Twenty-five hundred years ago, Pythagoras taught that simple counting numbers are the basic building blocks of reality. A century and a half later, Plato argued that our world is but a poor copy of the world of ideas. They neither realized that their ...
Twenty-five hundred years ago, Pythagoras taught that simple counting numbers are the basic building blocks of reality. A century and a half later, Plato argued that our world is but a poor copy of the world of ideas. They neither realized that their numbers and ideas might also be the most basic components of the human archetypes. This book traces the modern evolution of this idea from the Renaissance to the 20th century, leading up to the archetypal hypothesis of psychologist C.G. Jung, and the mirroring of mathematical ideas of Kurt Gödel.
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