The red book = Liber novus

Book • 2009
The Red Book is a large, illuminated volume created by Carl Jung between 1914 and 1930.

It documents his experiments with active imagination and his encounters with figures from his unconscious, including his soul, Salome, and other mythic beings.

The book is a central source of Jung's inspiration for his theories on the collective unconscious, archetypes, and the process of individuation.

It reflects Jung's attempt to reconcile the scientific with the mythic and spiritual, and it is considered a profoundly personal and influential work in the history of psychology.

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Mentioned by Jordan Peterson in the context of his critique of Nietzsche's philosophy.
202. Meaning, Awe and Conceptualization of God - pt. 2

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