October 21, 1937
Jung Views Dreams as a Key to 'Isms'
Special to The New York Times
ew Haven, Conn., Oct. 20.--Dr. C. G. Jung of Zurich said today in opening the
Terry lectures at Yale University before more than 2,000 persons in Woolsey Hall
that the great mental epidemics of our days, called "isms," showed that
the majority of human beings were exposed to the possibility of being dominated
by irrational ideas.
"Such ideas are based upon unconscious motive-powers," he added. "The
most efficient method of exploring the causality and the meaning of such phenomena
is the analysis of dreams."
Dr. Jung crossed the ocean to appear for the Dwight H. Terry Foundation which
was established for lectures on "Religion in the Light of Science and Philosophy."
He was introduced by President Seymour.
Speaking on the topic "Applied Psychology and Religion," he said:
"There are any amount of creeds and ceremonies for the sole purpose of forming
a defense against the unexpected dangerous tendencies of the unconscious. The
peculiar fact that the dream is the divine voice and messenger and yet an unending
source of trouble does not disturb the primitive mind. Since the dawn of mankind
there has been a marked tendency to delimit the unruly and arbitrary 'supernatural'
influence by definite forms and laws. And this process has gone on in history
by the multiplication of rites, institutions and creeds.
"In the last 2,000 years we find the institution of the Christian Church
assuming a mediating and protective function between these influences and man.
It is not denied in medieval ecclesiastical writings that a divine influx could
take place in dreams, for instance, but this view is not exactly encouraged and
the church reserves her right to decide whether a revelation is to be considered
as authentic or not."
In his discussion of dreams, Dr. Jung stated that he "takes dreams for granted
and not as a 'mere facade behind which something has been carefully hidden.'"
In this he disagrees with Freud.
"Freud has made a courageous effort to elucidate the intricacies of dream
psychology by the aid of views which he has gathered in the field of psychopathology,"
said Dr. Jung. "Much as I admire the boldness of his attempt, I cannot agree
with his method and its results.
"I am doubtful whether we can assume a dream is something else than it appears
to be. I am rather inclined to quote another Jewish authority, the Talmud, which
says: "The dream is its own interpretation.'
"The dream is a natural event and there is no reason under the sun why we
should assume that it is a crafty device to lead us astray."
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