"Kundalini yoga presented Jung with a model
of something that was almost completely lacking in Western
psychology--an account of the development phases of higher
consciousness.... Jung's insistence on the psychogenic and symbolic
significance of such states is even more timely now than then. As R. D.
Laing stated... 'It was Jung who broke the ground here, but few followed
him.'"--From the introduction by Sonu Shamdasani Jung's seminar
on Kundalini yoga, presented to the Psychological Club in Zurich in
1932, has been widely regarded as a milestone in the psychological
understanding of Eastern thought and of the symbolic transformations of
inner experience. Kundalini yoga presented Jung with a model for the
developmental phases of higher consciousness, and he interpreted its
symbols in terms of the process of individuation. With sensitivity
toward a new generation's interest in alternative religions and
psychological exploration, Sonu Shamdasani has brought together the
lectures and discussions from this seminar. In this volume, he
re-creates for today's reader the fascination with which many
intellectuals of prewar Europe regarded Eastern spirituality as they
discovered more and more of its resources, from yoga to tantric texts.
Reconstructing this seminar through new documentation, Shamdasani
explains, in his introduction, why Jung thought that the comprehension
of Eastern thought was essential if Western psychology was to develop.
He goes on to orient today's audience toward an appreciation of some of
the questions that stirred the minds of Jung and his seminar group: What
is the relation between Eastern schools of liberation and Western
psychotherapy? What connection is there between esoteric religious
traditions and spontaneous individual experience? What light do the
symbols of Kundalini yoga shed on conditions diagnosed as psychotic? Not
only were these questions important to analysts in the 1930s but, as
Shamdasani stresses, they continue to have psychological relevance for
readers on the threshold of the twenty-first century. This volume also
offers newly translated material from Jung's German language seminars, a
seminar by the indologist Wilhelm Hauer presented in conjunction with
that of Jung, illustrations of the cakras, and Sir John Woodroffe's
classic translation of the tantric text, the Sat-cakra Nirupana.
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