137 - Arthur I. Miller [145]
infuriating grin and a long tail: Gamow (1985), pp. 165–214.
delighted to be cast in this role: Schucking (2001), p. 46. For more on this spoof, see Segré (2008).
Chapter 8 • The Dark Hunting Ground of the Mind
three for extremely important: Pauli’s personal library is housed in La Salle Pauli in CERN.
Jung would help him discover it: Jung (1921), p. 594.
“a vague dread of the other sex”: Jung (1921), pp. 487–489.
“has caught me and I can deal with it”: Quoted from Joseph Henderson’s conversations with Jung, “Carl Gustav Jung: 1875–1961,” compiled and presented by Ean Begg, BBC Radio 3, July 27, 1975.
“he made up his mind to consult me”: Jung (1936b), p. 6.
“blowing over from the lunatic asylum”: Jung (1958a), pp. 538 and 540.
visions were driving him to distraction: See Jung (1944), p. 42; and Jung (1935), pp. 173 and 540.
“Therefore I won’t touch it”: Jung (1935), p. 174.
“appropriate man to treat me medically”: Pauli to Rosenbaum, February 3, 1932, ETH Wissenschaftliche Sammlungen, ETH-Library, Hs. 176.
“and so he had spontaneous fantasies”: Jung (1936b), pp. 7 and 8.
“He cannot be inferior”: Jung (1959), p. 14.
“for having to read all this”: Pauli to Rosenbaum, August 26, 1932, ETH Wissenschaftliche Sammlungen, ETH-Library, Hs. 176. There are no letters from Rosenbaum to Pauli in the archives. Perhaps Franca destroyed them after Pauli’s death as she did with those of other women with whom Pauli corresponded.
“marvelous series of archetypal images”: Jung (1935), p. 174.
others suspected it too: Personal communication from Fierz to Lindorff, see Lindorff (2004), p. 52.
referred to were indeed Pauli’s: See Westman (1984), pp. 217–218. While analyzing Pauli’s essay on Kepler, Robert Westman, a historian of science, became curious as to whether Pauli had any close connection with Jung. He asked a colleague in Zürich to contact Meier.
The information actually could have been found over a decade earlier in a footnote in volume 18, published in 1977, of Jung’s Collected Works. It was added by the translator, R. F. C. Hull, to a lecture that Jung gave in 1939 in London. (See CW18, p. 265 for full citation; the footnote is on p. 285 of Jung’s lecture, The Symbolic Life.) In his lecture Jung spoke about the case of a “a great scientist, a very famous man, who lives today.” Pauli was known to be a colleague of Jung’s, and some friends knew they had a rather close relationship. Jung craved the attention of scientists, particularly physicists, and so came close to revealing the forbidden information.
Jung went into more detail in seminars in the United States during 1936 and 1937—see Jung (1936b, 1937a, 1937b). In 1944 Jung published a lengthy version of his dream analysis in Jung (1944).
“because there is nobody home”: Jung (1937a), p. 96.
“get away from Father”: Jung (1944), p. 49.
“and is always the victim”: Jung (1936b), p. 81.
“He held my both hands and kissed me”: Jung (1936b), p. 81.
he was no longer the center of attention: P/J [16P], February 28, 1936.
share her with another man: Jung (1936b), p. 79.
“of human knowledge and understanding”: Jung (1958a), p. 540.
“the documentary evidence of his sanity”: Jung (1958a), p. 540.
trance states of shamans and medicine men: Jung (1916), p. 68.
trapped in a world of phantasmagoria: Jung (1935), p. 174; and von Franz (1972), pp. 108–111.
“the unconscious as personified by the anima”: Jung (1944), p. 112.
“and you will have the Philosopher’s Stone”: Jung (1937b), p. 54.
“completely throttling” the left: Jung (1944), pp. 154–163.
“I am at one with myself”: Jung (1944), p. 172.
“but still not good enough”: Jung (1944), p. 174.
“a certain man of unpleasant aspect”: Jung (1944), p. 177.
“the darkest hunting ground of our times”: Jung to Progoff, January 30, 1954, copy at the ETH; quoted in Bair (2004), p. 553.
Chapter 9 • Mandalas
dreams accompanied by his drawings: Jung (1944), p. 167.
“period of spiritual and human confusion”: Pauli (1955b), p. 30.
“one revolution of the golden ring”: Jung (1944), pp. 203–204;