In hmolscience, Nathan J. Schwartz-Salant (c.1940-) is a Swiss-born American Jungian psychotherapist noted, in psychological thermodynamics, for his 1969 to present efforts to outline a type of Jungian spirituality model applied as a type of psychology.
Overview
In 1969, Schwartz published Entropy, Negentropy, and the Psyche: an Inquiry into the Structure of Psychic Energy, his PhD thesis, which was followed by articles and books on entropy and negative entropy applied to the psyche. [1]
In 1998, Schwartz published The Mystery of Human Relationships, wherein he outlines a spiritual Jungian psychology theory of relationships.
Education
Salant completed his thesis in 1969 on “Entropy, Negentropy, and the Psyche” at the C.G. Jung Institute Zurich. [1] Salant is thus a student of the work of Carl Jung. He currently has a psychotherapy practice in New York, Princeton, and New Jersey.
References
1. Schwartz, Nathan. (1969). Entropy, Negentropy, and the Psyche: an Inquiry into the Structure of Psychic Energy (WorldCat) (Google Books), 222-pgs., PhD thesis, C.G. Jung Institute Zurich.
2. Schwartz-Salant, Nathan. (1998). The Mystery of Human Relationships: Alchemy and the Transformation of the Self (entropy, pg. 11). Routledge.
Further reading
● Schwartz, Nathan and Schwartz, Sandra R. (1970). “On the Coupling of Psychic Entropy and Negentropy” (link), Spring, 51: 67-90.