Pathways to Bliss: Mythology and Personal Transformation (The Collected Works of Joseph Campbell)
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Joseph Campbell famously defined myth as “other people’s religion.” But he also said that one of the basic functions of myth is to help each individual through the journey of life, providing a sort of travel guide or map to reach fulfillment - or, as he called it, bliss. For Campbell, many of the world’s most powerful myths support the individual’s heroic path toward bliss.
In Pathways to Bliss, Campbell examines this personal, psychological side of myth. Like his classic best-selling books Myths to Live By and The Power of Myth, Pathways to Bliss draws from Campbell’s popular lectures and dialogues, which highlight his remarkable storytelling and ability to apply the larger themes of world mythology to personal growth and the quest for transformation. Here he anchors mythology’s symbolic wisdom to the individual, applying the most poetic mythical metaphors to the challenges of our daily lives.
Campbell dwells on life’s important questions. Combining cross-cultural stories with the teachings of modern psychology, he examines the ways in which our myths shape and enrich our lives and shows how myth can help each of us truly identify and follow our bliss.
- Listening Length8 hours and 5 minutes
- Audible release dateJune 20, 2018
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB07DVQKVW5
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
| Listening Length | 8 hours and 5 minutes |
|---|---|
| Author | Joseph Campbell, David Kudler |
| Narrator | Fred Stella |
| Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
| Audible.com Release Date | June 20, 2018 |
| Publisher | Brilliance Audio |
| Program Type | Audiobook |
| Version | Unabridged |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B07DVQKVW5 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #17,324 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #165 in Medical General Psychology #255 in Philosophy (Audible Books & Originals) #545 in Psychology (Audible Books & Originals) |
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Some of my favorite ideas I'll list below:
A myth isn't a lie... a myth points past itself to something indescribable. A myth is a metaphor.
Eternity is now. It is the transcendent dimension of the now to which myth refers.
Follow your bliss: that deep sense of being present, of doing what you absolutely must do to be yourself. If you can hang on to that, you are on the edge of the transcendent already. Your bliss can guide you to that transcendent mystery, because bliss is the welling up of the energy of the transcendent wisdom within you.
The only way to affirm life is to affirm it to the root, to the rotten, horrendous base.
One can know God only when one knows that God far surpasses anything that can be said or thought about God.
The real, important function of the Church is to present the symbol, to perform the rite, to let you behold this divine message in such a way that you are capable of experiencing it. Unfortunately, when you have a dogma telling you what kind of effect the symbol is supposed to have upon you, you're in trouble.
Perfection is inhuman. Human beings are not perfect. What evokes our love --and I mean love, not lust-- is the imperfection of the human being. So, when the imperfection of the real person, compared to the ideal of your animus or anima, peeks through, say, This is a challenge to my compassion.
It is a fashionable idiocy of youth to say the world has not come up to your expectations. "What? I was coming, and this is all they could prepare for me?" Throw it out. Have compassion for the world and those in it. Not only political life but all life stinks, and you must embrace that with compassion.
The only way one can become a human being is through relationships to other human beings.
Each of us has an individual myth that's driving us, which we may or may not know.
Mythological images are the images by which the consciousness is put in touch with the unconscious. That's what they are.
What is the great thing for which you would sacrifice your life? What makes you do what you do; what is the call of your life to you-- do you know it? The old traditions provided this mythic support for people; it held whole culture worlds together. Every great civilization has grown out of a mythic base.
Maslow's five values are the values for which people live when they have nothing to live for. Nothing has seized them, nothing has caught them, nothing has driven them spiritually mad and made them worth talking to. These are the bores. - "A bore is one who deprives us of our solitude without providing companionship."
That awakening of awe, that awakening of zeal, is the beginning, and, curiously enough, that's what pulls people together. People living for these five values (Maslow) are pushed apart. Two things pull people together; aspiration and terror.
There is no aspiration that's been put in front of us to pull people together, nor any overwhelming fear to drive us together.
Now, that's the big thing, to activate your imagination somehow. You can't do this by taking suggestions from somebody else. You must find that which your own unconscious wants to meditate on.
