He studied loonies and learned to imitate them. Then wrote a fairy tale using that ability.
no thanks. I’ll read something more constructive.
Fantastic post! Thank you for finding this. I will buy as soon as it comes out.
parsy, who has a copy of Jung’s UFO book (and the one on Symbols) and a few of the Bollingen series, and...
bump
I trust the NYT Book Review will continue with us long after its mother ship has left the dock.
Interesting...
there will be lots of closed minds to something like this-something ‘new’
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Thanks for posting this article BGH. Good stuff.
Though no sane man will knowingly eat contaminated food,
and will only consume that which he knows to be healthy for his body,
why nothing similar in what he normally serves his mind?
Why do men continue to take in, mentally, rations which are obviously,
to any reasonable observer, without nutritional value?
That is: What they generally accept in their minds as entertainment (even information)
offers no real, new knowledge, no up-lifting or challenging ideas,
and nothing that speaks to the positive future and potential of man.
And yet...out in the public marketplace of man’s mind, there things stand,
and once this is clearly seen and understood aright,
a man can retire his attention — nay, he must retire his attention from this torpid,
redundant, lowest-common-denominator-from-the-past mass spectacle,
and begin to mentally abide solely with himself — and with the stillness
that is now his private feast.