Teilhard and Jung PDF
Teilhard and Jung PDF
Teilhard and Jung PDF
Introduction
In his recent book Cosmos and Psyche, philosopher and cultural
historian Richard Tarnas notes the tremendously creative years that
bridged the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries, with the
emergence of such giants as Darwin, Einstein, James, Marx, and
Freud. These years brought with them, he says, a change in the way
that human beings regard the cosmos, expanding the horizons of
consciousness out to the edges of the universe and into the depths of
matter.
Reflecting on the opening to the human psyche that became
known as depth psychology, Tarnas writes:
Just as the Copernicans had displaced the Earth from the center of
the Universe to reveal a much larger cosmos of which the earth
1
was now but a tiny peripheral fragment, the Freudians displaced
the conscious self from the center of the inner universe to reveal
the much larger unknown realm of the unconscious.”1
Two figures emerged during this period, whose lives, research, and
theory bring into creative convergence the worlds of matter and
psyche. They are Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, the Jesuit paleon-
tologist born in 1881, and Carl Gustav Jung, the medical psy-
chiatrist born in 1875. Though they never met, they shared a
common vision of the inner dimension of life, a dimension that
underlies the process of evolution on planet Earth.
Raised within the context of Newtonian physics, a context which
would be blown apart in the twentieth century by the theories of
relativity and quantum mechanics, these two creative giants intuited
the future direction of science and religion as each in his own way
converged towards an holistic view of the universe which has yet to
be absorbed by human culture.
While their vocations and lives unfolded in quite different modes,
in their formative periods, they display astonishing similarities. Both
were, from an early age, intrigued with how the world of matter
intersects with issues of the psyche. In an essay entitled “The Heart
of Matter,” Teilhard describes his childhood treasure, a plow hitch
made of iron, which he deemed to be incorruptible, everlasting.
When it turned out that this bit of iron rusted, he threw himself on
the lawn and shed the bitterest tears of his existence.
In a short biography of Teilhard, John Grim and Mary Evelyn
Tucker point out that it was but a short step for Teilhard to move
from his “gods of iron” to those of stone.2 His most precious pos-
session became a collection of rocks found near his childhood home
in the province of Auvergne. From an early age, the boy showed a
fascination with the world of matter and the problem of per-
ishability.
At about the same age as Teilhard displayed fascination with
stones, Carl Jung sat on a stone in his family’s garden and struggled
with the question of selfhood and existence. He would think,
“I am sitting on the top of this stone and it is underneath.” But
2
the stone could say “I” and think “I am lying here on this slope
and he is sitting on top of me.” The question then arose: “Am I
the one who is sitting on the stone, or am I the stone on which he
is sitting?” This question always perplexed me, and I would stand
up wondering who was what now.3
3
For a reason that will soon become obvious, in the domain of
physicochemistry objects are manifested only by their external
determinism. In the eyes of the physicist, there is legitimately
nothing but an “outside” of things (at least until now). For the
bacteriologist, whose cultures are treated (obviously, with major
difficulties) as reactive substances of the laboratory, the same
intellectual attitude is still permissible. But in the world of plants,
it already presents many more difficulties. In the case of the
biologist concerned with the behavior of insects and coelen-
terates, to take this attitude is to attempt the impossible. In the
case of vertebrates, it appears to be simply futile. And in the
human, in whom the existence of an interior is inescapable, it
finally fails completely, because it becomes the object of direct
intuition and the stuff of all knowledge.7
4
Psyche cannot be totally different from matter, for how otherwise
could it move matter? And matter cannot be alien to psyche, for
how else could matter produce psyche? Psyche and matter exist in
one and the same world, and each partakes of the other. If
research could only advance far enough, we should arrive at an
ultimate agreement between physical and psychological
concepts.10
Lying beneath the concept of psyche for Jung and the unfolding
inner dimension of matter for Teilhard is their common under-
standing of the nature of energy. Working themselves at the dawn of
the era of quantum mechanics, they intuited a spectrum of energy
that included both mechanistic and psychic extremes. To differ-
entiate psychic energy from physical, Jung uses the term “libido” to
define what he calls a hypothetical “life energy.”11 Jung’s use of the
term, however, is much broader than that of his mentor, Sigmund
Freud, who limited his definition to psycho-sexual energy.
