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Atom and Archetype

The Pauli/Jung Letters, 1932-1958

Atom and Archetype( )
Author: Jung, C. G.
Pauli, Wolfgang
Editor: Meier, C. A.
Translator: Roscoe, David
Preface by: Zabriskie, Beverley
ISBN:978-0-691-01207-0
Publication Date:Jun 2001
Publisher:Princeton University Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $45.00
Book Description:

In 1932, Wolfgang Pauli was a world-renowned physicist and had already done the work that would win him the 1945 Nobel Prize. He was also in pain. His mother had poisoned herself after his father's involvement in an affair. Emerging from a brief marriage with a cabaret performer, Pauli drank heavily, quarreled frequently and sometimes publicly, and was disturbed by powerful dreams. He turned for help to C. G. Jung, setting a standing appointment for Mondays at noon. Thus bloomed an...
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Book Details
Pages:312
Detailed Subjects: Psychology / Psychotherapy / Jungian
Biography & Autobiography / Science & Technology
Science / Physics / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.944 x 9.163 Inches
Book Weight:1.312 Pounds
Author Biography
Jung, C. G. (Author)
Born in Switzerland, Wolfgang Pauli was the son of a professor of physical chemistry at the University of Vienna and godson of Ernst Mach. He was a child prodigy, writing an outstanding paper on the theory of relativity at age 19, and receiving his Ph.D. from the University of Munich in 1922. After further study with Niels Bohr and Max Born, Pauli taught at the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, where he remained until his death in 1958.

His discovery of the exclusion principle enabled Pauli to explain the structure of the periodic table of elements, formulate fundamental theories of electrical conductivity in metal, and investigate magnetic properties of matter. For this discovery, Pauli received the Nobel Prize in 1945.

Pauli's second great accomplishment was resolving the "problem" of beta decay. In 1930 he addressed this question of the "missing energy" of electrons by suggesting that an emitted electron was accompanied by a neutral particle carrying an excess of energy. Pauli's intellectual ability was not matched by his manual dexterity; his colleagues laughed at the so-called Pauli effect, whereby accidents seemed to happen whenever he worked in the laboratory.

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