Word: jungly
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...professor of clinical psychology, who spent four decades probing human personality from every conceivable angle. A Groton graduate and captain of the Harvard crew ('15), Murray went on to become a Manhattan surgeon, a Rockefeller Institute embryologist, a Cambridge University Ph.D. (biochemistry), a personal student of Psychiatrist Carl Jung. He ran the Harvard Psychological Clinic, designed the personality-assessing Thematic Apperception Test, won a Legion of Merit medal for his work in the wartime OSS, and conducted impeccable personal research into everything from fear, fantasy and humor to religion, myths and Melville's novels...
Graham sermons are still geared closely to the Bible, but they reflect Billy's growing interest in contemporary trends of thought. He has read widely in modern theologians, has taken enough interest in psychology to quote Carl Jung in the same breath with St. Paul. "We're dealing with millions of people suffering from nervous and mental illness," he says. "I've done much reading in psychology, although I believe that the therapy Christ offered is the only adequate therapy...
Captain of the crew in his senior year, Murray did graduate work and research at Harvard, Columbia, the Rockefeller Institute, Cambridge University, and at Zurich under Carl Jung before joining the Faculty in 1926. As a Lieutenant Colonel during the war, he successfully applied techniques of psychology to the selection of personnel to the Office of Strategic Services...
...happens, our first contacts on stories lead to others. Correspondent Andrew Kopkind found himself chasing out to a North Hollywood "dance therapy'' studio to interview Dr. Tina Keller, a soft and grey woman who was once a psychoanalyst and Zurich friend of both Karl Earth and Carl Jung. "I hated Karl Earth for a while," she said, but in the end came to believe that "Karl Earth said 'no' to many things because he wanted to say a precise 'yes.' " Out of many such interviews come the odd, valued sentence that helps illume...
...tried to draw a body, would not picture it that way. The figure is not a "man" at all, but a mandala (Sanskrit for magic circle), the circle-in-four that anthropologists have found central in design throughout history and a source of proof in much of C. G. Jung's "racial psychology...