Guest guest Posted December 14, 2000 Report Share Posted December 14, 2000 Dear Toni, You wrote: > I continue to gasp at what I believe to > be a superficial view of poverty in western Europe than under our almost unbridles capitalism. > For example, this morning's newspaper had an article about the " working poor " who had to resort > to soup kitchens and food banks to make it to the end of the month, if illness or emergency > came along. The salient words, in my view, are " resort to soup kitchens and food banks, " not " left to starve in the street unsuccored " . What's wrong with feeding children through food banks? >It may not be the starvation of Ethiopia, but it must still greatly affect the > children of these working peolpe...I am not even speaking of those who will not, or cannot > work. You just brush them off as no " big deal " . Would you feel that was at a minimum pay job > with a family to feed and clothe? I wouldn't have a family if the best I could do were a minimum wage job. It's a matter of responsibility or prudence in my opinion. My own father gave up journalism, which he loved, and went into business because he didn't think he could earn enough as a journalist to take care of a family. I have always thought that Bob Cratchit was silly to have five children (or seven, or whatever it was) on thirty shillings a week, haven't you? Still, all that said, no one is suggesting that we " let 'em starve. " See soup kitchen remarks above. > > As far as Jung's special and political views. Well, I must say, he was an acute observer, but > he observed from a distance. All his great knowledge would not change the outcome of our wars, > or even our recent mess of an election race. It is not enough to know why someone acts like a > horses patutie,. Understanding Saddam's soul will make his own soul more aware, but it sure > won't change how Hussain treats his people. No, but it might teach us how to deal with Saddam's like (hint: Patriot missiles). Jung observed the war from a distance, alright ... a distance of about sixty miles, lol. He could have observed it from America had he wished, with three thousand miles of ocean between himself and the nearest storm trooper, but that wasn't his style. > > As long as politics is the art of the possible, and governments carry out their duties to a > diverse population, in a very inexact way....no amount of psychoanalysis, no philosophy will > suddenly change how we deal with each other. Poltics is " the art of the possible, sure enough. Agreed. ( Look how long it took Jung to understand where > Hitler was headed. At first he praised him. His sight was no better than anyone else's.) I know of no place where Jung praises Hitler - what do you have in mind?. Jung may have held a " wait and see " attitude regarding Hitler initially, as did many, but by 1934 - pretty early in the game, if you ask me - he was warning the world about the grave danger posed by Hitler and Nazism. > > I will continue to believe that Jung and his followers can change the way man thinks and > acts....one person at a time. It is a long, slow process to help one person to become more > conscious.All the knowledge of human nature will not change a generation. None of the " greats " > tried to change the pace of history. I'm not sure what you mean here by the " pace " of history, but if you mean that none of the greats tried to influence the future or guide the course of man, I would disagree. >We move at the speed of our slowest member. If this were true we would all still be savages, would we not? > > Even our " greats " were human beings. They too had to deal with their own environment from which > they sprang, and it shaped their point of view, as much as all that brain power did. They will > make a difference to those few who read them, study them and try to implement what they have > learned. > I will accept each of them in their area of expertise, but for the last 100 years England has > not been an oligarchy. But the 'aristocratic ideal " had not yet died out in Britain when Jung spoke. Maybe it hasn't yet. I think there's still a ghost of it - and maybe more than a ghost - even in America. >Not since the Reform act of 1832, and the two later reform acts. However > much he rants and raves, neither Jung nor any other " great " can keep society from marching on. He doesn't rant and rave. It seems to me that while his views may be seen as radical, his speech is always tempered. > This was the " century of the common man " whether we like it or not, No argument there. whether it is better or > worse than what it was. > Not hard to deal with the Nazis from a neutral country, where he was an immediate threat to no > one. His books were burned in France, and word was that he was on the Nazis' list for when they got to Switzerland. Jung was stuck tenuously between Germany and Italy, in a country ill-equipped to defend itself. Do you think that the Nazis would not have taken Switzerland, had the war gone their way? A country's true " neutrality " is ultimately a function of its ability to defend itself. > > I also do not interpret history as you say Jung does, and I would have to say, I have > authorities on my side as well...as well as my own studies. I further object to the idea that > all modern culture has done is negative. But I don't suggest that, and neither does Jung. Only a fool would deny the advantages of modernity, and Jung was no fool. What one might object to is the notion that all that modernity has done is *positive*, or that it has been mostly positive.Yes, all men and women now have their " rights, " or so they say, but at the cost of their place in the cosmos. I'm not sure it was worth it, to repeat. It reminds me in a way of Castro, who taught everyone to read, but took all the books away, lol. One step forward, two steps