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137 - Arthur I. Miller [146]

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and Jung (1937b), p. 66.

in the Kabbalah, signifying wisdom: Jung (1944), p. 206.

made up of forty-nine rotating spheres: See CW11, pp. 68–72.

“produced the impression of ‘most sublime harmony’”: Jung (1937b), p. 72.

“discussed in medieval Christian philosophy”: Jung (1937b), p. 74.

“the existence of an archetypal God-image”: Jung (1937b), p. 59.

“became a perfectly normal and reasonable man”: Jung (1935), p. 175.

“development of symbols of the self”: Jung (1944), p. 215.

“outbursts of ecstasy and visions”: P/J [30P], May 24, 1934.

“unless something untoward should arise”: P/J [7P], October 27, 1934.

“is something I have since rather lost”: Pauli to Hecke, October 20, 1938: PLC [534].

“mix my critical remarks with so much sugar”: Pauli to Born, November 20, 1942: PLC3 [668].

“and a third not essentially influenced”: MDR, p. 165.

Chapter 10 • The Superior Man Sets His Life in Order

several high-level secretarial positions: Friedrich Adler was a colorful figure. As a young man he had been a promising physicist and a close friend of Einstein’s, sharing as well an interest in Socialist politics. As a protest against the Austrian government’s institution of an autocratic military regime and its decision to dissolve the parliament in 1916, he walked up to the premier while he was eating lunch and shot him three times in the head. Adler was sentenced to death, despite support from leading figures including Einstein. The sentence was never carried out and he was released after the war.

“Now we marry”: Quoted from Enz (2002), p. 286; from notes of Enz’s conversations with Franca Bertram, March 21, April 6, and May 6, 1971.

“I am going to get married also”: Weisskopf (1989), pp. 160–161.

dark archetypes into his consciousness: P/J [29P], April 28, 1934.

Jung was “perfectly correct”: P/J [29P], April 28, 1934.

“it secretly made a great impression on her”: P/J [30P], May 24, 1934.

“the binding would be good”: Enz (2002), pp. 247–248, notes from Enz’s interviews with Franca in 1971.

Franca had done him a favor: von Meyenn (1999), p. xxiii.

screamed that he wanted to “thrash someone”: Enz (2002), p. 287, from conversations with Franca and Adolf Guggenbühl, Jr.

“But I never did”: Weisskopf (1989), p. 161.

“huge piece of work”: von Meyenn (1999), p. xxv.

“of some interest to the psychologist”: P/J [9P], June 22, 1935.

“our dream psychology”: P/J [19J], March 6, 1937.

“radioactive nucleus”: P/J [13P], October 2, 1935.

Pauli never once mentioned the topic: Weisskopf (1989), p. 165.

“by the conventional concept of time”: P/J [22P], May 24, 1937; and P/J [23P], October 15, 1938.

“3 layers to a four-part object (clock)”: P/J [23P], October 15, 1938.

about which Pauli had a severe phobia: P/J [29P], April 28, 1934.

“of these symbols than I do at the moment”: P/J [29P], April 28, 1934.

“the ‘blond beast’ is stirring in its sleep”: Jung (1935), pp. 163 and 164.

“Wotan the wanderer is on the move”: Jung (1936c), p. 180.

“a higher potential than the Jewish”: Jung (1934), p. 166.

“to Germanic and Slavic Christendom”: Jung (1934), p. 166.

“Freud’s brethren”—the Jews: Léon to Greene—members of the tercentenary committee—August 26, 1936. Quoted from Bair (2004), p. 419.

“the nightmare on the way to being dreamt”: Quoted from Bair (2004), p. 419.

“have brought relief to many in distress”: From the Harvard tercentenary book as quoted from Bair (2004), p. 421.

“lives in indissoluble union with the body”: Jung (1936a). The quote is on p. 114.

Melville’s novel Moby-Dick: Aaron (2001), p. 49.

Cobb shined them himself: Quoted from Bair (2004), p. 420. This story was related to Bair by an acquaintance of the Cobb family, who relished telling it.

“long overdue” book on alchemy: Jung to Jacobi, October 27, 1936: CLI.

fearing for his life, left immediately: As told by the American author Philip Wylie, a friend and one-time patient of Jung’s. Wylie, however, left no written substantiation of Jung’s story in his papers.

“really menaced and treated as a Jew”: Pauli to Aydelotte, May 29, 1940, in PLC3, p. xxviii.

“his

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