We may think we have ourselves under control; yet a friend can easily tell us things about ourselves of which we have no knowledge.
July Anggrenyhas quoted5 years ago
dream treated as a direct, personal, and meaningful communication to the dreamer—a communication that uses the symbols common to all mankind,
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
Yet the emotions that effect us arc just the same. In fact, the terrors that stem from our elaborate civilization may be far more threatening than those that primitive people attribute to demons.
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
We are so accustomed to the apparently rational nature of our world that we can scarcely imagine anything happening that cannot be explained by common sense.
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
A theologian once told me that Ezekiel’s visions were nothing more than morbid symptoms, and that, when Moses and other prophets heard “voices” speaking to them, they were suffering from hallucinations.
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
The primitive man confronted by a shock of this kind would not doubt his sanity; he would think of fetishes, spirits, or gods.
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
in a dream, such concepts can express their unconscious meaning. In our conscious thoughts, we restrain ourselves within the limits of rational statements
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
statements that are much less colorful because we have stripped them of most of their psychic associations.
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
Even the most carefully defined philosophical or mathematical concept, which we are sure does not contain more than we have put into it, is nevertheless more than we assume.
MWENYA IIhas quoted2 years ago
The very numbers you use in counting are more than you take them to be. They are at the same time mythological elements (for the Pythagoreans, they were even divine); but you are certainly unaware of this when you use numbers for a practical purpose.