2022-12-20 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Reading "The Soul's Code - In Search of Character and Calling" by James Hillman and quite enjoying it. He is making the point that psychology (along with existentialists and shallow religions) has put the individual in a state of victimhood and lack of meaning. He seems to despise the whole field pretty much, and says that psychology demands that the matters of heart are their domain, but at the same time have side-stepped the whole question of what human heart is in a poetically psychological sense. It is an interesting read, and considers many of the topics I personally have been moaning about. Hillman seems a strange character. He talks more like Jung than any Jungians I've heard, but at the same time keeps his distance to Jung. He also seems rather post-modern with his deconstruction of the whole of the statistically oriented social sciences, but at the same time he doesn't pull it down to "nothing matters" like the deconstructionists often do, but rather pulls it back all the way to Plato and the Myth of Er. Hillman wants to paint a picture of an individual that is being pushed forward by their daimon, sort of a guardian angel, but not as angelic as you might think. This angel is working for your inner purpose. Purpose that might be all too much for your limited existance. The angel doesn't care. It is inhuman and otherworldly. It pushes you along, it makes you ill if you refuse, it may stretch you between heaven and hell, unable to go either direction. It protects you and may literally kill for you. All this you have agreed to in the realm before birth. Then you forgot you made this deal. This of course is a myth, but not a dead myth. I think Hillman is trying to resurrect forgotten myths that he sees could bring some vitality to the nihilistic culture. It's exciting to find a challenging niche like this. I just began the book, and he seems to have a lot more. ------------------------------------------------------------------