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Анатомия души. Алхимический символизм в психотерапии

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Алхимия. Как правило современный человек, услышав это слово представляет средневековых мечтателей пытающихся обрести в своих лабораториях золото и камень бессмертия.
Однако правда в том, что алхимия - это предтеча глубинной психологии. Именно в недрах алхимических трактатов, сформировалось первое, еще достаточно наивное знание о законах по которым живет наше бессознательное. Карл Юнг был первым, кто обратил свой взор к Алхимии посвятив её исследованию всю вторую половину жизни.
В предлагаемой нами книги, последователь Юнга Эдвард Эдингер рассматривает алхимические образы как своего рода карту психологической реальности. Оказывается наши сны, наши фантазии и наши влечения продолжают жить по алхимическим законам, также разделяясь на четыре стихии и семь режимов воображения о которых увлекательно и ярко расскажет Эдвард Эдингер. И понимание образного языка нашей души будет полезно каждому образованному человеку в нелегкой работе самопознани

302 pages, Unknown Binding

Published January 1, 2017

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About the author

Edward F. Edinger

38 books205 followers
Edward F. Edinger was a medical psychiatrist, Jungian analyst and American writer.
Edward F. Edinger Jr. was born on December 13, 1922, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, earning his Bachelor of Arts in chemistry at Indiana University Bloomington and his Doctor of Medicine at Yale School of Medicine in 1946. In November 1947, as a first lieutenant, he started a four-week Medical Field Service School at the Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas. He became a military doctor in the United States Army Medical Corps and was in Panama. In New York in 1951, he began his analysis with Mary Esther Harding, who had been associated with C.G. Jung.
Edinger was a psychiatrist supervisor at Rockland State Hospital in Orangeburg, New York, and later founder member of the C.G. Jung Foundation in Manhattan and the CG Jung Institute in New York. He was president of the institute from 1968 until 1979, when he moved to Los Angeles. There he continued his practice for 19 years, becoming senior analyst at the CG Jung Institute of Los Angeles.
He died on July 17, 1998, at his home in Los Angeles at age 75, according to family members due to bladder cancer.

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