Talk:James Hillman
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LACKS NPOV
This article appears to lack NPOV. It says much more about what Hillman is against than what he is for. In particular, the claims against Jung, from whose work the author freely admits Hillman's work is derived, are unsubstantiated. Although I am not sufficiently expert to change this, I do not see, in my reading of Jung, the extreme weight on the ego that the author ascribes to him, without reference. Therefore it is impossible to see what particular phase of Jung's work he is referring to. I would like to see a Jung expert weigh in on this.
This lack of NPOV extends to the section on dream interpretation where the author uses the phrase 'a la Jung' which looks like a snide crack at Jung rather than a neutral comparison of Hillman's and Jung's approaches.Diogenes 00:07, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Why would you like a Jung expert to weigh in? Why not go to the source, read Hillman, and come to your own conclusions. Start with Suicide and the Soul, The Myth of Analysis, and Re-visioning Psychology. Finish them, and you'll be ready for the utterly radical work of The Dream and the Underworld. Be forwarned: he'll turn everything you think about psychology on its head.
Jungians are notoriously critical of Hillman, largely, I think, because he's stolen Jung's thunder.69.86.105.192 12:43, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
- as a major contributor to this article, i have to wonder, diogenes, about your arguments.
- the article indeed says what Hillman is for. please note everything after the introductory quote.
- the article explicity states the Hillman is indeed indebted to Jung, as well as others (influences); yet he also moves beyond Jung. Jung's psychology focused greatly on the self and its constellations (which includes, but is not exclusive to, the ego), as noted, yet it remained focused on the self (or Self, with a capital "S"). Hillman moved beyond that to focus on psyche. if you would like a reference for Jung, please observe the Jung page- it is one reason why someone (not me) linked to it here.
- the phrase "a la jung" is not a "snide crack" at Jung, but implies that compensation is a theory underpinning Jung's position of dream interpretation which keeps the dream within the realm of ego/self. Hillman's position differes substanitally from that.Platypusjones 14:18, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
A Question of Scope
All and all, I like this article a lot. Thanks to all who have contributed to it.
It seems that the section 'The Soul's Code' is disproportionately long when compared to other parts of the article. I don't think the Acorn Theory has reached the prominence of many of Hillman's other ideas. For instance the role of psychopathology, Hillman's critique of modern and postmodern psychology or his move of emphasizing the less literal- Each of these ideas seems more central to Hillman's thought than the Soul's Code or the Acorn Theory.
- thank you. i agree ; perhaps with the contributer's permission, we can move it to it's own page and link it here.
Personal Life?
I can't find any information about Hillman personally -- family? spouse? children? All the pages on politicians mention family life. I think that this is an important facet of the life of a thinker and gives some important insight into them.
- Hillman talks about some aspects of personal life in the book "InterViews" with Laura Pozzo. At the same time, he has also kept his personal life somewhat private.
He was married to Patricia Berry, another jungian psychologist, and then divorced. I believe he remarried. I am unsure of any children.