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Synopsis Jung's autobiography is considered by many to be the most interesting of all his works. In telling his life story, Jung writes of his inner life and his interest in unexplained phenomena and parapsychology.
| Size | | Length: | 430 pages | | Height: | 8.0 in | | Width: | 5.3 in | | Thickness: | 0.8 in | | Weight: | 12.8 oz |
Industry Reviews "What renders this book of surpassing (if sometimes aggravating) interest to the psychological historian is not so much Jung's polemic on the nature of psychic energy as the long drawn out account of his 'religious conversion,' his varieties of 'religious experience,' and his testament of faith....It is difficult to do justice to the many-sidedness of these memoirs. Those who have followed the intricacies and convolutions of Jung's arguments on religion will no doubt turn with some relish to his views on life after death....Other more matter-of-fact readers may prefer to browse in his all too brief accounts of his travels. So much, however, is certain: this book of memoirs will continue to be read with some fascination by future generations when some of his more formal works are respectfully interred in psychological libraries." New York Times Book Review - Edward Glover (05/19/1963)
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