- Alchemical Active Imagination — Franz, 1979
Alchemy represents a profound psychological tradition that anticipated modern depth psychology by centuries, serving as both primitive chemistry and a symbolic system for exploring the collective unconscious and the process of individuation.
- Animus and Anima — Jung, 1957
The animus and anima are archetypal figures bridging personal consciousness and the collective unconscious, and a woman's psychological development requires her to consciously integrate the masculine-intellectual animus principle rather than remaining possessed by it or projecting it onto men.
- Catafalque — Kingsley, 2018
C.G. Jung was a prophet and mystic who received genuine gnosis from the ancient world, particularly from the pre-Socratic philosopher Parmenides, but Western civilization's rationalism has systematically suppressed and misread this transmission, leaving humanity spiritually bereft at a critical turning point.
- Evil — Sanford, 1981
Evil, examined through the lens of Jungian Analytical Psychology and Judaeo-Christian tradition, is not simply an external force to be rejected but a necessary aspect of reality whose recognition and integration is essential for psychological wholeness and genuine moral development.
- The Interpretation of Fairy Tales — Franz, 1970
Fairy tales are the purest expression of collective unconscious processes and represent archetypes in their simplest form; by interpreting them through Jungian psychological methods, we can understand the fundamental patterns of the human psyche, all of which ultimately circumambulate the central symbol of the Self.
- Man and His Symbols — Jacobi, 1964
The unconscious psyche communicates through symbols and dreams, and integrating its messages into conscious life—the process of individuation—is essential to psychological wholeness and human fulfillment.
- Memories, Dreams, Reflections — Jung, 1961
Jung's life was primarily determined by his inner experiences and encounters with the unconscious, which he considers more meaningful than external events in understanding the development of his psychological theories and spiritual insights.
- The Problem of the Puer Aeternus — Franz, 1970
The puer aeternus—the man identified with the archetype of eternal youth—suffers from an unresolved mother complex that keeps him in adolescent psychology, preventing genuine commitment to life, work, and relationship; this problem is analyzed through literary interpretation and case material to reveal both its personal and cultural dimensions.