Here I share a few afternoon's letters. I share them only as a gift of a living heart to other living hearts. What is Negative Capability? As you greet it here, it's a sort of interstitial hallway where a few friends meet. A presence that hopes to live up to Keats's original meaning when he first used the term Negative Capability. We are friends who have written for years now, and we all met through an interest in Jung. Jung seems the essence of Negative Capability. A man who was willing to speak to and listen to all that it is to exist: the dreams and hopes, the irrational fears and joys; that bond of the deep bedrock that we all carry: both the consciousness, and the unconscious that is always present—there with its hand on all we do. Jung denied none of the experience of his life, and it's his honest example that helps us look in all things for that intelligent sphere whose center is everywhere and circumference nowhere. That frees us with the honest admission that no one 'Knows' — yet also understands that each heart's knowing is as good an anyone's. We embrace the gift of that gnosis. And share it as a gift of the living heart to other living hearts... |
Jung, criticized even in some analytical circles for
his 'new age', magic-leaning interpretations, was a doctor first, and like
his early mentor Freud (and William James, for that matter), he applied
the principles of biological systems to the psyche. Hence, the term
unconscious rather than subconscious: the unconscious isn't 'below'
anything, but is a vital, ever-present part of being human; one is just
un-conscious of it. As a post-Einsteinian, he went further, and came to
see the unconscious as an unavoidable component and force ever-present
within a living mind. His twenty volumes of work reflect this path of
study. The function of art, the language of dreams—such studies roll
naturally from an empiricism grounded and centered in this perspective.
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Venus and Mars:
make love, not war!