back. Having a roof over on'es head and enough to eat is not, of course, as you say beloe, a reflection of excessive materialism. But people historically have generally had these things in well run regimes (even tribal regimes), barring unfortunate weather, etc. > > Dan, I still want to discuss another provocative letter of your , but haven't time now. OK, looking forward to it. Regards, Dan > Toni > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 14, 2000 Report Share Posted December 14, 2000 Covert, You wrote: > > Toni, Dan, and others... > > I may not be around to see it in full bloom, but I suspect one of the > biggest shake-ups to prevailing philosophical and psychological opinions > will emerge out of the current study of the human genome. It won't surprise > me at all to see in the near future people hooked up to computerized devices > that can not only read one's genome, but change it by pushing a few > buttons - carefully, my good man, carefully. > Yes, it remains to be seen whether we will even have human beings for long after we begin tampering with the genetic code. Fearsome stuff, indeed. Regards, Dan Watkins Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 14, 2000 Report Share Posted December 14, 2000 Dan, You are the reason I believe in freedom of speech and freedom to learn and to teach. It continues to amaze me that you and I can look at life from an entirely different angle. We consider the same events, books, people but we see them through our own eyes. I will not change your way of looking at life and you will not change mine, It always amazes me that two educated, well read, thinking people can come to opposite conclusions from the same points of consideration. I, am not of course giving up, or letting you think you convinced me. You haven't, naturally because I interpret words, history people differently. I continue to gasp at what I believe to be a superficial view of poverty in western Europe than under our almost unbridles capitalism. For example, this morning's newspaper had an article about the " working poor " who had to resort to soup kitchens and food banks to make it to the end of the month, if illness or emergency came along. It may not be the starvation of Ethiopia, but it must still greatly affect the children of these working peolpe...I am not even speaking of those who will not, or cannot work. You just brush them off as no " big deal " . Would you feel that was at a minimum pay job with a family to feed and clothe? As far as Jung's special and political views. Well, I must say, he was an acute observer, but he observed from a distance. All his great knowledge would not change the outcome of our wars, or even our recent mess of an election race. It is not enough to know why someone acts like a horses patutie,. Understanding Saddam's soul will make his own soul more aware, but it sure won't change how Hussain treats his people. As long as politics is the art of the possible, and governments carry out their duties to a diverse population, in a very inexact way....no amount of psychoanalysis, no philosophy will suddenly change how we deal with each other. ( Look how long it took Jung to understand where Hitler was headed. At first he praised him. His sight was no better than anyone else's.) I will continue to believe that Jung and his followers can change the way man thinks and acts....one person at a time. It is a long, slow process to help one person to become more conscious.All the knowledge of human nature will not change a generation. None of the " greats " tried to change the pace of history. We move at the speed of our slowest member. Even our " greats " were human beings. They too had to deal with their own environment from which they sprang, and it shaped their point of view, as much as all that brain power did. They will make a difference to those few who read them, study them and try to implement what they have learned. I will accept each of them in their area of expertise, but for the last 100 years England has not been an oligarchy. Not since the Reform act of 1832, and the two later reform acts. However much he rants and raves, neither Jung nor any other " great " can keep society from marching on. This was the " century of the common man " whether we like it or not, whether it is better or worse than what it was. Not hard to deal with the Nazis from a neutral country, where he was an immediate threat to no one. I also do not interpret history as you say Jung does, and I would have to say, I have authorities on my side as well...as well as my own studies. I further object to the idea that all modern culture has done is negative. There are some hugh strides in basic human rights from both the feudal times, Greek times or anywhere up to the present. Materialism, per se is a problem, but having enough to eat, and a solid roof over ones head does not come under the title " materialism " Man has not been a monk or an Indian yogi, or even a poverty stricken philosopher. Further those roles are a choice, The lot of common man was not. Man is a very human frail animal, and we can not judge 5000 yearsof history as either wrong or right. Its that old dichotomy again: the balance between extremes. The past was not better, to my mind, but it was different. (Also much scholarship and discoveries have been published since Jung was at the university.)nostalgia is normal, but I believe not based on facts. Dan, I still want to discuss another provocative letter of your , but haven't time now. Toni Dan Watkins wrote: > > " On the contrary, he gives an example of how they work in real life - > Britain. Hence he praises the British regime. He states that it is > precisely when the " aristocratic ideal " is lost, as it has been in this > century, that things begin not to work. I think that he meant what he > said. > > I