious, depths of the psyche itself.
- Published
- 1990
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