James Hillman
Published: 2001
Total Pages: 0
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"I have learned that persons suffer unwittingly from the influence of impersonal ideas as much as from personal relationships, memories, fears, and traumas. Ideas we do not know we have, have us. They hold our minds in their grip. This means that therapy of people and their problems cannot proceed without therapy of ideas and their problems. Often these hidden ideas are stereotypes, that is, ideas that have become repeated for so long that they have hardened into facts and truths. (Stereos, Greek for stiff, hard, firm, stubborn, solid.) Stereotypes might also be defined as assumptions of collective consciousness that dull our perceptions and our wits. They substitute for thought because they come first to mind and are usually widely shared. So, the psychological task with these hidden, unthought ideas is to think them afresh and free a problem from their deadening effect. This is exactly what I want us to be doing now: enter the tangle of welfare and sort through some of the typical ideas that keep it such a hard and stubborn problem"- James Hillman