Louis I. Kahn - "Conversations with Students" pg. 31-32

Three aspects of architecture......
As a professional you have the obligation of learning your conduct in all relationships...in institutional relationships, and in your relationship with men who entrust you with work.

Another aspect is training a man to express himself. This is his own prerogative. He must be given the meaning of philosophy, the meaning of belief, the meaning of faith. He must know the other arts.

An architect must use round wheels, and he must make his doorways bigger than people. But architects must learn that they have other rights...their own rights. To learn this, to understand this, is giving the man the tools for making the incredible, that which nature cannot make. The tools make a psychological validity, not just a physical validity, because man, unlike nature, has choice.

The third aspect you must learn is that architecture really does not exist. Only a work of architecture exists. Architecture does exist in the mind. A man who does a work of architecture does it as an offering to the spirit of architecture.....
Jung - "Memories Dreams Reflections" pg. 326
As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being. It may even be assumed that just as the unconscious affects us, so the increase in our consciousness affects the unconscious.
Jung - "Memories Dreams Reflections" pg. 300

Rationalism and doctrinairism are the disease of our time; they pretend to have all the answers.
Jung - "Memories Dreams Reflections" pg. 311
Myth is the natural and indispensable intermediate stage between unconscious and conscious cognition. True, the unconscious knows more than the consciousness does; but it is knowledge of a special sort, knowledge in eternity, usually without reference to the here and now, not couched in language of the intellect.