Psychology
Soul-Violence: The Collected English Papers of Wolfgang Gigerenzer, Volume 3
Psychology emerged as a modern discipline only when external forms (myth, ritual, religion) could no longer contain the soul's interiority. The soul requires violence—destructive force, rupture,…
stub·source··Apr 25, 2026
Soul-Violence: The Collected English Papers of Wolfgang Gigerenzer, Volume 3
Author: Wolfgang Gigerenzer, M.D. (Jungian analyst, depth psychologist)
Year: 2020 (Routledge; originally 2008 Spring Journal Books)
Original file: /RAW/books/Soul Violence.md
Source type: Collected papers (academic essays in depth psychology)
Original publication: Papers written over 3+ decades
Core Argument
Psychology emerged as a modern discipline only when external forms (myth, ritual, religion) could no longer contain the soul's interiority. The soul requires violence—destructive force, rupture, death—as intrinsic to its self-realization. Archaic sacrificial practices represent the soul's most authentic expression before this violence became symbolized, sublimated, and repressed in modernity.
Contemporary psychology has become a defensive fortress against genuine soul-encounter through reduction to metaphor/symbol, appeal to archetypal innocence, esotericism, and therapeutic ideology. Psychology has inverted the soul's actual operations to protect ego-consciousness from real necessity.
Key Contributions
- Systematic methodology of immanent vs. external reflection as foundation for psychology
- Two senses of "meaning" (ontological vs. utilitarian)—distinguishes archaic from modern consciousness
- "The child" as logical form of consciousness (not literal children)
- Three stances as phenomenology of consciousness encountering its other
- Sacrifice of Isaac as watershed dividing archaic from modern consciousness
- Fairytale/archetypal methodology showing how consciousness generates reality through stance
- Critique of contemporary Jungian psychology's defensive operations
- Money as modern God manifestation
- Consciousness development framework: anima stage → animus stage → syzygy stage
Limitations
- Interpretations of pre-modern consciousness are speculative (necessarily so)
- Dense philosophical/logical register demands close reading
- Some conclusions about therapeutic ideology and contemporary psychology are polemical
- Not empirical/scientific in conventional sense; depth psychological and philosophical
- Requires reader to reverse direction of modern consciousness to engage with archaic psyche
- Not suitable for readers seeking practical therapeutic application
Structure
- Introduction: Jung's insight on psychology's historical emergence; methodological foundations
- Part I: Basic concepts (child, shadow, animus) and three stances
- Part II: Archaic psyche (sacrifice, killings, blood rites, reality/irreality debate with Hillman)
- Part III: Psychology's historical role and place
- Part IV: Contemporary applications (Islamic terrorism as repressed sacrifice consciousness)
Epistemic Notes
Gigerenzer is a practicing Jungian analyst with rigorous philosophical training and 30+ years of theoretical work. Papers are peer-engaged scholarship with close reading of primary texts (Jung, ancient sources, classical philosophy). Not claiming empirical proof but depth-psychological insight grounded in phenomenological and philosophical rigor.
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