Hey everyone! This is my first RUclips Video ever. Yay! While the colorization might not be perfect, I have spent a lot of hours tweaking it manually. I hope you enjoy the video!
Hi, thanks for your work! Genuine question here, when you colour a black and white video, how do you know which are the real ones? Or do you color it according to your imagination?
@@perpetualmotion357I think meaning comes through on many different levels. Be it relationships, artistic expression, family, community, country etc. God being the ultimate / last circle of meaning. So without that, and the whole culture that comes with it, people are going to attempt to reaffirm their meaning in other ways. Some will do what needs to be done and see Jung’s works for inner work. Others will overcompensate and seek validation from others, which can be taken to the extreme, as we often see now.
What a bane to Humanity, there had always been a dark aura even Freud wouldn't touch. It needs to be understood he built his theories on the foundation of Racism, Misogyny, and anti-Semitism. There was definitely a sense of the dark heart about him
Crazy how he wanted to be an archeologist, but ended up as a psychologist. In a way, however, he was his own type of archeologist, one that has further helped us to "excavate" the recesses of the human mind... strange how life works out sometimes.
Think about your titans, heroes, role-models, the poets and philosophers and painters that you really, truly love and admire. The ones who could weave beauty with just a few well-chosen words, who lived and loved and lost a million, billion times over, once for each heart-wounded reader. Ask them, if you could, where they thought they'd be in ten years when they were your age. Five years. Two. Ask them if they had life plans, and if they did, how accurate any of them proved to be. They'd laugh in your face. They'd find your naïveté endearing and tragic. That life has any meaningful, predictable causal narrativity is the greatest lie you and so many of our peers have internalized into axiomatic dictum. Van Gogh never picked up a paintbrush until he was 27. Nietzsche, at your age, was studying theology. Hesse was working as an apprentice printmaker. DFW was studying mathematics and modal logic. Walter Benjamin studied law, as did Flaubert and Baudelaire. William Gibson draft-dodged to Canada and lived off of charity and thrifting. Basquiat was homeless. Ask Dostoevsky, if you could, if when he worked as an engineer just out of military school he thought he'd become one of the world's most important writers. Life, for the good ones, the ones worth fucking and discovering and, yes, loving, makes no goddamn sense until after the fact. To believe otherwise is to do yourself and others a great disservice, is to live a bourgeois compromise of stagnation and banality.
The improved audio is life changing. I previously haven’t been able to listen to this interview intently because of the quality of the recording. If not for your work I wouldn’t yet have the opportunity to connect with Jung so much more deeply as I feel now. I’ve been in Jungian Analysis for 5 years! The work you did is extremely meaningful to me 🤍
This is absolutely amazing. As a longtime admirer of Jung, this is a blessing. Thank you for this closer glimpse of one the greatest minds this world has ever known.
The wisest part of that statement was his emphasis on how little we put towards understanding the human mind and correcting for the social dynamics that lead to ignorant and violence-promoting mindsets.
Imagine if we took a fifth of school time dedicated towards empathy training; just sincerely immersing your mind in someone elses shoes thats from a group you dislike.
This is beautiful, thank you for doing this. How well said, "I don't need to believe, I know". For me, to believe it to acquire an external idea and keep it as your own. You need some level of convincing yourself, your experiences with the object of your belief have probably not been very personal. You may remember someone saying it to you, or reading it somewhere. So, it's something to sustain: to maintain the state of belief. But knowing is a much more powerful thing, it's when you identify an external thing because it is inside you. It's when a piece of information feels like remembering it, not learning it. Knowing doesn't just happen in your brain, it happens in the body and the soul, it is felt. More than anything, is something that would be impossible to disregard because you've experienced it. It would be like denying the wind. Your recollections of knowing are not a phrase on a book or someone's sermon, they are deeply personal experiences charged with emotions, memories and moments.
