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Topic: Carl Jung



  
 Carl Jung - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jung identified the anima as being the unconscious feminine component of men and the animus as the unconscious masculine component in women.
Jung considered this process of psychological growth and maturation (which he called the process of individuation) to be of critical importance to the human being, and ultimately to modern society.
According to Jung, Freud concieved the unconscious solely as a repository of repressed emotions and desires.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Jung   (4638 words)

  
 Jung, Carl Gustav. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
However, a formal break with Freud came with the publication of Jung’s revolutionary work The Psychology of the Unconscious (1912), which disagreed with the Freudian emphasis on sexual trauma as the basis for all neurosis and with the literal interpretation of the Oedipus complex.
In Psychological Types (1921) Jung elucidated the concepts of extroversion and introversion for the study of personality types.
After a stint at the University Psychiatric Clinic in Zürich, Jung worked (1902) under Eugen Bleuler at the Burgholzli Clinic.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ju/Jung-Car.html   (489 words)

  
 Carl Jung
Carl Jung is one of the most respected and recognized psychologists of all time.
Jung was a great psychologist and psychiatrist that changed the ways of psychology today.
Jung was an inspiration to all in the psychology field.
http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/fghij/jung_carl.html   (490 words)

  
 Carl Gustav Jung - Wikimedia Commons
Carl Gustav Jung (July 26, 1875 – June 6, 1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist and founder of the neopsychoanalytic school of psychology.
For a time, Jung was Freud's heir-apparent in the psychoanalytic school.
After the publication of Jung's Symbols of Transformation (1912), Jung and Freud endured a painful parting of ways: Jung seemed to feel confined by what he believed was Freud's narrow, reductionistic, and rigid view of libido.
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Carl_Gustav_Jung   (116 words)

  
 ITP Carl Jung
Carl Jung is one of the most important, most complex, and most controversial psychological theorists.
According to Jung, the archetypes are structure-forming elements within the unconscious.
Jung postulated the idea of archetypes from the experiences his patients reported.
http://www.itp.edu/about/carl_jung.cfm   (5807 words)

  
 Carl Jung
Carl Jung saw the ouroboros as an archetype and the basic mandala of alchemy.
Jung proposed and developed the concepts of the extroverted and introverted personality, archetypes, and the collective unconscious.
Jung founded analytic psychology, in some aspects a response to Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis.
http://www.crystalinks.com/jung.html   (3109 words)

  
 Jung Bio
CARL GUSTAV JUNG (1875-1961) was a Swiss-German psychoanalyst who, with Sigmund Freud, was instrumental in bringing psychology into the twentieth century by developing one of several theories of the unconscious.
Aside from his seminal work on the archetypes, Jung also developed a ground-breaking personality theory that introduced to the world the concepts of extraversion and introversion and explained human behavior as a combination of four psychic functions--thinking, feeling (better English translation: valuing), intuition, and sensation.
Indeed, as a a young man in Zurich, Jung developed the concept of the autonomous (and unconscious) complex and the technique of of free association, well before joining forces with Freud's Viennese school.
http://www.usd.edu/~tgannon/jungbio.html   (646 words)

  
 synchronicity
Carl Jung (1875-1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist and colleague of Freud's who broke away from Freudian psychoanalysis over the issue of the unconscious mind as a reservoir of repressed sexual trauma that causes all neuroses.
CARL JUNG 1875 - 1961 by Dr. C.
Jung founded his own school of analytical psychology.
http://skepdic.com/jung.html   (660 words)

  
 Carl Gustav Jung
Jung was often at pains not to complicate his theory of the Archetypes by committing himself to a metaphysical theory -- he wanted the theory to work whether he was talking about the brain or about the Transcendent -- but that was merely a concession to the materialistic bias of contemporary science.
Whether "psychoanalysis" as practiced by Freud or Jung is to be taken seriously anymore is a good question; but both men will survive as philosophers long after their claims to science or medicine may be discounted.
Schopenhauer, Otto, and Jung all represent an awareness that more exists to religion and to human psychological life than this.
http://www.friesian.com/jung.htm   (1284 words)

  
 Psychology, Astrology & Carl Jung - Metamorphosis, August 2004
Carl Jung, an early 20th-century psychoanalyst and colleague of Sigmund Freud, was very much ahead of his time in his theories of the unconscious mind.
Toward the end of his life, Jung had two dreams that worked to reverse the relationship between ego-consciousness and the unconscious, with the suggestion that it’s the unconscious existence that is the real one.
It was at this time of loneliness, isolation and self-analysis that he reconnected with his inner child and rediscovered his creative side, which helped to release a stream of fantasy figures, waking visions, and inner voices that rose out of his unconscious mind in the form of dreams.
http://www.consciousevolution.com/metamorphosis/0408/jung0408.htm   (2339 words)

  
 Carl Jung
Jung believed that there was a deeper and more significant layer of the unconscious, which he called the collective unconscious, with what he identified as archetypes, which he believed were innate, unconscious, and generally universal.
Jung saw the collective unconscious as the foundational structure of personality on which the personal unconscious and the ego are built.
Jung taught that the psyche consists of various systems including the personal unconscious with its complexes and a collective unconscious with its archetypes.
http://www.psychoheresy-aware.org/jungleg.html   (1819 words)

