Introduction: Roderick Main, Christian McMillan and David Henderson; Part 1: History and contexts; Chapter 1: How do we think in terms of wholes ? Holistic voices and visions after World War II, Linda Sargent Wood; Chapter 2: Irreducible responsibility: applying holism to navigate the Anthropocene, Andrew Fellows; Chapter 3: Georg Ernst Stahl's holistic organism, Barbara Helen Miller; Part 2: Analytical Psychology; Chapter 4: From the split to wholeness: the ' coniunctio ' in C. G. Jung's Red Book, Alessio de Fiori; Chapter 5: Science as a system: connections between Carl Gustav Jung's holistic thoughts about science and his Red Book experience, Armelle Line Peltier; Chapter 6: The holistic wish: migration of feeling, thought and experience, Phil Goss; Chapter 7: Holistic education: the Jungian dilemma, Robert Mitchell; Chapter 8: Simondon and Jung: re-thinking individuation, Mark Saban; Part 3: Philosophy; Chapter 9: A whole made of holes: interrogating holism via Jung and Schelling, Gordon Barentsen; Chapter 10: Jung, Spinoza, Deleuze: a move towards realism, Robert Langan; Chapter 11: Kant's influence on Jung's vitalism in the Zofingia Lectures, Christian McMillan; Chapter 12: An emergent, critical realist understanding of holism, Ian Hornsby; Chapter 13: Synchronicity: between wholes and alterity, Rico Snellee; Chapter 14: Why don't holisms describe the whole? The psyche as a case study, John Mackey; Part 4: Practice and the arts; Chapter 15: A synchronistic experience in Serbia, Richard Berengarten; Chapter 16: The concept of kami in Shinto and holism: psychotherapy and Japanese literature, Megumi Yama; Chapter 17: The CORE Trust: the holistic approach to addiction, Jason Wright.
Holism