Subtitle:
The Terry Lectures (Yale University); 15
Edition:
First edtion; sixth printing (April, 1946)
Place of Publication:
New Haven, Connecticut
Publisher:
Yale University Press
Copyright Date:
1938
Publication Date:
1946
ISBN / SBN / ISSN:
(None)
Media Type:
Print (Non-Serial)
Media Sub-type:
Book
Copy:
4
LoC Call Number:
BL 53 .J8 1938 c.4
Accession Number:
101580
Keyword Subject Headings:
Psychology--Relgious aspects
Unconscious (Psychology)
Symbolism (Psychology)
Unconscious (Psychology)
Symbolism (Psychology)
User Notes:
This is a Rare book for use only under direct supervision in the Library.
Hardbound; 131 pp., including end notes with bibliographic references.
The contents of this book are based on the Terry Lectures of 1937,
delivered by C.G. Jung at Yale University under the auspices of
The Dwight Harrington Terry Foundation.
Other copies of this publication are available in the Library's circulating,
Reference, and Rare collections.
This material was published in revised and augmented form as Section 1
of Jung's "Psychology and Religion: East and West" (CW 11), in accordance
with the Swiss edition (Zurich: Rascher, 1940).
Contents:
The autonomy of the unconscious Mind
Dogma and natural symbols
The history and psychology of a natural symbol
From the front matter published in the sixth printing --
citing the Dwight Harrington Terry Foundation's deed
of gift to Yale:
"The lecturers shall be subject to no philosophical
or religious test and no one who is an earnest
seeker after truth shall be excluded because his
views seem radical or destructive to existing
beliefs. The founder [of the Terry Foundation]
realizes that the liberalism of one generation is
often conservatism in the next, and that many
an apostle of true liberty has suffered martyrdom
at the hands of the orthodox. He therefore lays
special emphasis on complete freedom of
utterance, and would welcome expressions of
conviction from sincere thinkers of differing
standpoints even when these may run counter
to the generally accepted views of the day.
The founder stipulates only that the managers
of the fund shall be satisfied that the lecturers
are well qualified for their work and are in
harmony with the cardinal principles of the
Foundation, which are loyalty to the truth,
lead where it will, and devotion to human
welfare."
