Jung’s four and some philosophers

Subtitle:
A paradigm for philosophy

Author:
King, Thomas M. (Thomas Mulvihill King) 1929-2009

Place of Publication:
Notre Dame, Indiana

Publisher:
University of Notre Dame Press


ISBN / SBN / ISSN:
9780268032517

Media Type:
Print (Non-Serial)

Media Sub-type:
Book

LoC Call Number:
BF 175.4 .P45 K56 1999

Accession Number:
117380

Keyword Subject Headings:
Philosophy / Philosophers--Psychological aspects
Typology--Psychological (Jungian)
Socrates ca.470-399 BCE
Plato 428/423-348/347 BCE
Augustine of Hippo 354-430
Descartes, René 1596-1650
Spinoza, Baruch 1632-1677
Locke, John 1632-1704
Hume, David 1711-1776
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 1712-1778
Kant, Immanuel (né Emanuel Kant) 1724-1804
Kierkegaard, Søren Aabye 1813-1855
Whitehead, Alfred North 1861-1947
Teilhard de Chardin, Pierre 1881-1955
Sartre, Jean-Paul Charles Aymard 1905-1980

User Notes:
Paperbound; xxii + 321 pp., including 15 black-and-white figures, references in notes and bibliographies at the end of each chapter, and an index. Contents: Introduction Part I: Three with a perceiving faculty as dominant 1. Plato: Socrates welcomes a stranger 2. Locke: A late encounter with the "bottom" 3. Sartre: "Jean sans Terre" tries to descend Part II: Six with a judging faculty as dominant 4. Augustine: A long and troubled conversion 5. Descartes: Thought and extension divided 6. Spinoza: Thought and extension united 7. Rousseau: The heart's uncertain reasons 8. Kant: Pure reason falters and regains control 9. Kierkegaard: "Sacrificium Intellectus" Part III: Three with a perceiving faculty as dominant 10. Whitehead: Process leads to peace 11. Hume: A philosopher turns to history 12. Teilhard: Quaternity in omega Epilogue Index