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CG Jung 1/3

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Uploaded by on Jun 7, 2008

BBC 1959 (Oct 22) 'Face to Face' interview.
Professor Carl Jung -- psychiatrist, psychologist -- was born Karl Gustav II Jung on July 26, 1875 in Kesswil, in the Swiss canton of Thurgau. He died June 6, 1961 in Zürich.
- http://tinyurl.com/66ubuh

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Education

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Uploader Comments (jjvanka)

  • the video is manipulated. The part of the teacher who accused him of stealing the paper belongs to later part of the interview where he was talking about his medical studies.

    However, thanks for the high quality

  • At least not by me. Interviews are edited quite often in order to establish a 'red line' for the (usually one-time) viewer.

  • Can someone please tell me what is the classical piece that is being played at the introduction ? thanks!

  • What I found:

    1 - Title: Face to face; theme of the BBC series 'Face to? Face'. m Hector Berlioz, arr. Roy Green. Variant title: Face to face .Based on the overture, The Holy vehm.

    2 - Face to Face , 'The Holy Vehm' by Hector Bolitho BBC series theme 'Face to Face' introduced by John Freeman 1960.

    3 - From The Overture Les Francs-Juges, Berlioz.

    Not sure what is correct.

Top Comments

  • Are his grandchildren afraid of him?

    WTF? What kind of question is that. I know a decent amount about Jung and although he is undobutably unconventional he certainly apperars to be the opposite of frightening or intimidiating.

  • LOL

    I realize from your comment that my comment really comes off poorly

    Jung's childhood trouble at school sound very much like my own experience, (is more of what I was trying to say)

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All Comments (59)

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  • @setnorm You apparently don't.

  • I wanted this video to be in German language.

  • good lord who remembers the moment they became conscious of theirself?

  • Marie-Louise Von Franz, as did Jung, recognized dreams as being authentic experiences of that inner world that we must understand if our spiritual development is either not to occur, or depend upon the secondhand views of others. Both therefore, and in fact, encouraged those who were able always to interpret their own dreams. Darrell could hardly be more wrong if he tried (not a challenge!).

  • @klgamit It's definitely from the overture to Berlioz' Les Francs-juges (the third of jjvanka's options below). :)

  • OMG the BBC accent!!! jeez

  • @potentialrandom Jung and his followers have said that dream interpretatiion is always a dialectical process between two people. Marie-louise von Franz has said that it is not a good idea to interpret one's own dreams. It's best left to a skilled professsional. Daryl Sharp: "If you think you've understood the meaning of a dream upon waking, chances are you're mistaken." Hall: Jungians are particularly strong at dream interpretation. Snobbery. elitism and pretention right and left.

  • @potentialrandom Prostitution is the oldest profession in the world. Dream interpretation is the oldest hoax in the world. There will always be people gullible and vulnerable enough to believe that someone else has the ability to interpret their dreams. If your next door neighbor Marge invites you over for coffee and dream interpretation, fine. But dream interpretation has no place in a licensed profession. Yet there are today who knows how many licensed Jungian psychotherapists.

  • @potentialrandom I question your choice of a word. vendetta: a prolonged bitter quarrel with or campaign against someone. Rather than "bitter," I would prefer "sarcastic." Sarcasm is a literary style used at times by the likes of Saul Bellow and Mark Twain. It is also used by John Stewart and Stephen Colbert. My disgust with Jung's writings is exceeded only by my efforts to stop laughing. He and his followers find so many creative ways of putting their feet in their mouths.

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