Kabbalah

The depth-psychology corpus engages Kabbalah not as a fixed theological system but as a living symbolic reservoir whose structures—the Sephiroth, the Tree of Life, Adam Kadmon, the Shekinah, the Zohar—proved richly generative for modern psychological interpretation. Jung himself treated it as a primary instance of Jewish mystical tradition, noting the Sefer Yetsirah and the Zohar as foundational texts and citing Gershom Scholem as the authoritative guide to its scholarship. Edinger draws Kabbalistic figures—particularly Tifereth and Shekinah—into direct alignment with Jungian concepts of the God-image and the Self. Armstrong traces Kabbalah's historical arc from Ashkenazic pietism through the Lurianic explosion following the Sephardic expulsion of 1492 and into Hasidic synthesis, reading these transformations as collective psychological responses to catastrophe and exile. Hillman appropriates the descending Kabbalistic Tree as a myth of the soul's increasing embodiment. Abram focuses on the letter-mysticism of the Kabbalists—the aleph-beth as a site of synaesthetic, magical participation with divine energies. Pollack and Place treat the Kabbalah-Tarot nexus critically, acknowledging its largely post-1781 construction while affirming its operative power in Western esotericism. The central tensions are historical (authentic versus fabricated lineages), psychological (Kabbalah as projection screen for individuation imagery versus genuine Jewish theology), and comparative (its structural resemblances to Neoplatonism, Gnosticism, and Sufism).

In the library

The Kabbalah, the Jewish mystical tradition, extends from the ist cent, to the present. The printed literature comprises about 3,000 texts, and many more have never been printed. The two most important texts are the Sefer Yetsirah (Book of Creation) ... and the Sefer Ha-Zohar (Book of Splendour), 13th cent.

Jung provides a concise authoritative definition of the Kabbalah's scope and canonical texts, signaling his serious scholarly engagement with the tradition rather than mere occult appropriation.

Jung, C.G., Letters Volume 1: 1906-1950, 1973thesis

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The Kabbalah, the Jewish mystical tradition, extends from the ist cent, to the present. The printed literature comprises about 3,000 texts, and many more have never been printed. The two most important texts are the Sefer Yetsirah (Book of Creation) ... and the Sefer Ha-Zohar (Book of Splendour), 13th cent.

Repeated across Jung's correspondence, this formulation establishes the Kabbalah as a recognized scholarly object and situates it within the broader constellation of Western mystical sources Jung drew upon.

Jung, C. G., Letters Volume 2, 1951-1961, 1975thesis

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Georg Wilhelm Hegel (1770–1831) evolved a philosophy which was in some respects strikingly similar to Kabbalah... as in Kabbalah, the Spirit was willing to suffer limitation and exile in order to achieve true spirituality and self-consciousness.

Armstrong argues that Hegel's philosophy of Spirit unconsciously recapitulates core Kabbalistic dynamics of self-limitation and exile, demonstrating Kabbalah's deep structural influence on Western thought even outside Jewish transmission.

Armstrong, Karen, A History of God, 1993thesis

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As a Kabbalist, Abulafia was more concerned with the divine energy that animates the whole of creation but which the soul cannot perceive... By means of his yogic disciplines, Abulafia taught his disciples to go beyond normal consciousness to discover a whole new world.

Armstrong presents Abulafia's Kabbalistic practice as a psychologically sophisticated technique for transcending ego-bound consciousness, explicitly analogizing it to psychoanalytic methods of unlocking inhibiting complexes.

Armstrong, Karen, A History of God, 1993thesis

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A close acquaintance with the living letters, and a working knowledge of their individual energies, was assumed to give the Kabbalist magical abilities with which to ease suffering, illness, and discord in the world about him.

Abram interprets Kabbalistic letter-mysticism as a practice of synaesthetic bodily participation with the alphabet's sacred energies, foregrounding the somatic and ecological dimensions of the tradition.

Abram, David, The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World, 1996thesis

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The Kabbalist tree, as first elaborated in thirteenth-century Spain, imagines the descending branches to be conditions of the soul's life, which becomes more and more manifest and visible as it descends.

Hillman reads the Kabbalistic Tree of Life as a myth of the soul's progressive embodiment and worldly entanglement, aligning it with his archetypal psychology of incarnation and calling.

Hillman, James, The Soul's Code: In Search of Character and Calling, 1996thesis

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This new form of Kabbalism probably... The Spanish Jews who had settled in the Ottoman empire continued to suffer from a sense of dislocation coupled with the irrational but indelible guilt of the survivor.

Armstrong contextualizes the Lurianic Kabbalistic renaissance as a collective psychological response to the trauma of the 1492 expulsion, linking mystical innovation to historical catastrophe.