While Jung includes this dimension of Freud’s in his use of the
term “libido,” his wider interpretation of psychic energy
encompasses the collective and individual drives towards con-
sciousness. He sees the emergence of the former in the development
of human culture and the latter in the process of individuation,
which leads to wholeness in the individual.
5
standing the unfolding drama of physical/psychic evolution through
the study of paleontology, and Jung towards a deeper knowledge of
the driving force of libido through sounding the depths of the
human psyche. Teilhard explored the within as an element of evolu-
tionary reality, while Jung sounded the mysteries of the within of
humanity in his studies of the human psyche.
In the process of evolution, the direction in which this energy of
the psyche flows is towards greater and greater complexity. In a
chapter in his opus The Human Phenomenon entitled “Ariadne’s
Thread,” Teilhard describes the growing complexity of the nervous
system in mammals, with an increasing dimension of “cerebral-
ization.”13 It provides a direction—and consequently proves that the
evolutionary movement has a direction—something is passed on, in
successive bursts, and never stops growing in the same direction.”14
Teilhard believes that within the tangential energy lies the radial,
and that the impetus of evolution is the great thrust towards com-
plexity and consciousness. As he traces the movement through the
development of the mammals and approaches the birth of con-
sciousness in the human, Teilhard becomes poetic in his description:
Everywhere, as we knew before, the summits of the active phyletic
lineages grow warm with consciousness. But in a clearly defined
region at the center of the mammals, where the most powerful
brains ever constructed by nature are being formed, they redden.
And already, even, at the heart of this zone, a point of incan-
descence flares. Let us not lose sight of that line crimsoned with
the dawn. After rising for thousands of years below the horizon, in
a narrowly localized spot a flame is about to burst forth. Thought
is here!15
Whereas Teilhard begins with the study of matter in all of its per-
meations, and, using paleontological evidence, moves through the
story of the development of life, through the coming of mammals,
with interior radial energy finally exploding onto the horizon in
human consciousness, Jung takes the opposite route. Beginning with
the consciousness of his patients, he joins Freud in the discovery of
the reality of the unconscious, and then plumbs the depths of the
6
personal and the collective unconscious to the level where psyche
and matter converge.
With the archetypes of the collective unconscious, those core
images of the psyche that form its bedrock, Jung arrives at a position
very similar to that of Teilhard’s convergence of tangential and
radial energy. He writes, “The psychoid nature of the archetype
contains very much more than can be included in a psychological
explanation. It points to the sphere of the unus mundus, the unitary
world, towards which the psychologist and the atomic physicist are
converging along separate paths.”16 Thus, descending from the level
of human consciousness through the personal levels of the
unconscious to those areas that reflect the instinctual side of the
species, and further still to the basic elements of the psyche, Jung
arrives at a concept similar to that of Teilhard’s anima mundi.17 For
Jung, the macrocosm that is the universe is infused into the
microcosm that is the individual human soul.18
Whereas Teilhard was concerned to prove that in human con-
sciousness the “within,” the radial energy that permeates the process
of evolution, becomes visible and evident as a result of that process,
Jung was challenged to prove that the psyche was not an epiphe-
nomenon of evolution, but at its depths reflects its emergence from a
process that contains it in potential all along. As a result, both men
found themselves in conflict with the world of science that was still
bound by Newtonian concepts of matter.
