"Sooner or later all the dead become what we also are."
--C.G. Jung, Letters, “Frau N.”
"The human on earth is a mortal god but that god in heaven is an immortal human. Through these two, then, cosmos and human, all things exist, but they all exist by action of the one."
- Corpus Hermeticum X:25.
--C.G. Jung, Letters, “Frau N.”
"The human on earth is a mortal god but that god in heaven is an immortal human. Through these two, then, cosmos and human, all things exist, but they all exist by action of the one."
- Corpus Hermeticum X:25.
afterlife
& Dialogue of a World Weary Man with His Ba
Scientific God Journal, May 2017; Vol. 8; Issue 5; Essays
Is the Afterlife a Non-Question? (Let's Hope Not) Deepak Chopra PDF
Life After Death? An Improbable Essay Stuart Kauffman PDF
The Mask of Eternity: The Quest for Immortality and the Afterlife
Iona Miller PDF
Are We Really “such stuff as dreams are made on”? Chris Nunn PDF
The afterlife is an imaginative creation. The dead live on in an imaginal realm,
constructed from the stuff of memories. They live on in our hearts and personal and imaginative memories. This memory of Nature is the World Soul -- the dwelling-house of symbols. They still live beyond time and space.
I make a great effort to fortify the belief in immortality as far as I can, especially in my older patients, for whom such questions are crucial. ~Carl Jung, The Secret of the Golden Flower, Page 124.
If viewed correctly in the psychological sense, death is not an end but a goal, and therefore life towards death begins as soon as the meridian is passed. ~Carl Jung, The Secret of the Golden Flower, Page 124.
"
V. The Moon as the Dwelling Place of Spirits.
In Persian, Hindu, and Egyptian literature the moon is represented as the place where the soul goes after the death of man.
On the moon the soul is judged, and goes either to the upper world or back to the earth.
On the moon-barge the dead travel to the underworld and await their regeneration.
The moon is thus a place for birth, for death, and for rebirth." -- M.E. Harding in Carl Jung, Dream Analysis Seminars, Pages 367-389
Scientific God Journal, May 2017; Vol. 8; Issue 5; Essays
Is the Afterlife a Non-Question? (Let's Hope Not) Deepak Chopra PDF
Life After Death? An Improbable Essay Stuart Kauffman PDF
The Mask of Eternity: The Quest for Immortality and the Afterlife
Iona Miller PDF
Are We Really “such stuff as dreams are made on”? Chris Nunn PDF
The afterlife is an imaginative creation. The dead live on in an imaginal realm,
constructed from the stuff of memories. They live on in our hearts and personal and imaginative memories. This memory of Nature is the World Soul -- the dwelling-house of symbols. They still live beyond time and space.
I make a great effort to fortify the belief in immortality as far as I can, especially in my older patients, for whom such questions are crucial. ~Carl Jung, The Secret of the Golden Flower, Page 124.
If viewed correctly in the psychological sense, death is not an end but a goal, and therefore life towards death begins as soon as the meridian is passed. ~Carl Jung, The Secret of the Golden Flower, Page 124.
"
V. The Moon as the Dwelling Place of Spirits.
In Persian, Hindu, and Egyptian literature the moon is represented as the place where the soul goes after the death of man.
On the moon the soul is judged, and goes either to the upper world or back to the earth.
On the moon-barge the dead travel to the underworld and await their regeneration.
The moon is thus a place for birth, for death, and for rebirth." -- M.E. Harding in Carl Jung, Dream Analysis Seminars, Pages 367-389