The work of the artist is to present objects to you in such a way that they will shine. Through the rhythm of the artist's formation, the object that you have looked at with indifference will be radiant, and you will be fixed in esthetic arrest.
What is it we are questing for? It is the fulfillment of that which is potential in each of us. Questing for it is not an ego trip; it is an adventure to bring into fulfillment your gift to the world, which is yourself. There's nothing you can do that's more important than being fulfilled. You become a sign, you become a signal, transparent to transcendence; in this way , you will find, live, and become a realization of your own personal myth.
You see, in my youth, in the days of the Depression, people who were what might be called counterculture had been kicked out of the society entirely. There was no room for them. That's different from the ones who leave out of resentment or with the intention to improve it.
What I think is that a good life is one hero journey after another. Over and over again, you are called to the realm of adventure, you are called to new horizons. Each time, there is the same problem: do I dare? There's always the possibility of a fiasco. But there's also the possibility of bliss.
I think the world lives on crazy things. The economics will work themselves out later -- you can count on it. But it's the scope of the aspiration that really matters.
Sometimes the drudgery itself can become part of the hero deed. The point is not to get stuck in the drudgery but to use it to free you.
However, this book was not really what I was expecting, and pretty disappointing on the whole. Most of the book is a primer on Freud and Jung, and social psychology. So, I guess my big annoyance is that it comes across as a load of pop psychology, with precious little in terms of mythology. Maybe it’s because I know social psychology—and how far we’ve progressed since the 1970s—but I really wanted to correct a lot of his assertions.
I also understood that it was cobbled together from multiple lectures by editors going in, but that didn’t make it any better to read. It wandered all over the place, and repeated itself a lot. I get that the editors wanted to stay true to the magic of the lectures and his lecturing style, but I almost would have rather they just put out whole lectures clearly labeled as such rather than making the pretense of this as a monograph.
There is good stuff still in here, and I still think it’s worth the read, but you need to know what you’re getting. Pop psychology that’s out of date but still thought-provoking at times, and only a sprinkling of actual mythology.
*The unnamed women in the interview(?) transcripts at the end are my favorites because they totally call out his sexist assumptions.
“The basic story of the hero journey involves giving up where you are, going into the realm of adventure, coming to some kind of symbolically rendered realization, and then returning to the field of normal life.”
“The scientist knows that at any moment facts may be found that make the present theory obsolete; this is happening now constantly. It’s amusing. In a religious tradition, the older the doctrine, the truer it is held to be.”
~ Joseph Campbell from Pathways to Bliss
This is the third review I’ve created on Joseph Campbell. As I mention in the others (A Joseph Campbell Companion and The Power of Myth), Campbell sits in the Granddaddy slot in my spiritual family tree. I heart Grandpa Joe. :)
This book is from the collected works series New World Library and the Joseph Campbell Foundation are assembling.
The prose and the presentation are stunningly beautiful. If you haven’t explored Campbell and his hero’s journey yet, get on it! I trust you’ll enjoy this gem, Pathways to Bliss.
Here are some of the Big Ideas:
1. Bliss = - Transcendent wisdom.
2. Your Life - Composed by a novelist.
3. Life Is Calling - Answer, please. :)
4. Say “Yes!” - Pretty please.
5. Bringing the Boon Back - Show me the boon!
Let go of your fears that following your quest is an ego trip… And let’s become transparent to transcendence, my friend!
(More goodness--including PhilosophersNotes on 250+ books at[...])
Top reviews from other countries
He gives his opinions of Freud, Jung, Adler etc, and it seems he knew Jung but he covers this deep subject matter with such a light touch that I remained disappointed.
About three quarters through the book I got a bit more interested however. It's fairly clear Campbell was a knowledgeable man having read much, digested it and then passed on what he had learnt.
This book is too superficial but it has given me a flavour of the nature of his work and I will when time permits try some of his other works.
I'd have to say the book is a nice light read, it's Ok, it's not great. It could have been substantially edited down but that might have removed some of the style of communication......I'm no book critic; just an opinion.
