I love his depth of thoughts. He looks at all with such inquisitions And in this is forgiveness of what we still don’t know. Possibilities still. To me it’s humbling and I then converse with God. And it becomes, leave it to me. Amen
When asked about his dispute about freud which he didn’t want to talk about out of respect for him. “His regards last longer than life.” What a great response.🙏
Wow!!!! I went through almost 6 months of intensive outpatient DBT therapy, and have been working on things for close to a decade now between between earning a psychology degree, and also recovering at the same time. I too, am an INFJ-T, and to hear Carl Jung share the exact same feelings regarding anger is really a relief! You question yourself in life if you were the problem, especially within your heavily narcissistic family unit - furious anger is often an unfortunate side effect from having a bully of a sibling, and it's probably innate to begin with! Good to know, straight from the horse's mouth, I am abnormally normal, and my feelings are as well! Love Jung's work, and especially his answer regarding God; all you have to do, is start seeing synchronicities happen in your life, the law of attraction, and you start to really get it!
Oh wow I haven't seen the interview yet but as an INFJ-T with a bully sister, I can relate to your post very well! Now I have to listen haha. Also the last part I totally agree, it's been proven to me there's a god and they actually resurrected Jesus (the Shroud of Turin is authentic!).
What a super work you have done. I love photography and I do it too with old family photos. And many also of C. G. Jung my great-grandfather. The colors you improved look amazing. I remember when we went to the cinema to watch it. The team who made this film also interviewed my dad Rudi Niehus and at the end called me down to say something too. I was still a very young boy and had no clue what to say. But he only appears in a short scene in the main film…. Thank you so much…. Kind Regards Mathias Niehus 😊
the same thing as u read one of his books happens while you watch him , u r simply aquiring wisdom , enlightenment and knowledge that isn,t necessarily belong to the current world or realm but rather can take u to a more holistic meaning of existence transcending all boundaries of the confining , decadent and low Grade of all material thing❤❤❤❤
Thank you!! I did not know this existed and im happy you shared it, good editing with colours. Its good to hear the man speak, very insightfull just as his books. 👍🏼😊
@@robertjohns-j4l he said that either he knows something by evidence (evidence can be subjective for me), or he simply doesn't know, it's quite simple. If he knows he does not by force need to believe. It's like those people whose mind is so fixed that would question and deny even the clear "evidence" because that threats their thinking, for me that is believing. Oh and evidence can be subjective because I am the observer, since religion is a personal matter...maybe is a thing of choice for some people don't you think. Sorry if I couldn't express myself very well, I'm learning english.
Thank you! That interview is, as far as I know, copyright-protected... I will Email the rights holder in the coming days and hope they will allow me to do it!
Here's an interesting (to me) anecdote. I remember when I first became "conscious" and self aware. I was 6 or so years old and I got off the school bus to walk a small stretch of road to my daycare. Nothing out of the ordinary, but this time I had to pee really bad and when weighing my options between running to get to the bathroom faster and in doing so risking soiling myself or just walking slowly but dealing with the pain of holding it for hours even longer as well as the other alternative options. I seemed to explode with retrospective introspect and realized that there is something fundamental about ending up in these situations where I could have avoided it but now that I was there I had to deal with what I understood as the nature of reality. Having to pee really bad and being like 100 feet from a bathroom is miniscule by comparison but even after 25+ years of contemplation that sprung from this very moment I have yet to find a situation where I am faced with a problem and the same rules don't apply. Nor have I found a loophole which I have spent just as much time looking for. The only thing to do in that thing in that situation that is not some futile attempt at a work around is to stay the course. Not "run" from my problem or find some place to hide because there are implications that go beyond what I am patient enough to explain here. But long story short my so called "awakening" that altered the course of my life was literally the result of a bathroom emergency when I was 6 years old.
The very end, "communal disoociation" through ever increasingly technological advancements is so appt for the present moment. and there will be a reaction to it, as he states.
@@leebearfield1405 We are watching and facilitating ancient archetypes as they re-establish prominence and dominance over humanity. Jung would probably say...Nothing new here.
If all ends in the grave, there would be no reason for going on a simple step, paying a bill, working one day, feeding your family, endure not only the pangs and pains, but also the joys of life. Life needs flavor, even that of tears.
In the first three minutes Carl describes a spiritual awakening and the interviewer doesn't understand it and moves on asking him about his parents. Damn!
