Philosopher
Michael Grosso in his 1985 book The Final
Choice summarizes C. G. Jung’s psychology: “what is real, effective and
fateful is the psyche. We are immersed in a sea of psychisms, deep collective
images, linked somehow to vital and cosmic forces. These exist as the living
forms of internal existence; what is more, as Jung believed, they are both
‘subjective’ and ‘objective.’” Jung affirmed that transcendental subjectivity
is transcendent objectivity. Grosso, quoting Jung: “What is deeply within leads
to what is deeply without.”
Michael Grosso, The
Final Choice: Playing the Survival Game (Walpole, NH: Stillpoint
Publishing, 1985), 125-26.
Jung,
writing of the archetypal collective unconscious, after discovering in the
dreams of his patients “mythological motifs from cultures of which they had no
intellectual knowledge.” He realized, “the human psyche has access not only to
the Freudian individual unconscious,” but also to “a repository of the entire
cultural heritage of humanity.” And he found comparative mythology useful “for
individuals involved in experiential therapy and self-exploration, and an
indispensable tool for those who support and accompany them on their journeys.”
Stanislav Grof, “Revision and Re-Enchantment of Psychology,”
Rethinking Consciousness: Extraordinary
Challenges for Contemporary Science (Anoka: MN, Process Century Press,
2020).
Jung
had dinner with Einstein several times and wrote in a 1953 letter that Einstein
started him thinking about how the relativity of time and space is likely
affecting the psyche. In “The Soul and Death” Jung asserts that: “We are not
entitled to conclude from the apparent space-time quality of our perception
that there is no form of existence without space and time.” For the psyche in
its depth “participates in a form of existence beyond space and time” and
“partakes of what is inadequately and symbolically described as ‘eternity’.”
C. G. Jung, On Death
and Immortality (Princeton University Press, 1999), 4-5.
In
1944 during surgery Jung suffered cardiac arrest, had his own near-death
experience, and later described it as “a glimpse behind the veil” . . .
The only difficulty is to get rid of
the body, to get quite naked and void of the world and the ego-will. When you
can give up the crazy will to live and when you seemingly fall into a
bottomless mist, then the truly real life begins with everything which you were
meant to be and never reached. It is something ineffably grand. I was
completely free and whole, as I never felt before.
I found myself 15,000 km from the earth
and I saw it as an immense globe resplendent in an inexpressibly beautiful blue
light. I was on a point exactly above the southern end of India, which shone in
a bluish silvery light with Ceylon like a shimmering opal in the deep blue sea.
I was in the universe, where there was a big solitary rock containing a temple.
I saw its entrance illuminated by a thousand small fames of coconut oil. I knew
I was to enter the temple and I would reach full knowledge. But at this moment
a messenger from the world (which by then was a very insignificant corner of
the universe) arrived and said that I was not allowed to depart and at this
moment the whole vision collapsed completely.
Jung
wrote he “was wakeful each night in the universe,” experiencing “the complete
vision,” but not as an I. Instead, he
was “united with somebody or something.” As if in “a silent invisible festival
permeated by an incomparable, indescribable feeling of eternal bliss, such as I
never could have imagined as being within reach of human experience.” He
learned from his NDE that: “Death is the hardest thing from the outside and as
long as we are outside of it. But once inside you taste of such completeness
and peace and fulfillment that you don’t want to return.”
Grosso
Final Choice, 127-28.