Abstract
The article examines the genesis, essence and prospects of religion in the interpretation of the outstanding Swiss philosopher and psychoanalyst Carl Gustav Jung. The problem of the correlation of religion and myth, the possibility of religious texts to enrich psychoanalysis, the ability of psychoanalysis to influence religious thinking is investigated. It is shown that C.G. Jung refers religion to a purely psychological phenomenon and believes that religion originally arose as one of the principles of the organization of the psyche. Jung describes the "inner god" archetype as one of the key archetypes of the collective unconscious. C.G. Jung calls religious experience numinous (sacred), considering it the most valuable thing that can happen in a person's life. We are talking about a dynamic action or impact that is not conditioned by an act of will. On the contrary, it itself measures and controls the person, who is always more a victim of this influence than the creator. The individual experiences this influence not from an external being — God, as the church teaches, but from his own unconscious, if psychological conditions allow it. However, such an experience, the meaning of which is always in the restructuring of a conscious personality, is infinitely dangerous, since it often ends with mental disorders of religious origin that destroy the personality. Religion, in the literal sense of the word, is, according to Jung, a specific conscious work on mastering this experience. C.G. Jung's views on religion have received contradictory assessments. Many criticized him for his mysticism, because he was looking for a rational explanation of religion. Psychoanalysts were outraged that he was taking this research beyond the limits of psychoanalysis. The clergy were afraid that Jung was proclaiming a new religion and acting as its prophet himself.
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