1 result for (book:tes2 AND session:83 AND stemmed:natur)
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
We will, indeed, return to our discussion of the inner senses. However there is more material concerning the nature of matter which should be considered first.
There are a few points that I would like to make of a general nature. Ruburt has been reading Jung, though not consistently. The libido does not originate in the individual subconscious of the present personality. It originates instead in the energy of the entity and inner self, and is directed by means of the inner senses, outward so to speak, through the deeper layers of the individual subconscious mind, then through the outer or personal layers.
Your Freud and Jung have probed into the outer, personal subconscious. Jung saw glimpses of other depths, but that is all. There are rather unfortunate distortions occurring in Jung’s writings, as well as in Freud’s, since they did not understand the primary, cooperative nature of the libido. We will involve ourselves in a much more thorough study along these lines, as we come to another body of subject material.
However, the basic cooperative nature of the libido is indeed responsible, in large degree, for the psychic cooperation in which all entities are involved, in the construction of a physical world of matter that is inhabited by all on your plane.
This cooperative nature of the libido has been completely overlooked and misinterpreted for various reasons, many simply due to ignorance. You know that the individual cells of any form cooperate to form another, more complicated gestalt; and without the cooperation not only would the more complicated structure cease to operate, but the individual cells would also cease to operate.
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
Miss Callahan, on the 14th of August, merely suffered a very light stroke. I say merely, since the occurrence could have been of an even more severe nature. On the following day she was more mentally agitated than usual, dizzy, with some motor disability in the left arm. The condition, the mental condition, passed more or less unnoticed in the light of her known disabilities.
[... 51 paragraphs ...]