Looks like there was another interview in 1957 titled something like "Great Minds of the 20th Century: Dr. Carl Jung". I saw a RUclips video that was 3 hours long. It'd be awesome if you released a colorized/remastered version of that video as well!
"I don't need to believe I know" WTF!!? I can't wrap my head around the fact the interviewer just let this slide and immediately started questions on his education. What a missed opportunity!
Holy heck, im laughing out loud at Jung talking about his shitty teacher and how he roughed some teens up! Thank you for the interview, the audio is very clear!
Hey everyone! This is my first RUclips Video ever. Yay! While the colorization might not be perfect, I have spent a lot of hours tweaking it manually. I hope you enjoy the video!
Colourisation gives it a lot of life. Keep this up would love to see more.
Thanks a lot for the kind words! I'll try to keep uploading regularly. Suggestions are welcome!
Hi, thanks for your work!
Genuine question here, when you colour a black and white video, how do you know which are the real ones? Or do you color it according to your imagination?
thanks
Seeing Jung interviewed in color is great.
He was 84-85 here and passed away 2 years later. He was still pretty sharp-minded at his advanced age.
😮 He could pass for ten years younger than that!
He is 10 times smarter than our presidents and politicians such as Biden.
Yes, but now i want to hear a "passing of time" from Kama(i)la H.
"man cannot stand a meaningless life" what a banger to end this interview with.
Tell this to atheistic scientist establishment today.
Not believing in a God doesn't negate having a meaningful life.
@@perpetualmotion357I think meaning comes through on many different levels. Be it relationships, artistic expression, family, community, country etc. God being the ultimate / last circle of meaning. So without that, and the whole culture that comes with it, people are going to attempt to reaffirm their meaning in other ways. Some will do what needs to be done and see Jung’s works for inner work. Others will overcompensate and seek validation from others, which can be taken to the extreme, as we often see now.
@@perpetualmotion357 Nonetheless, all-too-common scientific worldviews imply meaning does not even exist.
What a gift to humanity
What a bane to Humanity, there had always been a dark aura even Freud wouldn't touch. It needs to be understood he built his theories on the foundation of Racism, Misogyny, and anti-Semitism.
There was definitely a sense of the dark heart about him
I love how he laughs when talking about his grandchildren stealing his things ❤
He seems to adore them, @aloneboarder.
Crazy how he wanted to be an archeologist, but ended up as a psychologist. In a way, however, he was his own type of archeologist, one that has further helped us to "excavate" the recesses of the human mind... strange how life works out sometimes.
He was an archeologist of the psyche
@@sharoncelani5594 yes indeed, thank you for putting it a tad more eloquently.
Think about your titans, heroes, role-models, the poets and philosophers and painters that you really, truly love and admire. The ones who could weave beauty with just a few well-chosen words, who lived and loved and lost a million, billion times over, once for each heart-wounded reader.
Ask them, if you could, where they thought they'd be in ten years when they were your age. Five years. Two. Ask them if they had life plans, and if they did, how accurate any of them proved to be. They'd laugh in your face. They'd find your naïveté endearing and tragic. That life has any meaningful, predictable causal narrativity is the greatest lie you and so many of our peers have internalized into axiomatic dictum.
Van Gogh never picked up a paintbrush until he was 27. Nietzsche, at your age, was studying theology. Hesse was working as an apprentice printmaker. DFW was studying mathematics and modal logic. Walter Benjamin studied law, as did Flaubert and Baudelaire. William Gibson draft-dodged to Canada and lived off of charity and thrifting. Basquiat was homeless. Ask Dostoevsky, if you could, if when he worked as an engineer just out of military school he thought he'd become one of the world's most important writers.
Life, for the good ones, the ones worth fucking and discovering and, yes, loving, makes no goddamn sense until after the fact. To believe otherwise is to do yourself and others a great disservice, is to live a bourgeois compromise of stagnation and banality.
Interesting. Freud also had an obsession with archaeology
Profound
The colors are great but the best thing about this video is the audio quality and the captions.
Thank you! I'm glad you pointed out the captions, as I put some effort into adding them.
