C. G. Jung Quotes
I Myself Found A Fascinating Example Of This In Nietzsche's Book Thus Spake Zarathustra, Where The Author Reproduces Almost Word For Word An Incident Reported In A Ship's Log For The Year 1686. By Sheer Chance I Had Read This Seaman's Yarn In A Book Published About 1835 (half A Century Before Nietzsche Wrote); And When I Found The Similar Passage In Thus Spake Zarathustra, I Was Struck By Its Peculiar Style, Which Was Different From Nietzsche's Usual Language. I Was Convinced That Nietzsche Must Also Have Seen The Old Book, Though He Made No Reference To It. I Wrote To His Sister, Who Was Still Alive, And She Confirmed That She And Her Brother Had In Fact Read The Book Together When He Was 11 Years Old. I Think, From The Context, It Is Inconceivable That Nietzsche Had Any Idea That He Was Plagiarizing This Story. I Believe That Fifty Years Later It Has Unexpectedly Slipped Into Focus In His Conscious Mind.
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