In an intimate talk with the filmmakers of "Peaceful Warrior," Dan Millman speaks about his old mentor.
01:42 min
CLEAR ALL
One question I am often asked is what books to begin reading if one is interested in the Jungian world view. My top recommendations are the books of Robert A. Johnson. They are the most accessible to someone building a Jungian vocabulary.
If human connection is essential, why do we thwart it by stereotyping others? Stereotypes are the fast-food of human connection: they fail to nourish us and, in the end, are detrimental to our thriving.
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Dr. Robert Johnson—author, lecturer, analyst—discusses masculine initiation as it relates to the modern ego of the western male in his film In Search of the Holy Grail.
A segment taken from Women of Tibet: Gyalyum Chemo in which Dr.
Featuring Jungian Analyst, Author and Activist Jean Shinoda Bolen, MD and her latest book Artemis The Indomitable Spirit in Everywoman, presented at the UN Commission on the Status of Women 59 (2015), in support of a Fifth World Conference on Women (5WCW).
This video focuses on what are regarded as the four major Jungian Archetypes: The Self, the Persona, the Shadow, and the Anima/Animus.
Carl Jung was one of the most important psychologists of the previous century. The notion of the shadow is central to the human condition and the ability to deal with it constitutes a challenging endeavor for most of us.
In the second part of our introduction to Jung we examine the individuation process, dream analysis, the persona, the shadow, the anima/animus, and the Self.
In this video we investigate what Carl Jung called archetypes, explaining what they are, how they influence our lives, their relationship to symbols, and their connection to religious experiences.
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Dr. Robert Johnson discusses the Mother Complex that is in most western males in his film In Search of the Holy Grail.