Thanks for doing that. They are really helpfull for non-native speakers _👍😎_ @@DustyArchiver
@@xmariokiler2443 they're also very helpful to native speakers 😂 his accent is definitely rough at times, kinda slurs his words together or away
The improved audio is life changing. I previously haven’t been able to listen to this interview intently because of the quality of the recording. If not for your work I wouldn’t yet have the opportunity to connect with Jung so much more deeply as I feel now.
I’ve been in Jungian Analysis for 5 years! The work you did is extremely meaningful to me 🤍
This is absolutely amazing. As a longtime admirer of Jung, this is a blessing. Thank you for this closer glimpse of one the greatest minds this world has ever known.
I could listen to him for days... Thank you so much for your work. This video is a bliss. Regards
Amazing! The audio is much much better. And looks good too!
Thanks, I really appreciate it!
"Man is the great danger " wise words
The wisest part of that statement was his emphasis on how little we put towards understanding the human mind and correcting for the social dynamics that lead to ignorant and violence-promoting mindsets.
Imagine if we took a fifth of school time dedicated towards empathy training; just sincerely immersing your mind in someone elses shoes thats from a group you dislike.
Ultron was right 👍
were you touched by this sentence?
It depends on which men he was talking about. Which men?............
This is beautiful, thank you for doing this. How well said, "I don't need to believe, I know". For me, to believe it to acquire an external idea and keep it as your own. You need some level of convincing yourself, your experiences with the object of your belief have probably not been very personal. You may remember someone saying it to you, or reading it somewhere. So, it's something to sustain: to maintain the state of belief. But knowing is a much more powerful thing, it's when you identify an external thing because it is inside you. It's when a piece of information feels like remembering it, not learning it. Knowing doesn't just happen in your brain, it happens in the body and the soul, it is felt. More than anything, is something that would be impossible to disregard because you've experienced it. It would be like denying the wind. Your recollections of knowing are not a phrase on a book or someone's sermon, they are deeply personal experiences charged with emotions, memories and moments.
Well said!
Thank you for your hard work. It is wonderful to listen to Carl Jung in his own words and voice.
This is amazing!!! Thank you so much for the hard work!
Thank you! I'm glad you liked it
Thank you for this gem. Uncle Jung is truly a blessing.
Thanks for taking the time to do this. The twinkle in his eye is all the more profound in colour ❤
I love his depth of thoughts. He looks at all with such inquisitions And in this is forgiveness of what we still don’t know. Possibilities still. To me it’s humbling and I then converse with God. And it becomes, leave it to me. Amen
When asked about his dispute about freud which he didn’t want to talk about out of respect for him. “His regards last longer than life.” What a great response.🙏
I can´t quite grasp seeing one of the greatest minds of mankind, as this regular man, just being casually amazing and human.
Wow, just wow, to think like this in the 50s! Thank you, Carl Jung
What a treat to hear this interview! Thanks for sharing!
Wow!!!! I went through almost 6 months of intensive outpatient DBT therapy, and have been working on things for close to a decade now between between earning a psychology degree, and also recovering at the same time. I too, am an INFJ-T, and to hear Carl Jung share the exact same feelings regarding anger is really a relief! You question yourself in life if you were the problem, especially within your heavily narcissistic family unit - furious anger is often an unfortunate side effect from having a bully of a sibling, and it's probably innate to begin with! Good to know, straight from the horse's mouth, I am abnormally normal, and my feelings are as well! Love Jung's work, and especially his answer regarding God; all you have to do, is start seeing synchronicities happen in your life, the law of attraction, and you start to really get it!
Best wishes hope you find some peace
Oh wow I haven't seen the interview yet but as an INFJ-T with a bully sister, I can relate to your post very well!
Now I have to listen haha.
Also the last part I totally agree, it's been proven to me there's a god and they actually resurrected Jesus (the Shroud of Turin is authentic!).
The undiscovered Self. Good to see him live , and in color.
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! ITS SO GOOD!!!
Well done and thanks. Watched in B+W many times before but great to get even a tiny bit closer to the great Man himself. 💙
Such a great work!! thanks for this gift
This is absolutely fantastic. Barely started listening to it and I can see the effort behind this. Thank you very much
I am really grateful for your kind words, thank you! More (Jung) to come!
