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Jung and Intuition: On the Centrality and Variety of Forms of Intuition in Jung and Post-Jungians PDF

321 Pages·2015·1.963 MB·English
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PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page i CHAPTERTITLE I JUNG AND INTUITION PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page ii PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page iii JUNG AND INTUITION On the Centrality and Variety of Forms of Intuition in Jung and Post-Jungians Nathalie Pilard PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page iv First published in 2015 by Karnac Books Ltd 118 Finchley Road, London NW3 5HT Copyright © 2015 to Nathalie Pilard. The right of Nathalie Pilard to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with §§ 77 and 78 of the Copyright Design and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, e lectronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A C.I.P. for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 1 78220 130 4 Edited, designed and produced by The Studio Publishing Services Ltd www.publishingservicesuk.co.uk e-mail: [email protected] Printed in Great Britain www.karnacbooks.com PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page v CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS vii ABOUT THE AUTHOR ix INTRODUCTION xi PART I JUNG’S NOTION OF INTUITION AND ITS CONTEXTS IN HIS PSYCHOLOGY CHAPTER ONE Plurality of meaning in Jung’s notion of intuition 3 CHAPTER TWO Contexts of the birth of intuition in Jung’s psychology 23 PART II AFTER 1896: INTUITION IN THE UNDER-CONSCIOUS CHAPTER THREE Supernatural intuitions, religion, science, and philosophy 61 CHAPTER FOUR Psychological intuitions 95 v PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page vi vi CONTENTS PART III AFTER 1912: INTUITION IN THE UNCONSCIOUS CHAPTER FIVE Anschauung and archetype 141 CHAPTER SIX Archetype, intuition, instinct, and empathy (1) 155 PART IV AFTER 1913: INTUITION IN JUNGIAN AND POST-JUNGIAN PRACTICE CHAPTER SEVEN Intuitive methods and empathy (2) 169 PART V AFTER 1921: INTUITION IN JUNGIAN AND POST-JUNGIAN CONSCIOUSNESS CHAPTER EIGHT Psychological types 205 PART VI LATE JUNG, EMPATHY (3), AND THE NATURE OF INTUITION CHAPTER NINE Suggestions for further research 233 APPENDIX I Indexations of “-intuition” 239 APPENDIX II CW and GW 6, indexing of “-intuition” in Chapter Two 243 NOTES 245 REFERENCES 277 INDEX 293 PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page vii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank Robert Segal for his talent and generosity, Sonu Shamdasani and Tomas Bokedal for their expert comments, my parents for their support, the French Ministère des Affaires Étrangères et Européennes and the University of Glasgow for my scholarship, the Department of Divinity and Religious Studies of the University of Aberdeen for the various financial support I received during my PhD. Thanks are also due to Paul Bishop, John Beebe, Antoine Faivre, Leslie Gardner, Lucy Huskinson, Roderick Main, and Martin Rueff for their advice and lively conversation, all the members of the International Association of Jungian Studies weblist for keeping me aware of the Jungian debate, Pete Gunter and John Mullarkey for their philosophical help, Greg Richter and Charles-Henri Discry for their help in German and linguistics, and Yvonne Voegeli and Marion Wullschleger for their warm assistance at the Jung Arbeitsarchivof the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH) Zürich. I am grateful to my friends for their patience, and especially Paul Midjord. I would like to thank Cécile Chavel, Frances Milne, and John Callender for their help and for the deepest motivation that lies beneath this work: health care. vii PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page viii viii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I thank the Foundation of the Works of C. G. Jung, Zürich: (c) 2007 Foundation of the Works of C. G. Jung, Zürich for permission to repro- duce from Jung’s unpublished manuscripts. For permission to quote from the Collected Works by C. G. Jung © 1983 CW 1; © 1991 CW B; 1970 © CW 1; 1973 © CW 2; 1960 © CW 3; 1971 © CW 6, I thank T&F and PUP editions. Reproduced by permis- sion of Taylor & Francis Books (UK, worldwide), and Princeton University Press (USA, Canada). For permission to cite Corinna Treitel A Science for the Soul: Occult ism and the Genesis of the German Modern, pp. 32–33, Table 2.1, I thank Johns Hopkins University Press © 2004 Johns Hopkins University Press. I thank Pantheon Books for permission to quote from Memories, Dreams, Reflexions by Jung–Jaffé, translation copyright © 1961, 1962, 1963 and renewed 1989, 1990, 1991 by Random House LCC. PILARD Prelims_Pilard prelims correx 26/01/2015 10:58 Page ix ABOUT THE AUTHOR Nathalie Pilard was born in Paris, where she started her studies in history and religion at the universities of Panthéon-Sorbonne, Denis Diderot, and the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes. Her thesis on C. G. Jung and the Confucian Changeswas subsequently published in France. She then joined the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, where she completed her PhD on C. G. Jung and intuition. An independent scholar, she is also a collagist and an artist, currently working on a tarot deck. ix

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