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In man’s original view of the world, as we find it among primitives, space and time have a very precarious existence. They become “fixed” concepts only in the course of his mental development, thanks largely to the introduction of measurement. In themselves, space and time consist of nothing. They are hypostatized concepts born of the discriminating activity of the conscious mind, and they form the indispensable co-ordinates for describing the behaviour of bodies in motion.[1]

C.G. Jung

References

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  1. ^ Jung, Carl Gustav (1960). The structure and dynamics of the psyche (5th ed.). Princeton, N.J., USA: Princeton University Press, Bollingen Series. p. 435. ISBN 0691097747.