Taking Plato’s allegory of the cave as its starting-point, this book demonstrates how later European thinkers can be read as a reaction and a response to key aspects of this allegory and its discourse of enchainment and liberation.
Places Jung's 1952 publication, Answer to Job, in the context of Biblical commentary, and then examines the circumstances surrounding its composition and immediate reception.
This book examines the Jungian imperative that the Third must become the Fourth through the lens of Carl Jung’s complex reception of Plato.
This book offers an exercise in reception theory and investigates the key figures in the reception of Nietzsche’s critique of Judeo-Christianity in the course of the twentieth century.