Acknowledgements Introduction 1.Patañjali An Overview of Patañjali Patañjali on Consciousness/Unconsciousness Patañjali on Mind/Psyche Patañjali on Ego/Self Patañjali on the Transformation of Human Consciousness References Notes 2. Jung An Overview of Jung Jung on Consciousness/Unconsciousness Jung on Mind/Psyche Jung on Ego/Self Jung on the Transformation of Human Consciousness References 3. Jung and Patañjali Back-to-Back Jung and Patañjali on Consciousness/Unconciousness Jung and Patañjali on Mind/Psyche Jung and Patañjali on Ego/Self Jung and Patañjali on the Transformation of Human Consciousness In Summary References Notes 4. Jung on Yoga The Teological Function of the Psyche Jung on Yoga: Conclusion References Notes 5. A Synthesis of Jung and Patañjali The Efficacy of the Unconscious Validating the Consciousness of the Unconscious References Notes 6. Conclusion References Afterword
Leanne Whitney received her PhD in depth psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara, California. She works as a transformational coach, Yoga teacher, and documentary filmmaker. Leanne’s professional papers include Depth psychology through the lens of Classical Yoga: a reconsideration of Jung’s ontic reality and Jung and non-duality: some clinical and theoretical implications of the self as totality of the psyche co-authored with Dr. Lionel Corbett.
‘Dr Whitney’s book is an important contribution to those of us
interested in the East-West dialog about the nature of
consciousness. She has the rare gift of expertise in both Jung’s
psychology and Patañjali’s metaphysics, and her text reveals the
important similarities and distinctions found in the work of these
two gigantic figures. Students of transformation will benefit by Dr
Whitney’s clear articulation of the ways in which depth psychology
and yoga philosophy complement each other.’ - Lionel Corbett,
Professor, Pacifica Graduate Institute, USA ‘Consciousness in Jung
and Patañjali is a brilliant analysis of Western and Eastern
concepts of consciousness, motivated by the author's personal
experience that there's something beyond a materialistic
brain-based explanation of consciousness. A deep dive into personal
ego, impersonal awareness, dual and nondual realities, and beyond.
Highly recommended.’ - Dean Radin, PhD, Chief Scientist, Institute
of Noetic Sciences, USA'When Carl Jung studied Yoga traditions, he
dealt with an abstraction, a relic of the exotic "other." With wide
practice of Yoga worldwide, one can no longer dismiss its insights
as inappropriate for non-Asians. Leanne Whitney's book updates our
thinking about Yoga and shows its benefits to contemporary
psycho-therapeutic theory and practice.’ - Christopher Key Chapple,
Doshi Professor of Indic and Comparative Theology and Director,
Master of Arts in Yoga Studies, Loyola Marymount University,
USA.
‘Dr Whitney’s book is an important contribution to those of us
interested in the East-West dialog about the nature of
consciousness. She has the rare gift of expertise in both Jung’s
psychology and Patañjali’s metaphysics, and her text reveals the
important similarities and distinctions found in the work of these
two gigantic figures. Students of transformation will benefit by Dr
Whitney’s clear articulation of the ways in which depth psychology
and yoga philosophy complement each other.’ - Lionel Corbett,
Professor, Pacifica Graduate Institute, USA ‘Consciousness in Jung
and Patañjali is a brilliant analysis of Western and Eastern
concepts of consciousness, motivated by the author's personal
experience that there's something beyond a materialistic
brain-based explanation of consciousness. A deep dive into personal
ego, impersonal awareness, dual and nondual realities, and beyond.
Highly recommended.’ - Dean Radin, PhD, Chief Scientist, Institute
of Noetic Sciences, USA'When Carl Jung studied Yoga traditions, he
dealt with an abstraction, a relic of the exotic "other." With wide
practice of Yoga worldwide, one can no longer dismiss its insights
as inappropriate for non-Asians. Leanne Whitney's book updates our
thinking about Yoga and shows its benefits to contemporary
psycho-therapeutic theory and practice.’ - Christopher Key Chapple,
Doshi Professor of Indic and Comparative Theology and Director,
Master of Arts in Yoga Studies, Loyola Marymount University,
USA.'The book hardly exceeds 150 pages in length, but its substance
outperforms its physical weight by far. From a proper background of
what is ontically undivided, it is Whitney’s vision that a ‘depth
psychology–classical yoga fusion can yield a contemporary, and more
lucid, understanding of the multiplicity of forms on the
foreground’. I couldn’t agree more.' - Harald Atmanspacher, Zürich,
writing in the Journal of Analytical Psychology, 2019.'This book is
an important contribution to the East-West dialogue that Jung
considered so necessary. Too, this book continues a tradition whose
genesis may be attributed to a then young scholar of Jungian
psychology who, in 1985, published Jung and the Post-Jungians.
Andrew Samuel’s seminal reference to the evolution of Jungian
thought introduced many of the critiques of Jungian orthodoxy that
are topical today. Dr. Leanne Whitney’s book continues this
tradition with a provocative inquiry that makes us reconsider the
aspects of the Abrahamic and Enlightenment traditions that are
impediments to actualizing our own higher consciousness.' - Robert
Mitchell in the International Journal of Jungian Studies 11 (2019)
79–92
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