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John Dunn
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John Dunn original writing
Carl Jung
End of the creative imagination
…These apparent seekers of the mysteries, these writers, poets, philosophers and mystics, who apparently stood aloof from the day-to-day mundane world of rationality and reason, in the end sought to kill the mystery and believed that in all their self-seeking that they had actually closed the door on it.
In the recovery of a lost Totality, of the Total-Man, of the Absolute Self, of the Selbst of Nietzsche, of the Unus Mundus of Jung, they had turned the creator into a discoverer and, if the creative imagination is the defining element of humanness, then they were dehumanisers. Jung’s concept of Synchronicity was founded upon a belief that both the observer and connected phenomenon ultimately stem from the same source, the Unus Mundus, which means One World. Jung was the Spinozist par excellence.
Jung and others fell and worshipped before the power of One; to aspire for us all to become as One; to bring about One world; to proffer a perennial ‘truth’ common to all religions. This is Tikkun, the return to the One. This is the end-game of Spinozism in which freedom is the recognition of this necessity. And the price of this necessary freedom? Answer - the end of the creative imagination, death of the self and the end of humanity.
From Child of Encounter
© John Dunn.
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From the archive:
Devoid of Love
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The Mythology
First in the Mythology is Love: variously Logos, God, the Word, the Cosmic Jesus, living thought. John Dunn
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Just a thought:
Over the centuries since the contractual obligations imposed at Nicaea, the struggle for freedom has been synonymous with the struggle against the Jehovian Terror. Just as the Jehovian Terror supported the Diocletian Order so too did a reinvigorated Jehovianism give scientific and philosophical, as well as divine, sanction to the reinvented Diocletian Order, which followed the collapse of the Renaissance. John Dunn (Renaissance: Counter-Renaissance)
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The Oxford to Cambridge Arch 6
Further additions to the project, starting with Herman Moll's alternative to the Buckingham and Bedford route. John Dunn
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