Word: jungly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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This dream, one of 400 which a patient transcribed for Swiss Psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung, is one of thousands of fantasies which have been analyzed by the great onetime disciple of Sigmund Freud. Last year, lecturing at Yale University on "Religion in the Light of Science and Philosophy," tall, magnetic Dr. Jung let his listeners in on some of the dreams his work is made of. Last week his views were given wider currency, when his three closely-reasoned, fact-packed lectures* were published...
Picture an irate mother flinging her offspring over her knee and raising her palm to give him a good one-so urged famed Psychoanalyst Carl Gustav Jung at a Manhattan luncheon of the Students International Union. "Suddenly," he said, "her hand falls slowly to her side. She has thought of the psychology book, and is wondering what its advice would be in this situation. The arm does not raise again, and the poor child is thus deprived of a valuable educational experience...
...Carl Gustav Jung (TIME, Nov. 9) makes as rash and unjustified a statement as he did in 1930 when in a Forum essay he said that white Americans had acquired a Negroid and Indian behaviour. Again it seems that Dr. Jung hears the bells but doesn't know where they're hanging. By attributing to Franklin D. Roosevelt "the most amazing power complex, the Mussolini substance, the stuff of a dictator absolutely," the analytical psychologist Jung overlooks the subtle but nevertheless gravitating difference between a leading statesman supported by more than...
...Jung spends now and then a few weeks in the U. S., but even if he had spent all of the time of his last sojourn in America in the company of Mr. Roosevelt, as a scientifically inclined psychologist, he could not have justified his sweeping statement. As is so often the case with European scientists and "observers," the American mentality, the American concept and interpretation of democracy, and the true causes on which these are based, are foreign to Dr. .lung. He discovers Negroid and Indian traits in our mentality while he doesn't see that the Negroes...
...been said by authorities and lay-folk that psychoanalysts, commonly called "Analysts," are rich-men's doctors. If so, it would be obvious where Dr. Jung, whose personal acquaintance with Mr. Roosevelt is but the very slightest, gained his information about...