Reading Plato through Jung: Why must the Third become the Fourth?

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This book examines the Jungian imperative that the Third must become the Fourth through the lens of Carl Jung’s complex reception of Plato. While in psychoanalytic discourse the Third is typically viewed as an agent that brings about healing, the author highlights that, in the case of Jung, an early emphasis on the Third as the “transcendent function” gave way to an increasing insistence on the importance of the Fourth. And yet, he asks, why must “the Third become the Fourth”? 
Paul Bishop begins with a survey of work on Jung’s relation to Plato, before turning to Jung’s readings of the
Timaeus and Black Books, as well as Goethe’s Faust II and Nietzsche’s Zarathustra. He proceeds to unpick Jung’s statements on the Third and the Fourth though a compelling analysis of how Jung draws upon religious and alchemical traditions, Pythagorean numerology, his own dream-like experiences and Plato’s cosmology. This book will appeal to practitioners and to scholars working in the history of ideas, psychoanalysis, philosophy, and psychoanalytic theory.

Author(s): Paul Bishop
Publisher: Palgrave Pivot
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 161
City: Cham

Acknowledgements
Contents
List of Figures
Chapter 1: Introduction: Psychoanalysis and the Problem of the Third and the Fourth
Bibliography
Chapter 2: Jung’s Reading of Plato and the Timaeus
Plato’s “Timaeus”
Transformations and Symbols of the Libido (1911–1912)
Bibliography
Chapter 3: Jung on the Doctrine of the Trinity
Number in Pythagoras and Gerhard Dorn
Timaeus’s Account of the Body of the World
Plato and Politics
The Third and the Fourth in the “Timaeus”
The Third and the Fourth in Goethe’s “Faust”
What Is the Fourth?
Other Numerical Schemes in the “Timaeus”
Bibliography
Chapter 4: The Timaeus and Cosmology; The Third and the Fourth in Alchemy and Synchronicity
The Third and the Fourth in Jung’s Writings on Alchemy
Synchronicity
Mysterium coniunctionis (1955–1956)
Bibliography
Chapter 5: Conclusion
Bibliography
Bibliography
Index