Armstrong, Karen, A History of God, 1993supporting

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Like Shabbetai, Nathan had studied the Kabbalah of Isaac Luria. When he met the troubled Jew from Smyrna, he told him that he was not possessed: his dark despair proved that he was indeed the Messiah.

Armstrong illustrates how Lurianic Kabbalistic doctrine—the descent into kelipoth, the release of divine sparks—was deployed to psychologically reframe personal pathology as messianic vocation.

Armstrong, Karen, A History of God, 1993supporting

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The connection with Kabalism may be in some respects like the Egyptian connection; as the later is arbitrary and apart from evidence in history, so the other is also factitious and apart from final warrant in the highest world of symbolism.

Place, quoting Waite, critically interrogates the historical legitimacy of the Tarot-Kabbalah link, arguing that the connection, though culturally powerful, is largely a modern occult construction without documentary foundation.

Place, Robert M., The Tarot: History, Symbolism, and Divination, 2005thesis

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The key ingredients in Levi's synthesis are Kabalah, Hermeticism, alchemy, Tarot, Pythagorean number symbolism, astrology, and ceremonial magic.

Place identifies Kabbalah as the cornerstone of Éliphas Lévi's nineteenth-century occult synthesis, through which it became structurally integrated into the Western esoteric Tarot tradition.

Place, Robert M., The Tarot: History, Symbolism, and Divination, 2005supporting

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Lull seemed to admire this common thread in the Sufi and Kabalistic traditions. He created his own system in which he took Islam and Judaism out of this Neoplatonism and added Christ instead.

Place traces Kabbalah's assimilation into Christian Neoplatonism through Ramon Lull, establishing the structural conditions for the later Renaissance synthesis of Jewish mysticism with Hermetic and Christian esotericism.

Place, Robert M., The Tarot: History, Symbolism, and Divination, 2005supporting

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Kabbalists picture the path made by the light of creation as a zigzag, sometimes referred to as the lightning bolt of God... it runs like this.

Pollack employs the Kabbalistic lightning-bolt path through the Sephiroth as a structural template for understanding the Tarot's Major Arcana, operationalizing Kabbalah as a living meditative framework.

Pollack, Rachel, Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A Tarot Journey to Self-Awareness, 1980supporting

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The Kabbalists, the occultists, and the Tarot designers, all deplored the separation of men and women into categories and taught unification as a final goal.

Pollack reads the Kabbalistic vision of the reunion of Shekinah and God as anticipating a post-patriarchal psychology of gender integration, aligning it with Jung's concept of the coniunctio.

Pollack, Rachel, Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A Tarot Journey to Self-Awareness, 1980supporting

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Adam is called by the Cabalists Adam Kadmon, to distinguish him from Adam the first man... Nothing can more fitly be signified thereby than the soul of the Messiah, of which Paul speaks in I Corinthians 15:45–49.

Jung, drawing on Knorr von Rosenroth's Kabbala denudata, deploys the figure of Adam Kadmon as a Kabbalistic analogue to the alchemical Anthropos and the Pauline cosmic Christ, serving the coniunctio symbolism.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Mysterium Coniunctionis: An Inquiry into the Separation and Synthesis of Psychic Opposites in Alchemy, 1955supporting

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Shekinah, in Jewish Kabbalah, 106... Tifereth, in Jewish Kabbalah, 105–107, 139, 189

Edinger's index entries for Shekinah and Tifereth signal his systematic appropriation of Kabbalistic Sephirothic concepts as structural analogues to Jungian God-image psychology.

Edinger, Edward F., The New God-Image: A Study of Jung's Key Letters Concerning the Evolution of the Western God-Image, 1996supporting

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Mathers, S. L. MacGregor, trans. The Kabbalah Unveiled. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1962.

Edinger's bibliographic citation of Mathers's translation of the Kabbalah Unveiled indicates the Golden Dawn textual tradition as a primary channel through which Kabbalistic symbolism entered depth-psychological discourse.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985aside

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For the Kabbalah with its anthropomorphic conceptions of deity the Spirit 'proceedeth from the concealed brain into the gallery of the nostrils'.

Onians cites Kabbalistic pneumatology in passing to illuminate ancient beliefs about the soul's connection to breath and the nostrils, positioning Kabbalah within a cross-cultural phenomenology of the spirit-breath.

Onians, R B, The origins of European thought about the body, the mind,, 1988aside

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Jewish mysticism see Kabbalah

Pollack's index equates Jewish mysticism with Kabbalah, reflecting the widespread assumption in Western esoteric Tarot literature that these terms are effectively synonymous.

Pollack, Rachel, Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom: A Tarot Journey to Self-Awareness, 1980aside

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Related terms