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Psychology of A Midsummer Night's Dream
Paperback

Psychology of A Midsummer Night’s Dream

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In this essay, A Midsummer Night's Dream Psychology, we observe throughout the chapters that this tale by William Shakespeare is not just the account of the Fairy Festival at the height of its successful activities; however, it is accounts of a reality that remains unconscious in the human psyche. Carl Gustav Jung in his studies, Jung (1985) in "Foundations of Analytical Psychology", presents arguments that support that in the human psyche there are archetypes that are constantly experienced and revitalized, by presenting evidence in Jung (1984) in "Psychology and Alchemy - the Psychic Nature of the Alchemical Work".

Fairy tales have been around since Lemurian times. By the end of the Atlantean epoch belief in them was irregular and casual. In the current Aryan era, for some people, they are realities that are part of everyday life; however, for others they are just beautiful or scary stories that are told on summer nights in the moonlight or around the fireplace on long winter nights.

However, it took the poet's divine imagination to gather all the fragments of fairy tales into a masterpiece and present it to humanity: the World of Fairies, of the so-called "fantasies". This world, or ethereal dimension, is true and real, because it is a very important part of life on our globe.

Therefore, since ancient Greece, sixth century B.C., human beings have been looking for answers to the hypothesis of the origin of things, that is, what is the origin of everything that is there? As formulated by the Greeks, from the beginning, in the search for knowledge by Reason and not by "dogma", as well as not following the techniques of the approach of the Sophists, due to the lack of commitment in search of the Truth; however, in this essay we present the Psychology and Psychological Ideas of William Shakespeare, in A Midsummer Night's Dream.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Adao Jose Goncalves Da Cruz
Date
27 December 2024
Pages
400
ISBN
9786501276489

In this essay, A Midsummer Night's Dream Psychology, we observe throughout the chapters that this tale by William Shakespeare is not just the account of the Fairy Festival at the height of its successful activities; however, it is accounts of a reality that remains unconscious in the human psyche. Carl Gustav Jung in his studies, Jung (1985) in "Foundations of Analytical Psychology", presents arguments that support that in the human psyche there are archetypes that are constantly experienced and revitalized, by presenting evidence in Jung (1984) in "Psychology and Alchemy - the Psychic Nature of the Alchemical Work".

Fairy tales have been around since Lemurian times. By the end of the Atlantean epoch belief in them was irregular and casual. In the current Aryan era, for some people, they are realities that are part of everyday life; however, for others they are just beautiful or scary stories that are told on summer nights in the moonlight or around the fireplace on long winter nights.

However, it took the poet's divine imagination to gather all the fragments of fairy tales into a masterpiece and present it to humanity: the World of Fairies, of the so-called "fantasies". This world, or ethereal dimension, is true and real, because it is a very important part of life on our globe.

Therefore, since ancient Greece, sixth century B.C., human beings have been looking for answers to the hypothesis of the origin of things, that is, what is the origin of everything that is there? As formulated by the Greeks, from the beginning, in the search for knowledge by Reason and not by "dogma", as well as not following the techniques of the approach of the Sophists, due to the lack of commitment in search of the Truth; however, in this essay we present the Psychology and Psychological Ideas of William Shakespeare, in A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Adao Jose Goncalves Da Cruz
Date
27 December 2024
Pages
400
ISBN
9786501276489