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Quote by C.G. Jung

“The individual is the only reality, the more we move away from the individual toward abstract ideas about Homo Sapiens, the more likely we are to fall into error.”

Quote by C.G. Jung

Work

Man and His Symbols

This book delves into the world of Carl Jung's analytical psychology, examining the various symbols that he believed were universal and deeply rooted in the human psyche. It discusses the origins, meanings, and applications of these symbols across different cultures and historical periods, offering insights into the human condition and the collective unconscious. more

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C.G. Jung

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“I think we have put a lot of emphasis on, of course, material wellbeing. By human economic betterment we mean material betterment. That’s economic enterprise, and that’s what Adam Smith worked out in his second book. But the first book had to do with human social betterment—all the things we do to make our lives better because we grow up in a social world. We learn in growing up that some actions are hurtful to others and they resent it, and some actions are beneficial to others, and they feel good about that and they tend to reward the beneficial actions. Those two sources account for a lot of the norms that we live by. Also, Adam Smith understood that—and I think this is remarkable—he understood that the downside was potentially far greater than the upside. So there is a fundamental asymmetry between gain and loss. And he didn’t just postulate that; he derived it from the idea there is an asymmetry between our joy and our sorrow. He got it from more fundamental considerations. Psychologists did not discover that until some 150 to 200 years later.”

“Whether or not you choose to incorporate your illness into your core identity is totally up to you. That’s also something that may change over the course of time as your illness evolves and perhaps becomes more chronic in nature. Regardless, you are not reducible as a person to your mental illness alone, nor does your illness define your inherent worth.”