Marie-Louise von Franz, The Interpretation of Fairy Tales. pic.twitter.com/F5GmnljO1Z
Rather than split human thought into scientific vs. mystical, or rational vs. irrational, we should see human experience as weaving dynamic trajectories through different modes of thinking and feeling about the world, some more rational, some less rational. 40/thread
Hannah Arendt’s remark on the centrality and importance of contradictions in the work of great thinkers like Marx, is worth keeping in mind when reading her work. pic.twitter.com/fHa0RC1GnI
Ross Woodman interview in The Forsaken Garden. Woodman was a Blake scholar and the author of a number of very powerful books [Sanity, Madness, Transformation: The Psyche in Romanticism is one of them.] Also known for being married to Marion. pic.twitter.com/Ubt3yfjNhU
Ross Woodman interview in The Forsaken Garden. Woodman was a Blake scholar and the author of a number of very powerful books [Sanity, Madness, Transformation: The Psyche in Romanticism is one of them.] Also known for being married to Marion. pic.twitter.com/ACFFRECHlg
“No man was ever yet a great poet, without at the same time being a profound philosopher.” ― Samuel Coleridge
There's a lot of stuff on twitter right now about outer planets and their rulerships, traditional vs. modern. I'm not going to link to any specific part of the debate, or take sides, exactly... but here's what I've found helpful in my practice.
Agree or disagree, this is a must-read. twitter.com/AndrewBWatt/st…