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Talk:The Red Book (Jung)

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Major Edit Begun

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This article has been rated "C" quality by Wikipedia -- meaning it needs major revision. It is now 5 years since publication of Jung's Red Book: Liber Novus. The entry here has received no major improvement since 2010; as it stands, it is disjointed, inaccurate, and lacking adequate references.

On 25 September 2014 I submitted the beginning of a major revision of the first sections of the article. As time allows, I am revising this edit, and will eventual complete a revision of the entire article. My area of study focuses on Jung and his history, and I have published several articles (including an encyclopedia entry) on Jung and the Red Book in peer-reviewed journals. I do reference some of these publications. A listing of my peer reviewed and published essays on Jung is available here: Published Works by Lance S. Owens


Any comments or additions are of course welcome -- this is Wikipedia, and it requires collective effort. The goal is make this an "A" quality article, not a "C"....

I took a look. "Jungs love for a woman"? Jung has a gay relationship to Freud, and writes this on psilocybin or a mimick (LSD also is a mimick), putting forward a belief in the mushroom god, rather than christian. He heroizes Freud, and indeed Freud is a jew, with the psilocybin Yah god, that many christians lean to, and what he uses to legitimize the text. Yah eariler is the same as Thor. They both make referances to more polytheism, and indeed greek/roman polytheism has many homoerotic "gods". I really cannot see what "love to women" would do to this article, other than make it nonfactual. Not "A", from me, Mr. Rather lessening it. (And here I was thinking Greek Gods would be a cue enough.. The book really should be considered an analysis of an author of something worse than "Mein Kampf". Most people may not find such analysis suitable and prefer standard language - "of idolaterous nature" etc. --

LOwens (talk) 21:13, 29 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Major Edit completed 29 September 2014

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I have completed most of the major edit and rewrite of this page. Footnote formatting still needs improvement and standardization. More minor corrections to punctuation and typos will undoubtedly be needed. Please add here any comments you may have.

For those wishing to see the article in this original version, as currently edited, it is timestamped by Wikipedia as:

19:57, 29 September 2014

LOwens (talk) 20:09, 29 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]

An "Experiment" Is Not This Vague

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There's no clarity on how this "experimentation" was carried out or who was included in the "drama" entered into on these occasions of "deliberately evoking a fantasy in a waking state." Were these dramas enacted after hours when the doctor was alone or were family members, patients and even perhaps the soldiers he commanded brought into them in some way? And what sort of "fantasies" and "dramas" are we talking about here? Some examples, please.68.178.50.46 (talk) 23:42, 21 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]

This article tells nothing about the content of the book

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The characters of the book, Salome, Elijah the snake... most readers won't give much about all the details about the book, but nothing about what the book tells about.

Jung - Considerations for article update.

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Jung is a mad man. His whole teachings should be discarded.

He thinks The Bible is written by mad men, idolaters, who use hallucinogens, and thus considers himself qualified for writing Liber Novus aswell.

He does not understand the simple theological reality, that teachings regress into idolatry, that has happened so many times in history.

He seems to have no clue what monotheism is. Indeed common related talk is of greek gods. It is pantheonic, the one thing clearly monotheism forbids.

He seems to have no clue what monotheism is. Indeed common related talk is of greek gods. It is pantheonic, the one thing clearly monotheism forbids.= He seems to have no clue what monotheism is. Indeed common related talk is of greek gods. It is pantheonic, the one thing clearly monotheism forbids.

German Counterpart

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From this article, one should be able to find the link (right/top) of its German counterpart. http://de.wiki.x.io/wiki/Carl_Gustav_Jung#Das_«Rote_Buch» LMSchmitt 00:54, 15 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

"My most difficult experiment"

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In this section of the Red Book, Jung actually referred to the first of the Black Books as the "book of my most difficult experiment". (p. 200) Tionysos (talk) 16:57, 6 June 2022 (UTC)Tionysos[reply]

red book

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red book same 122.2.78.146 (talk) 13:54, 29 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]

The redirect Red Book (Jung has been listed at redirects for discussion to determine whether its use and function meets the redirect guidelines. Readers of this page are welcome to comment on this redirect at Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2024 February 21 § Red Book (Jung until a consensus is reached. Utopes (talk / cont) 06:44, 21 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]