Hillman and the image: The dialogue of the imagination

Hillman and the image: The dialogue of the imagination

James Hillman writes that we must return to the image. He thinks of images as being like animals, alive and vital; a phenomenon that can be engaged with. Therapy, too often, is the art of interpretation rather than the art of IMAGination. The image might refer to...
Logos and Mythos: Alternative ways of knowing

Logos and Mythos: Alternative ways of knowing

Karen Armstrong argues that symbolism came more naturally to people in the pre-modern world that it does today. The Greeks referred to two different ways of knowing: Mythos and Logos. Both were essential and neither were superior to the other. Each had its sphere of...
Religion and the creative imagination: The history of God

Religion and the creative imagination: The history of God

The Greeks, who gave birth to rationalism, were not interested in using rational tools in engaging with spiritual questions. Karen Armstrong suggests that the Greeks intuitively knew that rationalism was the wrong tool for approaching the world of the numinous and the...