Philosophical issues in the psychology of C.G. Jung /
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Author / Creator: | Nagy, Marilyn |
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Imprint: | Albany, NY : State University of New York Press, c1991. |
Description: | ix, 321 p. ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/1093035 |
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I. To Know Only The Soul: Jung's Epistemology
- 1. Childhood And Youth: Taking Up The Problem Of The Father
- 2. From Experience As Value To Experience As Knowledge
- 3. Inner Experience As True Knowledge: The Apologetics of Subjectivism
- 4. Epistemology As A Value Term: Plato's Theory Of Recollection As A Solution To The Problem Of Justice
- a. Immortality and Justice in Homeric Society
- b. The Orphic Vision
- c. Inner Knowledge and Transcendent Order
- 5. Theories of Perception And Knowledge: From Descartes To Kant
- 6. Nineteenth-Century Kantianism
- a. Hermann von Helmholtz and the Skeptical Heritage
- b. Lange and the Phenomenal Idealists
- c. Haeckel and Adickes: A Pitched Battle
- d. Arthur Schopenhauer
- 7. Two Epistemological Discussions By Jung
- a. Esse in Anima as a Solution to the Mind-Body Dilemma
- b. The Lumen Naturae of Paracelsus as the Paradigm of True Knowledge
- Part II. Archetypes: Championing The Mind
- Introduction
- 1. Freud And The Theory Of Instinct Libido
- 2. Toward A Genetic Theory Of Libido
- 3. From Libido To Archetypes: Reduction To Final Cause
- a. A Phylogenetic Viewpoint
- b. Fantasy, Symbol, and the Prospective Method
- c. "Instinct and the Unconscious"
- 4. Jung's Empiricism And The Common Consent Arguement
- 5. Theories Of Archetypes: Plato And Schopenhauer
- a. Plato
- b. Schopenhauer
- 6. Instincts And Archetypes
- 7. Late Developments Of The Archetype Theory: Synchronicity
- Part III. Individuation Versus Evolution: The Long War
- Section A. Teleological Patterns In Jung And In Aristotle
- 1. Individuation
- a. Life as Purposive
- b. The Self as Arbiter of Psyche
- 2. Aristotle's View Of Teleology As Act And Potency
- Section B. The Nineteenth-Century Challenge To Final Cause
- 3. Goals In Nature: Kant, Schopenhauer, Von Hartmann
- 4. The Struggle With Vitalism: From Stahl To Haeckel
- 5. Neo-Vitalism: Driesch And Jung
- A Postscript on Vitalism
- Conclusion
- A Personal Note
- Appendix: Gustav Theodor Fechner
- Selected Bibliography
- Index