The Origins and History of Consciousness Audiobook By Erich Neumann, R. F. C. Hull - translator, Carl Jung - foreword cover art

The Origins and History of Consciousness

Bollingen Series

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The Origins and History of Consciousness

By: Erich Neumann, R. F. C. Hull - translator, Carl Jung - foreword
Narrated by: William Roberts
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About this listen

This audiobook, narrated by William Roberts, explores the evolution of consciousness through the archetypes and myths that are universal to all humanity.

The Origins and History of Consciousness draws on a full range of world mythology to show how individual consciousness undergoes the same archetypal stages of development as human consciousness as a whole. Erich Neumann was one of C. G. Jung's most creative students and a renowned practitioner of analytical psychology in his own right. In this influential book, Neumann shows how the stages begin and end with the symbol of the Uroboros, the tail-eating serpent. The intermediate stages are projected in the universal myths of the World Creation, Great Mother, Separation of the World Parents, Birth of the Hero, Slaying of the Dragon, Rescue of the Captive, and Transformation and Deification of the Hero. Throughout the sequence, the Hero is the evolving ego consciousness.

Featuring a foreword by Jung, this Princeton Classics edition introduces a new generation of listeners to this eloquent and enduring work.

©1949 Erich Neumann (P)2020 Princeton University Press
Consciousness & Thought Psychology Social Sciences Jungian Psychology
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Critic reviews

"No better exposition has come to us of the two Jungian themes: the evolution of consciousness in the history of mankind and the development of personality in the individual." (The Personalist)

"A welcome source of information for all those who are touched by the relationship between man and his myths." (The New York Times)

"There can be no doubt that [Neumann] has brought to his task a remarkable...knowledge of classical mythology, some considerable acquaintance with the comparative study of religion, and a deep understanding of those psychological views and theories evolved by C. G. Jung." (The Times Literary Supplement)

What listeners say about The Origins and History of Consciousness

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Remarkable

Information that is timeless and valid, great performance of a classic and important work of cultural achievement.

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3 people found this helpful

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Great Find for Classic Psychology Fans!

A must if you like the great works of psychology that are also superb literature. The narrator emphasizes every page but does it well. It's kind of like having Freud or Jung read to you by Vince McMahon or Mean Gene Okerlund. I recommend it to anyone who likes those guys. Freud or Jung that is, not McMahon or Okerlund.

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Depth psychology

I have been an enthusiastic student of Depth Psychology over the years and enjoyed listening and thinking about the concepts in this presentation.

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I can't say i understood what he was explaining

Maybe my level of psychological understanding is to low for this book...because as I heard it my brain felt groggy...but by the end of the chapter I sort of got the feeling that it made complete sense...

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Great book, need a better narrator

I had to buy this book in print to avoid listening to the narrator. The concept is amazing and interesting, but honestly, please get a new narration. The issue is this: the narrator has this 1950s professorial tone with an interesting but condescending tone throughout. Tragically, if he were British it would work, but the American accent (and I’m American) just doesn’t work.

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Treasure abounds in this book

📚 📚 📚
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·Death by 5G: An Advanced Guide to Population Reduction Techniques by Louise Steele

·Earthing: The Most Important Health Discovery Ever? By Clinton Ober, Martin Zucker, and Stephen Sinatra

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Wow

That book was DENSE. I had to listen to many parts twice and I’m a veteran audio book listener. I enjoyed every minute of it though! Great stuff!

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Brilliant work, wrong narrator.

Feminist author Camille Paglia once mused that American universities should have read Neumann rather than the postmodernists. I couldn't agree more; the author's writing is a bit dated but his ideas are incredibly thought provoking and insightful. The whole book is unfortunately undermined by a enthusiastic but off-putting narrator.

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Great book with invaluable insights on Consciousne

A very powerful narrative about the history of miths that form a collective unconscious and their importance to support every man and woman in building a balanced ego, through the overcome of our individual challenges using the perenial tools of this Treasure of the unconscious dream Word.
Through balancing both Worlds we achieve a strong personality fully aware of the matemathical and physical logics of Nature but deeply supported on the Faith and Emotional support of the Ancient Wisdom inherited from our Cultural background and also soaked in pur genetical core.
A very inspiring book, decoupling Jungs teories of the Archetypes into a more consolidated and historical perspective of the Ego formation and warning us for the dangers of our Massified World of modern man, specially in Big cities, where the fundamental ties with the Collective unconscious and the Mithological stories we should all carry and integrate frequently are weakened in a dangerous way, leaving the modern Man arrested in its own admiration and focus on reason and himself. Stuck with his own ego, he will feel the sharp nife of Consciousness cutting him until he is victim of his own intelect dissection and no longer whole!😀😉❤👌🤙🙏🤝👏👏👏

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Brilliant ideas from a brilliant mind!

Look, there’s a lot (and I mean it, a lot) to think about even after about 70 years from the first publication. Must read for ones who are not indifferent to the topic of conciseness and of keeping up with it through both group- or individual-related journeys.

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