What is Soul?

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A01=Wolfgang Giegerich
Absolute Negativity
analytical psychology
Author_Wolfgang Giegerich
Autonomous Mind
Category=JMAF
Contra Naturam
CW
CW 9i
Dead Letter
depth psychology theory
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eternal
Eternal Mind's Eternal Recreation
Eternal Mind’s Eternal Recreation
eternal salvation
Extra Corpus
Fountain Of Life
Intra Corpus
Jung
Jungian
Jungian approach
meaning
Mental Development
metaphysics of consciousness
Mighty Aphrodite
Mysterium Coniunctionis
naturalistic thinking
negative dialectics in soul studies
Opposite Intentionalities
phenomenology of mind
philosophy of psyche
Polytheistic Psychology
Psychic Background
psychology
religion
salvation
Shared Meanings
Sick Soul
soul
Soul Events
Soul Purpose
Soul Truths
Soul's Logical Life
Soul’s Logical Life
Spring Fever
subjectivity in psychology
Sublated Moment
West
Western tradition
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367477189
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jan 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Rooted in the metaphysics of bygone times, the notion of soul in our Western tradition is packed with associations and meanings that are incompatible with the anthropological and naturalistic thinking that prevails in modernity. Whereas treatises of old conceived of the soul as an infinite, immaterial substance which was the ground of man’s hope for eternal salvation, modern psychology has for the most part discarded the concept in favor of more tangible touchstones such as the emotions, desires, and attachments which characterize man as a finite, bodily-existing positive fact. An exception to this trend has been the analytical psychology of C. G. Jung. Against the positivistic spirit of his times, Jung insisted upon a "‘psychology with soul,’ that is, a psychology based upon the hypothesis of an autonomous mind." In this volume, Wolfgang Giegerich once again takes up the Jungian commitment to a psychology with soul. Agreeing with Jung that the soul concept is indispensable for a truly psychological psychology, he supplements and re-orients the Jungian approach to both this concept and the phenomenology of the soul by means of a whole series of nuanced discussions that are as rigorous as they are thoroughgoing. The result is nothing short of a tour de force. Tarrying with the negative, Giegerich’s particular contribution resides in his showing the movement against the soul to be the soul’s own doing. In animus moments of itself, consciousness in the form of philosophy and Enlightenment reason turned upon itself as religion and metaphysics. Far from abolishing the soul, however, these incisive negations were themselves negated. As if dancing upon its own demise, the soul came home to itself, not as an invisible metaphysical substance, but more invisibly still as the logically negative evaporation of that substance into the form of subject, or even better said, into psychology.

Wolfgang Giegerich is a Jungian analyst, now living in Berlin, and the author of numerous books, among them Neurosis: The Logic of a Metaphysical Illness and his Collected English Papers, volumes 1-6.