TY - BOOK AU - Moacanin,Radmila TI - The essence of Jung's psychology and Tibetan Buddhism: western and eastern paths to the heart SN - 0861713400 AV - BQ4570.P76 M63 2003 U1 - 294.3/375 21 PY - 0000/// CY - Boston PB - Wisdom Publications KW - Jung, C. G. KW - Buddhism KW - Psychology KW - China KW - Tibet Autonomous Region KW - fast KW - Analytische Psychologie KW - Tibetischer Buddhismus KW - swd N1 - Originally published: Jung's psychology and Tibetan Buddhism. London : Wisdom, 1986; Includes bibliographical references (pages 133-139) and index; 1. Buddhism -- Tibetan Buddhism -- Tantric Buddhism: Vajrayana -- 2. Carl Gustav Jung -- Collective Unconscious -- Archetypes -- The Self -- Individuation -- Alchemy -- Synchronicity -- 3. Methods in Jung's Psychology and Tibetan Buddhism -- The Cure of Souls -- Emancipation from Suffering -- The Spiritual Friend and the Analyst -- 4. Archetypal Symbols -- The Tibetan Book of the Dead -- The Mandala -- 5. Connections, Similarities, Differences -- Consciousness and the Unconscious -- Spiritual Transformation -- The Union of Opposites -- The Middle Way and the Madhyamaka -- Ego and Non-Ego -- Suffering and Methods of Healing -- Redemption of God -- Jung's View of Eastern Traditions -- Dangers -- Ethical Issues -- 6. Conclusion N2 - "In this expanded edition of her classic introduction, Radmila Moacanin takes us to the interface of Tibetan Buddhism and Jungian psychology. Emerging from radically different cultures, these two worldviews share strikingly parallel ideas and a common concern for what Jung called "the tremendous experiment of becoming conscious." Tibetan Buddhism, renowned for its tantric practices, is replete with imagery and rituals for transforming the mind. In his theories of mind and psychology, Jung searched for universal symbols and methods for unlocking the power of the human psyche. Moacanin examines Jungian archetypes and Buddhist deities, the roles of analyst and spiritual friend, the collective unconscious and karma, and much more. She allows these concepts to illuminate one another while carefully preserving the distinctiveness of each view. Passionate about both disciplines, Moacanin is able to communicate their essential import and worldview in an integrated and direct way. She lifts the ideas and methods of both the Buddha and Carl Jung beyond mere theory into the realm of experience, bringing them alive for twenty-first-century readers. Book jacket."--Jacket UR - http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy036/2002155427.html ER -