7
The change of biological state ending up in the awakening of thought does
not simply correspond to a critical point passed through by the individual,
or even by the species. Vaster than that, it affects life itself in its organic
totality. And consequently it marks a transformation that affects the state
of the whole planet.19
Just as extensive but even more coherent still, as we will see, than
all the preceding layers, it truly is a new layer, the “thinking
layer,” that, after having germinated at the close of the Tertiary,
since that time has been spreading out on top of the plant and
animal world. Over and beyond the biosphere there is a
noosphere.20
8
conscious ego emerged as an island on a great sea. “This is the fact
that the psychic process does not start from scratch with the
individual consciousness, but is rather a repetition of functions
which have been ages in the making and which are inherited with
the brain structure.”24
This deeper level I call the collective unconscious. I have chosen the
term “collective” because this part of the unconscious is not
individual but universal . . . It is, in other words, identical in all
men (sic) and thus constitutes a substrate of a suprapersonal
nature which is present in every one of us.25
9
The Consistent, the Total, the Unique, the Essential of my
childhood dreams—the vast cosmic realities . . . it was surely there
that I met those very ‘archetypes’ which, as we shall be seeing, I
still use, even when I come to the Christic itself, when I try to
express for my own satisfaction precisely what I mean.27
10
unconscious of which Jung speaks confronted him in alien forms
“who no longer obeyed me.” It was at the extremity of the psyche,
where the darkness of the abyss underlying his life loomed, that
Teilhard experienced the gift of grace—the current which he dared
to identify as his own individuality, “which I dare to call my life.”
In terms reflective of Jung’s description of the levels of the psyche,
Teilhard’s sense of Self emerges as a current, a power, an energy from
the totally Other. He experienced directly the dynamic force of that
inner reality that underlies matter in all of its forms, and emerges as
consciousness in the human.
In his role as a psychiatrist, as well as in his own vivid dream life,
Jung worked for years in conscious engagement with the
unconscious. Yet he came to a point where his own life journey
drove him to take the journey into the depths. His words are
strikingly similar to Teilhard’s, as he undertakes that plunge.
In order to grasp the fantasies which were stirring in me
‘underground,’ I knew that I had to let myself plummet down into
them, as it were . . . It was during Advent of the year 1913—
December 12, to be exact—that I resolved upon the decisive step.
I was sitting at my desk once more, thinking over my fears. Then I
let myself drop. Suddenly it was as if the ground literally gave way
beneath my feet, and I plunged down into the dark depths.29
11
of Teilhard and Jung as they took the brave and fateful steps of
letting themselves drop beyond the light of consciousness and enter
the formless area that separates each of us from what Jung calls “the
cosmic abyss.” Both men saw these moments as pivotal in their
lives—and ultimately in their careers, their vision, and their gifts to
human understanding.
The fruit of Teilhard’s inner journey was his awareness of the
Divine Milieu, the seed of whose energy became for him the Cosmic
Christ and the Omega Point. In his period of inner descent and in
his subsequent integration of that experience into his life and work,
Jung found the world of the archetypes of the unconscious, leading
eventually to the archetype of the Self, which he saw as a tran-
scendent reality, represented by the image of the Christ in Western
civilization.31
12
Wherever being in fieri is produced, suffering and wrong imme-
diately appear as its shadow: not only as a result of the tendency
towards inaction and selfishness found in creatures, but also
(which is more disturbing) as the inevitable concomitant of their
effort to progress. Original sin is the essential reaction of the finite
to the creative act . . . It is the reverse side of all creation.34
13
personal and collective psychic elements which, because of their
incompatibility with the chosen conscious attitude, are denied
expression in life and therefore coalesce into a relatively
autonomous “splinter personality” with contrary tendencies in the
unconscious.37
For Jung, the first task of the individual seeking to relate to the
content of the personal unconscious was to confront this element of
the shadow, which contains within it the repressed or unrealized
elements of the psyche that have been banished by the developing
conscious ego. Not all of this shadow material is “evil” in the classic
sense, but rather it contains culturally banished elements that need
to be integrated into conscious life for wholeness to occur. “Ego and
shadow,” writes Jungian analyst Joseph Henderson, “although
separate, are inextricably linked together in much the same way as
thought and feeling are related to each other.”38
Jung’s understanding of the nature of the shadow in the personal
unconscious does not, however, deny the reality of evil. Evil
manifests itself in human action, not only in personal experience,
but also in the collective experience of humanity and culture. Jung
writes: “Who says that evil in the world we live in, that is right in
front of us, is not real! Evil is terribly real, for each and every
individual.”39 “None of us stands outside humanity’s black collective
shadow.”40
Today as never before it is important that human beings should
not overlook the danger of the evil lurking within them. It is
unfortunately too real, which is why psychology must insist on the
reality of evil and must reject any definition that regards it as
insignificant or actually non-existent.41
14
Creator, who acts from a position of ultimate power. To blame the
existence of evil in the world on human beings through the act of
original sin does not take into account the ambivalent nature of
ultimate reality. 42
Both Teilhard and Jung look beyond the symbols of orthodoxy to
attempt to understand the nature of the shadow cast by the light of
creation and the light of consciousness. Entropy and disintegration
are for them natural results of the evolutionary process unfolding in
time. The human soul becomes a vehicle for stepping beyond the
physical world into the realm of psyche and spirit, the “inner”
dimension of evolution that Teilhard calls radial energy.
