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Swiss and psychoanalyst
He consulted a Swiss psychoanalyst, who advised him to give up working on Tintin.
The Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung argued that archetypal processes such as death and resurrection were part of the " trans-personal symbolism " of the collective unconscious, and could be utilized in the task of psychological integration.
The Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung ( 1875 – 1961 ) adopted a very different posture, one that was more sympathetic to religion and more concerned with a positive appreciation of religious symbolism.
Hermann Rorschach ( or ; 8 November 1884 – 1 April 1922 ) was a Swiss Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, best known for developing a projective test known as the Rorschach inkblot test.

Swiss and Carl
The Swiss Psychologist Carl Jung wrote a short Gnostic treatise in 1916 called The Seven Sermons to the Dead, which called Abraxas a God higher than the Christian God and Devil, that combines all opposites into one Being.
* 1845 – Carl Spitteler, Swiss poet, Nobel laureate ( d. 1924 )
Carl Jung ( 1875 – 1961 ) was a Swiss psychiatrist, an influential thinker and the founder of analytical psychology.
* 1875 – Carl Jung, Swiss psychiatrist ( d. 1961 )
According to Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung, the libido is identified as psychic energy.
Swiss psychologist Carl Jung ( 1873 – 1961 ) tried to understand the psychology behind world myths.
In modern times, the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung defined the mythological figure of Proteus as a personification of the unconscious, who, because of his gift of prophecy and shape-changing, has much in common with the central but elusive figure of alchemy, Mercurius.
* June 6 – Carl Jung, Swiss psychiatrist ( b. 1875 )
** Carl Jung, Swiss psychiatrist ( d. 1961 )
* April 24 – Carl Spitteler, Swiss writer, Nobel Prize laureate ( d. 1924 )
Carl Gustav Jung ( ; ; 26 July 1875 – 6 June 1961 ) was a Swiss psychologist and psychiatrist who founded analytical psychology.
Carl Jung was born Karl Gustav II Jung in Kesswil, in the Swiss canton of Thurgau, on 26 July 1875, as the fourth but only surviving child of Paul Achilles Jung and Emilie Preiswerk.
Carl Gustav Jung, a Swiss psychiatrist, developed the concept further.
But in 1951, the Neuen Helvetischen Gesellschaft ( New Swiss Society ), under the leadership of Emil Egli, got 150, 000 Swiss citizens to sign a petition protesting the project ; among the signatories were 49 famous citizens, including Hermann Hesse and Carl Jacob Burckhardt.
Like the Swiss psychologist, Carl Gustav Jung, would have said: Ancient archetypes resurfaced from our collective unconscious and repossessed receptive minds-which were, as a rule, still developing and thus especially impressible.
The concept of synchronicity was first described in this terminology by Carl Gustav Jung, a Swiss psychologist, in the 1920s.
Swiss psychologist Carl Jung was deeply influenced by his interest in the I Ching.
The concept of synchronicity from the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung can be seen as similar to yuánfèn, which Chinese people also believe to be a universal force governing the happening of things to some people at some places.
The concept of " synchronicity " from the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung is the closest English translation of Yuanfen.
Swiss psychologist Carl Jung saw the Ouroboros as an archetype and the basic mandala of alchemy.
In the twentieth century the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung used the term Religio Medici several times in his writings
The Northern Bald Ibis was described and illustrated by Swiss naturalist Conrad Gessner in his Historiae animalium in 1555, and given the binomial name Upupa eremita by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 Systema Naturae.

Swiss and Jung
A solitary and introverted child, Jung was convinced from childhood that, like his mother, he had two personalities — a modern Swiss citizen and a personality more at home in the eighteenth century.
In 1934, Jung wrote in a Swiss publication, the Neue Zürcher Zeitung, that he experienced " great surprise and disappointment " when the Zentralblatt associated his name with the pro-Nazi statement.
In his book Synchronicity ( 1952 ), Swiss psychologist C. G. Jung tells this story, starring a Cetonia aurata, as an example of a synchronic event:
Fritz Levi, in his 1952 review in Neue Schweizer Rundschau ( New Swiss Observations ), critiqued Jung's theory of synchronicity as vague in determinability of synchronistic events, saying that Jung never specifically explained his rejection of " magic causality " to which such an acausal principle as synchronicity would be related.

