The collected works of C. G. Jung Psychology and Religion Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The collected works of C. G. Jung Psychology and Religion: west and east Volume 11 The collected works of C. G. Jung Psychology and Religion: west and east Volume 11 by C.G. Jung
0 ratings, 0.00 average rating, 0 reviews
The collected works of C. G. Jung Psychology and Religion Quotes Showing 1-2 of 2
“For whatever we do and whatever we create outside, whatever we make visible in this world, is always ourselves, our own work, and when we do not finish it, we don't finish ourselves. So he carries that burden all the time with him; every unfinished situation which he has built up and left is in himself. He is an unfulfilled promise. And what he encounters in life is also himself, and that is true for everybody, not only the so-called intuitive.

Whatever our fate or whatever curse we meet, whatever people we come into contact with, they all represent ourselves – whatever comes to us is our own fate and so it is ourselves. If we give it up, if we betray it, we have betrayed ourselves, and whatever we split off which belongs to us, will follow and eventually overtake us.”
C. G. Jung, The collected works of C. G. JungPsychology and Religion
“A man may be convinced in all good faith that he has no religious ideas, but no one can fall so far away from humanity that he no longer has any dominating représentation collective. His very materialism, atheism, communism, socialism, liberalism, intellectualism, existentialism, or what not, testifies against his innocence. Somewhere or other, overtly or covertly, he is possessed by a supraordinate idea.”
C. G. Jung, The collected works of C. G. JungPsychology and Religion