15
Ever since my childhood I had been engaged in the search for the
Heart of Matter, and so it was inevitable that sooner or later I
should come up against the Feminine. . . . I have experienced no
form of self-development without some feminine eye turned on
me, some feminine influence at work. . . . Every day supplies more
irrefutable evidence that no man at all can dispense with the
Feminine, any more than he can dispense with light, or oxygen,
or vitamins.45
16
of the unconscious, of the primitive mind, of the history of
language and religion . . . Man cannot make it; on the contrary, it
is always the a priori element in his moods, reactions, impulses,
and whatever else is spontaneous in psychic life.47
For Jung, the anima expresses for man the element of the
feminine in the natural world, which stirs in the human soul a love
of nature and concern for the context of the Earth, which is the
womb of life. It connects one with the underlying creative forces of
life, the divine energy that resides beneath the evolutionary process.
Ultimately, it is an expression of the soul of the world, the anima
mundi. Towards the end of his life, in his autobiography, Memories,
Dreams and Reflections, Jung writes of this image contained in the
work of the alchemists, whom, he believed, projected the contents
of the collective unconscious into matter.
The green gold is the living quality which the alchemists saw not
only in man but also in organic nature. It is an expression of the
life-spirit, the anima mundi . . . who animates the whole cosmos.
This spirit [is] poured out into everything, even into inorganic
matter; present in metal and stone.48
Jung felt that, in their conjectures, the alchemists who were the
forerunners of modern chemistry had intuited a deep reality—one
that seems to reflect Teilhard’s insights regarding the inner
dimension of matter. It was Jung’s conviction that the search for
ultimate meaning in life must not be directed primarily towards the
heavens through philosophical or metaphysical speculation, but
inward, where the archetype of the self as the organizing principle of
the psyche emerges as the imago dei, the image of the divine.
17
making a sharp distinction between the ego, which, as is well
known, extends only as far as the conscious mind, and the whole of
the personality, which includes the unconscious as well as the
conscious component. The ego is thus related to the self as the
part to the whole.49
18
His kingdom is the pearl of great price, the treasure buried in the
field, the grain of mustard seed which will become a great tree,
and the heavenly city. As Christ is in us, so is the heavenly
kingdom . . . These few, familiar references should be sufficient to
make the psychological position of the Christ symbol quite clear.
Christ exemplifies the archetype of the self.53
For Jung, it was the archetype of the self that brought the
opposites together; it was the centre of wholeness in the human
psyche, the Alpha and Omega from which sprang the ego, the
individual consciousness, and the process of individuation. As a psy-
chologist, Jung affirmed that the image of Jesus of Nazareth as the
Christ had entered the collective psyche as a dynamic of the
archetype of the self for Western culture.
I have tried . . . to indicate the kind of psychic matrix into which
the Christ-figure was assimilated in the course of the centuries.