don't know that > Jung was such a bad practical politician. He dealt with the Nazis and > lived to tell about it. > > . There is no material poverty worth talking about in > either America or Western Europe, so the problem wouldn't come up, > except as a psychological problem > > However, I am > not talking here about psychologists in this ordinary (dare I say > vulgar?) sense, but about true psychologists such as Jung. > > > I took the idea from Jung. Jung takes it seriously, I take it seriously. > No I wasn't kidding. I think that Jung's point was that there were > compensations for the lack of widespread wealth in the middle ages. The > dirt-poor serf had riches of a kind that many contemporary boat-owning > laborers in the West currently lack. > > > But that consideration is not, I think, even to the > point. The points is, as Jung said in what I quoted, that man at that > time lived psychologically at the center of the cosmos. Now that place > has been lost. There is nothing that modernity offers that can > compensate for that loss, much as I enjoy computers, cars, hifi > equipment and other techno-toys. > > It wasn't just by-and-by. It was also here-and-now (or rather, > then-and-there). The world itself was numinous, at least if Jung was > right. > > I don't think he said medieval Europe was paradise. He does at the very > least strongly imply, however, that as humans we Westerners have lost > much since then. > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 14, 2000 Report Share Posted December 14, 2000 Can't stay out of this one - sorry! > ( Look how long it took Jung to understand where > > Hitler was headed. At first he praised him. His sight was no better than anyone else's.) > > I know of no place where Jung praises Hitler - what do you have in > mind?. Jung may have held a " wait and see " attitude regarding Hitler > initially, as did many, but by 1934 - pretty early in the game, if you > ask me - he was warning the world about the grave danger posed by Hitler > and Nazism. Dan, you are right on the money here. Jung was accused of " praising Hitler " in the interview on Radio Berlin in 1933 (in C. G. Jung Speaking, pp 73-79). The reason is because he quoted Hitler, and the quote is always taken out of context without the (albeit slightly veiled) words of caution which immediately followed. He also criticised Freud and Adler in this interview - so people have blown it up out of all proportion and claimed that he was pro-Nazi and anti-Jewish. DUH! What he actually said about Hitler was this: " As Hitler said recently, the leader must be able to be alone and must have the courage to go his own way. *But if he doesn't know himself, how is he to lead others? That is why the true leader is always one who has the courage to be himself, and can look not only others in the eye but also himself.* " (emphasis mine). People are also getting overexcited because he used the term " Der Fuehrer " for " leader " . Ahem - that is a perfectly normal word, before Hitler chose to use it as meaning him and him alone! Toni - do you know another German word for " leader " - because I don't! > > His books were burned in France, and word was that he was on the Nazis' > list for when they got to Switzerland. Jung was stuck tenuously between > Germany and Italy, in a country ill-equipped to defend itself. Do you > think that the Nazis would not have taken Switzerland, had the war gone > their way? A country's true " neutrality " is ultimately a function of its > ability to defend itself. Some of his books were banned in Germany, once Hitler realised that he couldn't manipulate him as the Nazis' psychologist. And, he was certainly on a hit list. Hitler hoped to use *him*, and even planned to meet him on one of his visits to Germany, but cancelled. Shortly afterwards, certain of Jung's books were banned. This leads many people (myself included) to believe that Hitler was informed of certain passages in Jung's work which contradicted Nazi aims. Jung was sufficiently alarmed about the Nazi threat to move his wife and children deep into the countryside during the war, although he himself remained where he was and fulfilled his professional obligations. fa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2000 Report Share Posted December 15, 2000 Dear Toni, You wrote: > > Dear Dan' > > I do not believe that a man must submerge his pride to accept hand-outs when he is capable of a > day's work. You wouldn't have children if you couldn't afford them. We could discuss this ad > infinitum, but just suppose he had those children at the time he had a good job, that he then lost. That's what charity is for - I'm not knocking alms giving. It does seem to me that a state subsidy is just as much a " hand-out, " as you say, as a box of groceries from Catholic Charities. Going the state-subsidy route, though, has the added disadvantage of further empowering the state by making people dependent (excessively, imo) upon it. > > I detect a wee bit of judgementalism, Dan, when you speak of the " poor " and " downtrodden " I didn't say anything about the " downtrodden " - this is not a term I would be likely to use. I do think that in Western countries, where economic opportunity abounds and life is very easy, long-term poverty does usually reflect a personal problem of some kind - which is not to say that the deficiency is necessarily characterological, or that it is the person's " fault. " Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn't. But, to repeat, I'm not against being charitable to those who are down on their luck >But that > could be me judging you, so there we are. We are not going to agree, I wager, on this earth because > innately we see the world differently. (It took me 40 years to convince my husband that some of my > view on welfare and societies ills had