ABSTRACT

This chapter attempts to elucidate how the distance between the floor and Jung's forehead has systematically existed in his psychology, and then how and why Jung planned to substantially deny the psychological difference in his psychology. It presents an example of a dream from one of his patients and his interpretation of it. The chapter examines that Jung rejected this hic in the same old depth-psychological trick. This "emphasis on the present" may be closely related to the conception of "the psychological difference", which he first introduced in that paper. Herein, the three characters of psychological truth, "eachness", "nowness" and "my-ness", were altogether missing, and therefore, the psychological difference also could not be respected. This is the substantial denial of the psychological difference; the word "denial" means that Jung was only half-conscious of the soul's ongoing movement and refused to receive it entirely. A truly modern psychologist, in place of Jung, must respect the psychological difference.