Had there not been an affinity—magnet!— between the figure of
the Redeemer and certain contents of the unconscious, the
human mind would never have been able to perceive the light
shining in Christ and seize upon it so passionately. The con-
necting link here is the archetype of the God-man, which on the
one hand became historical reality in Christ, and on the other,
being eternally present, reigns over the soul in the form of a
supraordinate totality, the self.34
Thus, one can say that in the figure of the Christ, mediated to
humanity through the archetype of the self, one meets, in fact, the
cosmic reality of God as immanent in the human psyche. Jung’s
work was in part a fulfillment of Teilhard’s prediction that beyond all
physics, biology, and psychology, there must be built a theory of
human energetics. There, science, being brought to concentrate on the
human, will find itself increasingly faced with religion.55
If Jung through his years of clinical work began to sense the
immanence of the divine in the human psyche, Teilhard found the
dimension of transcendence in his concept of the hyper-personal-
ization of the evolutionary process in the Omega Point.
19
Because it contains and generates consciousness, space-time is
necessarily convergent by nature. Consequently, followed in the
right direction, the boundless layers must coil up somewhere
ahead in a point—call it Omega—which fuses them and con-
summates them integrally in itself.56
20
who reflects the star-like natures and thus, as the smallest part and
the end of the work of Creation, contains the whole.”58 Teilhard
echoes this theme of the Human as a microcosm of the macrocosm.
If the consciousness of each monad is explicable, that monad must
be conceived not as an atom juxtaposed with other atoms, but as
a partial centre of the Whole, a particular actualizing of the
Whole . . . Not only is each one of us partially Whole—we are all
together included in, given cohesion in, a unifying association.
There is a centre which is the centre of all centres, and without
which the entire edifice of thought would disintegrate into dust.59
21
“pleasing patina,” extraordinarily thin in comparison with pow-
erfully developed layers of the primitive psyche.60 Writing in 1918,
he saw in the psyche of the German People the danger of a
primitive layer of violence, waiting to burst forth from the thin layer
of bright rationality. Such a vision led him to a pessimism about the
future of the human race that stands in stark contrast to Teilhard’s
optimism. Jung saw in the collective unconscious the seeds of both
destructive and creative behavior on the part of the human race.
The archetypes of light and darkness are active in the personal as
well as the collective psyche. Without consciousness he believed
that history is subject to eruptions from the deeper layers of the
human soul that threaten the earth itself.
Both Teilhard and Jung perceived the human race at a turning
point in its history. The eruptions of national violence which they
both experienced in the twentieth century with its two World Wars
and the development and use of the nuclear bomb gave them a
sense of the importance of maturity in consciousness and in the
transformation of culture. Teilhard writes:
What makes and classifies someone as “modern” (and scores of
our contemporaries are still not modern in this sense) is to have
become capable of seeing not only in space or in time, but in
duration—or, what amounts to the same thing, of seeing in bio-
logical space-time—and moreover, to have become incapable of
seeing anything in any other way—anything— starting with
oneself.61
22
the collective unconscious, He writes:
The modern [person]—or, let us say again, the [person] of the
immediate present—is rarely met with, for he must be conscious
to a superlative degree. Since to be wholly of the present means to
be fully conscious of one’s existence as a [person], it requires the
most intensive and extensive consciousness, with a minimum of
unconsciousness. It must be clearly understood that the mere fact
of living in the present does not make a [person] modern, for in
that case everyone at present alive would be so. He alone is
modern who is fully conscious of the present.62
These two quotations from the works of Teilhard and Jung express
the two sides of the vision necessary for modern humanity. On the
one hand, there is the outer perspective that perceives the role of
the human in the unfolding process of evolution on planet Earth.
On the other, there is the perspective that can look within,
becoming conscious of the layers of unconsciousness that stretch
beneath us into the mists of the psychic past—the “inner”
dimension that is an expression of radial energy in evolution, cul-
minating in the complexity of the human brain.
These quotations also give us some understanding of the
experience of solitary loneliness that Teilhard and Jung must have
felt in their professions and among their contemporaries. Writing
and working in the first half of the twentieth century, they were
visionaries ahead of their time. The depths of their insights into the
nature of evolution and the psyche, with the lessons to be learned
for modern history, have yet to be fully appreciated.
23
Notes
1 Richard Tarnas, Cosmos and Psyche (New York: Plume, 2007), 44.
2John Grim and Mary Evelyn Tucker, “Teilhard de Chardin: A Short Biography,”
Teilhard Studies 11 (Spring, 1984): 2.
