Jung and Eastern Thought: A Dialogue with the Orient by John James Clarke | Goodreads
Jung and Eastern Thought: A Dialogue with the Orient
by John James Clarke
4.43 · Rating details · 7 ratings · 1 review
In Jung and Eastern Thought, J.J. Clarke seeks to uncover the seriousness and relevance of Jung's dialogue with the philosophical ideas of the east, which arise from the various forms of Buddhism, Chinese Taoism and Indian Yoga. Through his commentaries on the I Ching and The Tibetan Book of the Dead, and various essays on Zen, eastern meditation and the symbolism of the mandala, Jung attempted to build a bridge of understanding between western psychology and the practices and beliefs of Asian religions, and thereby to relate traditional eastern thought to contemporary western concerns.
This book offers a critical examination of this remarkable piece of intellectual bridge building: first by assessing its role in the development of Jung's own thinking on the human psyche; second by discussing its relationship to the wider dialogue between east and west; and third by examining it in the light of urgent contemporary concerns and debates about intercultural understanding.
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Paperback, 1st edition, 217 pages
Published January 6th 1994 by Routledge
URL http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415104197/
Other Editions (2)
Jung and Eastern Thought: A Dialogue with the Orient
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Average rating4.43 · Rating details · 7 ratings · 1 review
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Editorial Reviews
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'... the book can be recommended as a wide-ranging overview of Jung's dialogue with the East.' - Network
'I am sure that this book is not only important to those who are interested inJung's psychology , and its link to Eastern traditions who want an entry into modern Western psychology, It also acts as a good introduction to Eastern thought and some of Jung's ideas, and is accessible .. ' - Journal of Analytical Psychology
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About the Author
John J. Clarke teaches at Kingston University, Surrey. He is the author of In Search of Jung.
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Shashank Singh
Sep 15, 2017Shashank Singh rated it it was amazing
Shelves: buddhism, hinduism-tantra, jungian, non-fiction, psychology, religion, religious-studies, philosophy, taoism, world-philosophy
Jung was not a proponent of practicing eastern religions for western folks. He believed western and eastern civilizations were culturally distinct entities which could benefit form dialogue but were too different to transplant traditions meaningfully. Historically he has been borne out to be practically wrong. Still he felt eastern religions emphasized and pointed to the psychic reality of life which had been marginalized by modern western culture. To explore eastern religions and have a hermeneutical dialogue was worthwhile for him and other westerns. It also aligned with his own thought that held the psychic aspect of life to be foundational.
JJ Clarke traces the influence of eastern thought on Jung(for example his idea of the interdependence of opposites), Jung’s ambivalent and changing views on it, and finally some of his misunderstanding of it(for example his tendency to reduce spiritual/religious states to psychic/psychological states). This is probably the best scholarly work on this specific subject I’ve read, and it’s also written in a very clear and readable style. (less)
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