This video is incredibly well made; I'm so happy its made his work more accessible. Brilliant job!
What a super work you have done. I love photography and I do it too with old family photos. And many also of C. G. Jung my great-grandfather. The colors you improved look amazing. I remember when we went to the cinema to watch it. The team who made this film also interviewed my dad Rudi Niehus and at the end called me down to say something too. I was still a very young boy and had no clue what to say. But he only appears in a short scene in the main film….
Thank you so much…. Kind Regards Mathias Niehus 😊
Today(27/5/24) i subscribe this channel, 12:07pm,tatanagar, jharkhand, india.
Love & respect to all of you
the same thing as u read one of his books happens while you watch him , u r simply aquiring wisdom , enlightenment and knowledge that isn,t necessarily belong to the current world or realm but rather can take u to a more holistic meaning of existence transcending all boundaries of the confining , decadent and low Grade of all material thing❤❤❤❤
This is an amazing way of describing it thank you!
Thank you!! I did not know this existed and im happy you shared it, good editing with colours. Its good to hear the man speak, very insightfull just as his books. 👍🏼😊
Thank you for everybody involved in making this video. Simple questions, but the answers are valuable and historical. 😊
@DustyArchiver ...Thank you for sharing these valuable videos such pleasure 🙏 that you made it available for us
That was fantastic. Thank you so much for the work you put into that.That story about the patient looking at the sun was extraordinary.
Thank you!
"I don't need to believe, i know"
. . . ol trickster . . .
The most failed non follow-up question ever. How did the interviewer not ask what he means?
@@robertjohns-j4l he said that either he knows something by evidence (evidence can be subjective for me), or he simply doesn't know, it's quite simple. If he knows he does not by force need to believe. It's like those people whose mind is so fixed that would question and deny even the clear "evidence" because that threats their thinking, for me that is believing. Oh and evidence can be subjective because I am the observer, since religion is a personal matter...maybe is a thing of choice for some people don't you think. Sorry if I couldn't express myself very well, I'm learning english.
Imagine if this interviewer had a personality and a curiosity instead of just reading questions off of a list.
Agree entirely. At least he didn’t try to compete as one so often sees.
I was feeling the same!
@@JAL1964 We should hear Jung without needless distraction. I think the interviewer is perfect for this interview.
@@coreycox2345he failed to follow up on the religion question. Interviewer was very wooden.
@@hiker-uy1bi Because you were left with a question? I liked noticing the interviewer less. Jung used that to make points he wanted to, I guess.
Thank you 🙏🏻
This is so much better! Could you remaster the 3 hour long interview with Carl Jung please?
Thank you! That interview is, as far as I know, copyright-protected... I will Email the rights holder in the coming days and hope they will allow me to do it!
@@DustyArchiver Okay, I really appreciate it!
@@DustyArchiver how did that go chief?
@@DustyArchiver Hello sir, did you got any response?
Amazing seeing this in color. Thanks for making this!
Such wisdom. And interestingly so much related to the times we are living in: what Jung has to say about atomisation and collectivism is spot on.
Thank you soo much appreciated ❤
You're welcome! Thanks for watching
Thank you so much for sharing this!
Here's an interesting (to me) anecdote.
I remember when I first became "conscious" and self aware. I was 6 or so years old and I got off the school bus to walk a small stretch of road to my daycare. Nothing out of the ordinary, but this time I had to pee really bad and when weighing my options between running to get to the bathroom faster and in doing so risking soiling myself or just walking slowly but dealing with the pain of holding it for hours even longer as well as the other alternative options. I seemed to explode with retrospective introspect and realized that there is something fundamental about ending up in these situations where I could have avoided it but now that I was there I had to deal with what I understood as the nature of reality. Having to pee really bad and being like 100 feet from a bathroom is miniscule by comparison but even after 25+ years of contemplation that sprung from this very moment I have yet to find a situation where I am faced with a problem and the same rules don't apply. Nor have I found a loophole which I have spent just as much time looking for. The only thing to do in that thing in that situation that is not some futile attempt at a work around is to stay the course. Not "run" from my problem or find some place to hide because there are implications that go beyond what I am patient enough to explain here. But long story short my so called "awakening" that altered the course of my life was literally the result of a bathroom emergency when I was 6 years old.