3C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams and Reflections, ed. Aniela Jaffe, trans. Richard
and Clara Winston (New York: Random House, 1963), 20.
4 Grim, “Teilhard de Chardin,” 5.
5Barbara Hannah, Jung: His Life and Works (New York: G. P. Putnam Son’s,
1976), 127.
6Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, The Human Phenomenon, ed. Sarah Appleton-
Weber (Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 1999), 22-32.
7 Ibid., 23.
8 Ibid., 24.
9C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, vol. 8 of The Collected
Works of C. G. Jung, Bollingen Series XX, ed. Sir Herbert Read, Michael
Fordham, Gerhard Adler, trans. R. F. C. Hull (New York: Pantheon, 1960), 376.
10
C. G. Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, vol., 9ii of The
Collected Works of C. G. Jung, ed. Sir Herbert Read, Michael Fordham, Gerhard
Adler, trans. R. F. C. Hull (New York: Pantheon, 1960), 261.
11 C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 17.
12 Teilhard de Chardin, The Human Phenomenon, 30.
13 Ibid., 92-93.
14 Ibid., 95-96.
15 Ibid., 105-6.
16C. G. Jung, Civilization in Transition, vol. 10 of The Collected Works of C.G.
Jung, ed. Sir Herbert Read, Michael Fordham, Gerhard Adler, William McGuire,
trans. R. F. C. Hull (New York: Pantheon, 1960), 452.
17Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, The Divine Milieu (New York: Harper Torchbooks,
1957), 113.
18 C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 490.
24
19 Teilhard de Chardin, The Human Phenomenon, 122.
20 Ibid., 123-24.
21 Ibid., 142.
22Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, The Future of Man (New York: Harper & Row,
1964), 31.
23 Ibid., 159.
24 C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 110.
25
C. G. Jung, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, vol. 9i of The Collected
Works of C.G. Jung, ed. Sir Herbert Read, Michael Fordham, Gerhard Adler,
William McGuire, trans. R. F. C. Hull (New York: Pantheon, 1960), 3-4.
26 Ibid., 44.
27Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, The Heart of Matter (New York: Harcourt, Brace &
Jovanovich, 1978), 23.
28 Teilhard de Chardin, The Divine Milieu, 76.
29 Jung, Memories, Dreams and Reflections, 178-79.
30 Ibid., 181.
31 C. G. Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, 62-63.
32Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Christianity and Evolution (New York: Harcourt,
Brace, Jovanovich, 1971), 51-52.
33 Ibid., 33.
34 Ibid., 40.
35 Ibid., 82.
36 Ibid., 84.
37Aniela Jaffe, ed., C. G. Jung: Word and Image (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1979), 228.
38 C. G. Jung, Man and His Symbols (New York: Doubleday, 1964), 118.
39 C. G. Jung, Civilization in Transition, 465.
40 Ibid., 297.
41 C. G. Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, 53.
42 C. G. Jung, Psychology and Religion: West and East, vol. 11 of The Collected Works
25
of C.G. Jung, ed. Sir Herbert Read, Michael Fordham, Gerhard Adler, William
McGuire, trans. R. F. C. Hull, (New York: Pantheon. 1960), 355.
43 Teilhard de Chardin, Christianity and Evolution, 58.
44 Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, The Heart of Matter, 42.
45 Ibid. 58-59.
46 Ibid., 60-61.
47 C. G. Jung, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, 27.
48 C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams and Reflections, 210.
49 C. G. Jung, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, 187.
50 C. G. Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, 31.
51 Ibid., 22.
52 C. G. Jung, Psychology and Religion: West and East, 468.
53 C. G. Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, 36-37.
54 Ibid., 181-82.
55 Teilhard de Chardin, The Human Phenomenon, 202.
56 Ibid., 184.
57 Teilhard de Chardin, Christianity and Evolution, 88.
58 C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 490.
59 Teilhard de Chardin, Christianity and Evolution, 61.
60 C. G. Jung, Civilization in Transition, 12.
61 Teilhard de Chardin, The Human Phenomenon, 152.
62 C. G. Jung, Civilization in Transition, 75.
26