merit) I don't mind if you judge me. > > You think Jung would have used missiles against Iraq, Maybe you are right., but its is a pretty big > assumption to make, and I am not sure it is pertinent, or correct. Well, I don't know whether Jung would have used missiles against Iraq specifically or not - my point was that Jung understood the necessity for maintaining the capacity and willingness to use military force in some international situations. Hence his remarks on the necessity for America to keep its army and navy large and prepared in the 1930's. > You are right about one thing, in > my opinion. Jung did not " rant and rave " to my immediate knowledge. I wasn't there. And it is hard > to see that from CW. I apologize at that characterization. > > We, as well as " the greats " try to influence the future.That is why we leave wills and " trusts " I am > not convinced Socrates had that in his conscious mind. He seemed too humble for that. But, in > general , men do try. > Dan, in the larger backdrop of evil in WW2, having ones books burned only shows the stupidity of the > burners, but did not hurt Jung. He was not in personal danger , and >that is fine with me. Jung appears to have thought that he was: " I might add that in 1941 I delivered a lecture before a meeting of Swiss psychotherapists entitled 'Psychotherapy Today' in which I condemned the totalitarian state at a time when the victorious panzer divisions were barely sixty-five miles away, and I knew the Nazis planned to make short work of me when and if they crossed the Swiss border " (CG Jung Speaking, p 199-200.) > > I hesitate to say this, Dan, but it is only an opinion that mankind has " lost its place in the > cosmos " Yes it is perhaps an opinion, but apparently it was Jung's opinion, and it appears correct to me too. >I for example. am part of mankind as are you. You feel you have lost your place? Decidedly. In your > judgment , modern times are not an unmitigated success. You may be right . But,I dare say you have > not the detachment of time and place to make a judgment. We need be about what we can influence, and > what we see as truly evil. Much of modernity is, imo, truly evil. Obviously we cannot simply turn the clock back, but we can try to learn from our mistakes and mitigate the damage in future. Before we can try to improve things, we have to understand where we went wrong, even if not everything is " fixable. " Regards, Dan Watkins Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2000 Report Share Posted December 15, 2000 Dear , Please do not assume that I do not and did not give very serious reflection to the whole problem of government and political science. I won't match credentials with you, but I have them. Not everyone will agree on how to interpret the Bible, so could there ever be total agreement on the works of Jung. My " tolerant amusement " which you detected was certainly not for Jung's ideas. Even with a terrific case of inflation, ( which I pray I am not showing and do not have) I would not dare make fun of Jung's theories. Tolerant amusement comes from a feeling of superiority. I do not and never have believed that I could do more than sit at Jung's feet to learn. I admit to putting him in a genius category. I will, however ,not genuflect at the sound of his name. However much, his depth has helped us in our lives, the man was a man. Even with him, I must say " if you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him. " In the last analysis, we carry his work forward, we do not set it in concrete. Differences of opinion on what Jung " meant " is not a mortal sin, and you my friend are not the priest to whom I must confess that I strayed from the path. If your goal was as you say to make people " think different " , you assume you are right. I make no such assumption, about either of our views, yet do give my opinion on where we think we are headed, and how Jung fits in. I will not convince you, never wanted to. I do believe it is good to hear the other side. There are basically two opposite poles from which we view life in general. One can not exist without the other. But I do believe, we are at liberty to find the answers where we find them. You have yours Good. Perhaps some day you will think differently on some subject. I know I change my views as I learn more , of look at it from a different angle. In applying your view of Jung's answers to a current problem, you take a risk. Your answers will always be from a subjective reading, as will all of ours. That's ok, as long as you don't hold those answers to the " Truth " . Toni said: > Dear friends, > > I think we do ourselves a tremendous disservice when we look at Jung's > political views with a tolerant amusement, characterizing them as the musings > of a tired, depressed old man because they do not mesh with our own ideas. > Jung's work has changed the lives of most of the people here and it is > impossible not to revere him. When he wrote about politics, like most of > what he wrote, it was not just politics. The work must be seen on many > levels. His political ideas are a macrocosmic vision of the individual > psyche. He was talking about the inner as well as the outer. He was > addressing the Self as well as the body politic. I am sure Jung got > depressed sometimes, just like the rest of us, but for him depression was an > opportunity to work through his complexes. I think nothing he wrote should > be dismissed without serious reflection. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2000 Report Share Posted December 15, 2000 Dear Dan' I do not believe that a man must submerge his pride to accept hand-outs when he is capable of a day's work. You wouldn't have children if you couldn't afford them. We could discuss this ad infinitum, but just suppose he had those children at the time he had a good job, that he then lost. I detect a wee bit of judgementalism, Dan, when you speak of the " poor " and " downtrodden " But that could be me judging you, so there we are. We are not going to agree, I wager, on this earth because innately we see the world differently. (It took me 40 years to convince my husband that some of my view on welfare and societies ills had merit) You think Jung would have used missiles against Iraq, Maybe you are right., but its is a pretty big assumption to make, and I am not sure it is pertinent, or correct. You are right about one thing, in my opinion. Jung did not " rant and rave " to my immediate knowledge. I wasn't there. And it is hard to see that from CW. I apologize at that characterization. We, as well as " the greats " try to influence the future.That is why we leave wills and " trusts " I am not convinced Socrates had that in his conscious mind. He seemed too humble for that. But, in general , men do try. Dan, in the larger backdrop of evil in WW2, having ones books burned only shows the stupidity of the burners, but did not hurt Jung. He was not in personal danger , and that is fine with me. There were martyrs enough. I hesitate to say this, Dan, but it is only an opinion that mankind has " lost its place in the cosmos " I for example. am part of mankind as are you. You feel you have lost your place? In your judgment , modern times are not an unmitigated success. You may be right . But,I dare say you have not the detachment of time and place to make a judgment. We need be about what we can influence, and what we see as truly evil. The grading of our efforts must be left to those who come behind us. There will always be " conservatives " and " liberals " It is a general mind set, and just proves the " opposites " that Jung was so fond of.Maybe it is passed on in our genes, maybe it is the environment we grew up in, in any case it seems a basically different way to view the world. Dan Watkins wrote: > > The salient words, in my view, are " resort to soup kitchens and food > banks, " not " left to starve in the street unsuccored " . What's wrong with > feeding children through food banks? > > I wouldn't have a family if the best I could do were a minimum wage job. > It's a matter of responsibility or prudence in my opinion. > > No, but it might teach us how to deal with Saddam's like (hint: Patriot > missiles). > > I'm not sure what you mean here by the " pace " of history, but if you > mean that none of the greats tried to influence the future or guide the > course of man, I would disagree. > > He doesn't rant and rave. It seems to me that while his views may be > seen as radical, his speech is always tempered. > > His books were burned in France, and word was that he was on the Nazis' > list for when they got to Switzerland. Jung was stuck tenuously between > Germany and Italy, in a country ill-equipped to defend itself. Do you > think that the Nazis would not have taken Switzerland, had the war gone > their way? A country's true " neutrality " is ultimately a function of its > ability to defend itself. > > . Only a fool would deny > the advantages of modernity, and Jung was no fool. What one might object > to is the notion that all that modernity has done is *positive*, or that > it has been mostly positive.Yes, all men and women now have their > " rights, " or so they say, but at the cost of their place in the cosmos. > I'm not sure it was worth it, to repeat. > > Regards, > > Dan > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2000 Report Share Posted December 15, 2000 fa, I stand corrected. You are far better versed on this side of Jung. Can't think of any word in German that would be more apt. I knew Jung wasn't anti-Semitic, but I thought I had read about early sympathy for National Socialism in terms of getting men to work and starting the economy in Germany. Glad to hear, how foresighted he turned out to be in reality. Toni fa wrote: > Can't stay out of this one - sorry!> > > Dan, you are right on the money here. Jung was accused of " praising Hitler " > in the interview on Radio Berlin in 1933 (in C. G. Jung Speaking, pp 73-79). > The reason is because he quoted Hitler, and the quote is always taken out of > context without the (albeit slightly veiled) words of caution which > immediately followed. He also criticised Freud and Adler in this interview - > so people have blown it up out of all proportion and claimed that he was > pro-Nazi and anti-Jewish. DUH! What he actually said about Hitler was this: > > Jung was sufficiently alarmed about the Nazi threat to move his wife and > children deep into the countryside during the war, although he himself > remained where he was and fulfilled his professional obligations. > > fa > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2000 Report Share Posted December 23, 2000 I love this entire paper and feel that the passage quoted *is*, in fact, highly relevant to his " Freedom " post. I'm not quite sure why people felt that it wasn't? Of course, I don't see Bush, Gore, or our own (G-d help us!) Tony Blair as being like Hitler. ( Portillo, possibly, given the chance.) But, certainly with Blair, I see dangerous megalomaniac tendencies. Did you know that he is already thinking in terms of his place in the history books in 50 years time? And he is moving more and more towards State-controlled life. They are currently considering passing a bill giving MI5 unlimited access to every telephone call we make and every e-mail we send! These kind of things are being done in the name of the nanny state which looks after us, as we are not adult enough to do it for ourselves. Thank you for the quote, (even if your politics *do* leave something to be desired, IMO!!!) fa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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