I love this. Thank yousno much for showing up in my feed somehow. Im grateful 🥰
So lovely you told me of your visitation there.
What a wonderful, informative interview. Thank you so much!
I'm so glad I found this channel
15:51 Long, penetrating conversations with Freud🤣🤣🤣 Don’t blame me for pointing it out, I couldn’t help it; it was too easy
What an amazing interview. Thanks!❤❤❤
The very end, "communal disoociation" through ever increasingly technological advancements is so appt for the present moment. and there will be a reaction to it, as he states.
thanks keep going
Thank you for posting these interviews with Jung. I wonder what he would say if he was alive now...
Impossible to say. I would bet it would be quite a different take than we might imagine.
@@leebearfield1405 We are watching and facilitating ancient archetypes as they re-establish prominence and dominance over humanity. Jung would probably say...Nothing new here.
He’d say “BRAVO” … I’d venture a guess !
💞L
Damn, your work is legendary! I suggest to also remasterize Heidegger interviews.
Wow, thanks so much! Means a lot. I am still learning to master these restorations...
Imagine being the normal guy in the car honking the horn at the 29 minute mark during this Epic interview of historic proportions
Impressive. Many thanks for this video.
He was a brilliant mind, the happyness in conscious man is extremely rare
Wonderful work. Thank you.
Thanks for the video.
This is absolutely the most accurate and heartfelt way of quantifying these thoughts! Thank you!
Thank you very much for your work!
Saw your IG and followed over to your RUclips. Thanks for posting this
Amazing❤
Love your effort and dedication ❤❤
just listen to his voice just amazing
Amazing, 11 years was also my moment of self.
Thank you for this 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
18:25 have mad respect for this man. This increased it.
4:40 “oh I knew he was very fallible” 😂
That’s a good dad.
thank you very much 🙏
6:32 Best Moment! "I know, i don´t need to believe. I know."
deep love for this man
The OG podcast
Wow, this is surreal
Bill donahue and his work brought me here😊😊
And thank you for remastering!!!😊😊😊😅
this single work of yours forced me to subscribe to you . great work mate
If all ends in the grave, there would be no reason for going on a simple step, paying a bill, working one day, feeding your family, endure not only the pangs and pains, but also the joys of life. Life needs flavor, even that of tears.
Great job
Good work, thanks!
In the first three minutes Carl describes a spiritual awakening and the interviewer doesn't understand it and moves on asking him about his parents. Damn!
Looks like there was another interview in 1957 titled something like "Great Minds of the 20th Century: Dr. Carl Jung". I saw a RUclips video that was 3 hours long.
It'd be awesome if you released a colorized/remastered version of that video as well!
amazing work! feels like I'm there
Tengkyu mbah jung, barokah always
Keep going man👊🏼
so cool. thanks a lot
Great topic!!
that's so cool
Great vídeo! Well done !!
Awesome!!
Profound, thank you.
The man was authentic, so fascinating and insightful
Would have love to see Alan Watts to be the interviewer
YEAH !" Made my day . . .
"These regards last longer than life, I'd prefer not to talk about it."
"I don't need to believe I know" WTF!!? I can't wrap my head around the fact the interviewer just let this slide and immediately started questions on his education. What a missed opportunity!
Fortunately Jung did clarify what he meant after the Interview. If you google it you should be able to find
@@samuelpoulston2964what did he mean by it can you send the link or tell me what I should search for
@@samuelpoulston2964 if "you google", you find a propaganda, or good chair to buy. But definitely not answer to that question
It’s quite odd. Jung seems to be giving cues to prompt the man to ask, “Why or how do you know?”
They say in zen, a twinkle of an eye can deliver the message, it's up to the receiver to be receptive.
Holy heck, im laughing out loud at Jung talking about his shitty teacher and how he roughed some teens up! Thank you for the interview, the audio is very clear!
I am not my own history.. what a gem
merci !!!
"Difficult to answer" I wanted to write something about that answer, but I can only write that it is difficult to express what I wanted to express.
Asking questions that end with ".... when you were young"