Swiss and who
This is an unsolved problem which probably has never been seriously investigated, although one frequently hears the comment that we have insufficient specialists of the kind who can compete with the Germans or Swiss, for example, in precision machinery and mathematics, or the Finns in geochemistry.
He set out on his 700-mile return journey with five families of discontented and disappointed Swiss who turned their eyes toward the United States.
Alcott had been influenced by educational philosophy of the Swiss pedagogue Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi and even renamed his school " The Cheshire Pestalozzi School ". His style attracted the attention of Samuel Joseph May, who introduced Alcott to his sister Abby May.
By the following year their ranks had grown to include German painter, sculptor and designer Oskar Schlemmer who headed the theater workshop, and Swiss painter Paul Klee, joined in 1922 by Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky.
But on his arrival, all was chaos – " Scarcely had my troops got over when the dragoons and Swiss who had preceded us, came tumbling down upon my battalions in full flight … My own fellows turned about and fled along with them.
" Major-General Murray ," recalled one eye witness, " … seeing him fall, marched up in all haste with two Swiss battalions to save him and stop the enemy who were hewing all down in their way.
On some occasions, simple weapons employed in an unorthodox fashion have proven advantageous, as with the Swiss pikemen who gained many victories through their ability to transform a traditionally defensive weapon into an offensive one.
There were 207 Swiss men and 271 Swiss women who emigrated from Switzerland.
The Swiss Blutspendedienst SRK precludes potential donors who have spent a cumulative time of at least six months in the United Kingdom between 1 January 1980 and 31 December 1996.
became the tri prima of the Swiss alchemist Paracelsus, who reasoned that Aristotle ’ s four element theory appeared in bodies as three principles.
He is of English ( maternal ), Swiss and possibly Native American Modoc Tribe multi-ethnic ( paternal ) ancestry His father, Howard " Pete " Brubeck, was a cattle rancher, and his mother, Elizabeth ( née Ivey ), who had studied piano in England under Myra Hess and intended to become a concert pianist, taught piano for extra money.
First synthesized in 1874 by Othmar Zeidler, DDT's insecticidal properties were not discovered until 1939 by the Swiss scientist Paul Hermann Müller, who was awarded the 1948 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for his efforts.
His discovery was followed by Swiss astrophysicist Fritz Zwicky in 1933, while working at the California Institute of Technology, who studied clusters of galaxies.
In January 1996, the Britannica was purchased from the Benton Foundation by billionaire Swiss financier Jacqui Safra, who serves as its current Chair of the Board.
On the night of 10 August 1792, insurgents and popular militias, supported by the revolutionary Paris Commune, assailed the Tuileries Palace and massacred the Swiss Guards who were assigned for the protection of the king.
Murray Gell-Mann always referred to Feynman diagrams as Stueckelberg diagrams, after a Swiss physicist, Ernst Stueckelberg, who devised a similar notation many years earlier.
Hegel, French materialist and utilitarian philosophe Claude Adrien Helvétius, Swiss collectivist philosophe Jean-Jacques Rousseau, French utopian socialist Henri de Saint-Simon, and Savoyard conservative Joseph de Maistre as thinkers who constituted the ideological basis for modern authoritarianism, in his book Freedom and Its Betrayal: Six Enemies of Human Liberty.
A similar figure was the Swiss magician known as Paracelsus ( 1493 – 1541 ), who published Of the Supreme Mysteries of Nature in which he emphasised the distinction between good and bad magic.
Guillaume Tell was a political epic adapted from Schiller ’ s play ( 1804 ) about the 13th-century Swiss patriot who rallied his country against the Austrians.
Modern Germanic peoples are the Scandinavians ( Norwegians, Swedish, Danish, Icelanders, and Faroese ), Germans, Austrians, Alemannic Swiss, Liechtensteiners, Luxembourgers, the Dutch, Flemings, Afrikaners, Frisians, the English and others who still speak languages derived from the ancestral Germanic dialects.
Geneva is the home of the Genève-Servette HC, who play in the Swiss National League A, and is the main sport team of the city.
There were 465 Swiss men and 498 Swiss women who emigrated from Switzerland.

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