The phrase spiritus contra spiritum — Latin for 'spirit against spirit' — enters the depth-psychology corpus through a single, decisive source: Carl Gustav Jung's 1961 letter to Alcoholics Anonymous co-founder Bill Wilson. Jung there observed that the Latin word spiritus names both the highest religious experience and the most degrading poison, and that the sole efficacious response to alcoholic compulsion is therefore its mirror image — spiritual transformation. The formula crystallizes a paradox endemic to Jungian thought: that the destructive and the redemptive draw from the same archetypal reservoir. Within the corpus, the phrase is treated along three principal axes. First, as a clinical-theological proposition about addiction, it links the craving for alcohol to an unconscious thirst for union with the Self — what Jung called, in medieval idiom, the unio mystica. Second, scholars such as Cody Peterson expand the formula into a general theory of enantiodromia, arguing that spiritus contra spiritum names the moment when the alcoholic paradox activates and demands a metanoia — an ego collapse that makes genuine spiritual experience possible. Third, writers including David Schoen situate the phrase within the broader Jungian account of archetypal evil, where the poisoning and the healing agent are indistinguishable until the moment of surrender. The formula thus functions simultaneously as clinical shorthand, mythological commentary, and ontological claim about the structure of transformation.
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Alcohol in Latin is 'spiritus,' and you use the same word for the highest religious experience as well as for the most depraving poison. The helpful formula therefore is: spiritus contra spiritum.
Peterson quotes Jung's letter verbatim and frames spiritus contra spiritum as the paradoxical formula that identifies the alcoholic's destructive drive with the very medium of spiritual transformation.
Peterson, Cody, The Shadow of a Figure of Light, 2024thesis
the opposites of the spiritus contra spiritum paradox are activated and another, far more dangerous shadow character of Wilson's making takes center stage: 'King Alcohol,' who once donned the regal robes of Spiritus, suddenly morphs into spiritum
Peterson argues that spiritus contra spiritum names the critical dramatic moment in the alcoholic's myth when the numinous spirit-pole inverts into its poisonous shadow, precipitating ego collapse and the demand for genuine transformation.
Peterson, Cody, The Shadow of a Figure of Light, 2024thesis
His craving for alcohol was the equivalent, on a low level, of the spiritual thirst of our being for wholeness, expressed in medieval language: the Jungian with God.
Schoen reproduces Jung's foundational letter to Wilson establishing that the alcoholic's craving is a displaced longing for the Self, the theological-psychological ground on which spiritus contra spiritum rests.
Schoen, David E., The War of the Gods in Addiction: C.G. Jung, Alcoholics Anonymous and Archetypal Evil, 2020thesis
his craving for alcohol was the equivalent, on a low level, of the spiritual thirst of our being for wholeness, expressed in medieval language: the Jungian with God … you see, 'alcohol' in Latin is 'spiritus' and you use the same word for the highest rel
Dennett situates Jung's spiritus contra spiritum formula within her archetypal-astrological analysis of Wilson's individuation, linking the Latin pun to the Neptunian dynamics of dissolution and spiritual longing.
Dennett, Stella, Individuation in Addiction Recovery: An Archetypal Astrological Perspective, 2025supporting
In his letter Jung explained that he had not been able to reveal to Rowland H. the full extent of his belief that spirituality is essential to recovery, for he feared
Kurtz contextualizes the letter from which the spiritus contra spiritum formula emerged, emphasizing Jung's deliberate restraint in clinical practice and the philosophical depth of his contribution to A.A.'s spiritual foundation.
Kurtz, Ernest, Ketcham, Katherine, The Spirituality of Imperfection Storytelling and the, 1994supporting
Wilson (2005) believed that 'sociologists and psychologists who would restore self-confidence had been mistaken. God-confidence was the thing, not self-confidence.'
Dennett's discussion of 'Neptune Contra Neptune' in Wilson's chart structurally mirrors the spiritus contra spiritum logic, arguing that only a transpersonal spiritual force can counter the compulsive archetypal energy of addiction.
Dennett, Stella, Individuation in Addiction Recovery: An Archetypal Astrological Perspective, 2025supporting
this astonishing chain of events actually started long ago in your consulting room, and it was directly founded upon your own humility and deep perception.
McCabe reproduces Wilson's letter to Jung tracing the origin of A.A.'s spiritual program to Jung's consulting room, situating spiritus contra spiritum within the direct lineage from Jungian psychology to the Twelve Step movement.
McCabe, Ian, Carl Jung and Alcoholics Anonymous: The Twelve Steps as a Spiritual Journey of Individuation, 2015supporting
Benda's index entry documents that spiritus contra spiritum functions as a recognized technical term within the clinical literature on spirituality and substance-use treatment, evidencing its uptake beyond depth-psychology proper.
Benda, Brent B., Spirituality and Religiousness and Alcohol/Other Drug Problems: Treatment and Recovery Perspectives, 2006aside
An unconscious compulsion to drink is what finally leads alcoholics to experience what Wilson called (in his letter to Jung) 'ego collapse at depth.'
Peterson establishes ego collapse at depth as the experiential crisis that the spiritus contra spiritum paradox both names and requires, linking unconscious compulsion to the threshold of spiritual transformation.
Peterson, Cody, The Shadow of a Figure of Light, 2024supporting
The drunkenness of ignorance is opposed by the 'sobriety' of knowledge, a religious formula sometimes intensified to the paradox of 'sober drunkenness.'
Jonas documents the ancient Gnostic topos of intoxication as spiritual blindness overcome by a counter-intoxication of gnosis, providing deep historical precedent for the logic of spiritus contra spiritum without naming the formula directly.
Hans Jonas, The Gnostic Religion: The Message of the Alien God and the Beginnings of Christianity, 1958aside