  
 Carl Jung: the Madame Blavatsky of psychotherapy Anthony Daniels
Jung would have understood this, as modern check-list or decision-tree doctors would not: though it is perhaps worth pointing out that it was the man’s tendency to psychotic mythologizing that resulted in the impoverished life from the true appreciation of which he had to be protected in the first place.
The present volume, Jung: A Biography by Deirdre Bair,[1] fully partakes, alas, of the prevalent disease of modern biography, the literary equivalent of terminal and untreatable heart failure, in which there is a gross swelling of the body caused by the accumulation of useless fluid.
But Jung was an intellectual rather than an empirical scientist, however painstaking his original research had been, and he was not content to potter in a laboratory for ever.
http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/22/nov03/jung.htm   (3395 words)

  
 CARL JUNG
Though Jung was Freud's protege, Jung had never been entirely sold on Freud's theory, with the result being detrimental to their relationship.
Jung's theory divides the psyche into three parts: Ego, Personal Unconscious, and the Collective Unconscious.
According to Jung, the Ego of extraverts was faced more toward the persona and outer reality, and that of introverts was faced more toward the collective unconscious and its archetypes.
http://brainmeta.com/personality/jung.php   (488 words)

  
 Carl Jung summary
A research technique Jung used to explore the complexes in the personal unconscious.
Jung believed that a human being is inwardly whole, but that most of us have lost touch with important parts of our selves.
Jung concluded that every person has a story, and when derangement occurs, it is because the personal story has been denied or rejected.
http://www.sonoma.edu/users/d/daniels/Jungsum.html   (867 words)

  
 Carl Gustav Jung
Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) was considerably important in the analytical movement for his being generally regarded as the dissident prototype, for the impact of his break as well as for the extent of the movement he created thereafter.
Forsaking the meanders of psycho-sexuality, Jung embraced spirituality and the so-called rational theology.
After a short period of personal disorders, Jung founded his own movement, and produced a considerable work, which appealed to many disciples.
http://www.freudfile.org/jung.html   (330 words)

  
 Carl Jung - near-death experiences
Carl Jung, who founded analytical psychology, centered on the archetypes of the collective unconscious.
In a hospital in Switzerland in 1944, the world-renowned psychiatrist Carl G. Jung, had a heart attack and then a near-death experience.
The following is an excerpt from his autobiography entitled Memories, Dreams, Reflections describing his near-death experience.
http://www.near-death.com/jung.html   (1665 words)

  
 Carl Jung
Jung believed the were indications of how we are connected, with our fellow humans and with nature in general, through the collective unconscious.
Jung felt that there had been a connection, somehow, between himself as an individual and humanity in general that could not be explained away.
In fact, Jung takes an approach that is essentially the reverse of the mainstream's reductionism: Jung begins with the highest levels -- even spiritualism -- and derives the lower levels of psychology and physiology from them.
http://www.ship.edu/~cgboeree/jung.html   (7394 words)

  
 Carl Jung
Carl Jung (1875-1961) is truly one of the great minds of psychology.
For Jung, the structures of the psyche are organized by unseen archetypal forces.
Individuation and Narcissism : The Psychology of the Self in Jung and Kohut
http://mythosandlogos.com/Jung.html   (2946 words)

  
 Psybernet: Jung
The term psychology as used by Jung is the sense in which I use it -- literally as a study of the psyche.
The exploration of the psychology of cyberspace relates to the collective unconscious, symbols and metaphor and the value of the imagination, all areas where Jung is an inspiration.
This Jung page especially references articles and sites that look at cyberspace in a Jungian way.
http://www.psybernet.co.nz/jung.htm   (473 words)

  
 Jung - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carl Jung (1875–1961), a Swiss psychiatrist and founder of analytical psychology
Salar Jung Museum, in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India, and houses the collection of the Salar Jung family
Jung Myung Seok (1945–), a controversial Korean religious leader
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jung   (240 words)

  
 Carl Gustav Jung
Today, Jung's significance in the field of clinical psychology, relative to Freud and to the behavourist B. Skinner, is minimal; but his influence - especially his idea of the "Collective Unconscious" - in New Paradigm and New Age thought, as well as the popular mythology of the day, is truely tremendous.
Jung was understandably stifled by the Freudian interpretation of the psyche, and formulated his own radically different, much popularised and much misunderstood, conception.
Jung was Freud's favourite disciple, and his defection, over his agreements in many areas - especially Freud's over-emphasis on sexuality (which can be seen in perspective as a response to and interpretation of the puritanical Victorian attitude of the time), and his rejection of spirituality, occultism, and religion - was a great loss for Freud.
http://www.kheper.net/topics/Jung/Jung.htm   (214 words)

  
 Unus Mundus -- Jung, Dreams and Archetypes
the Journey into Unus Mundus is devoted to Dr. Carl G. Jung, Depth Psychology, the study of Archetypes and Symbols, Healing of Soul, and Dreams.
As shocking as it might seem to me, some of you may not have even the slightest clue about: who in the heck the Swiss psychiatrist, Dr. Carl G. Jung was...
This is a practical, "down to earth" look at Jungian Psychology.
http://www.thezodiac.com/mundus.htm   (366 words)

  
 Dr. Carl Jung And The UFOs: The Real Story! - UFO Evidence
Carl Jung, Swiss psychologist, says in a report released
Jung's Collective Unconscious, was it a consciousness inherent
The influence of Jung is still clearly very strong.
http://www.ufoevidence.org/documents/doc734.htm   (4002 words)

  
 Ideas on Carl Jung - F. David Peat
In parallel with his researches in physics during the 1970s and 80s Peat continued to think about Jung's notions of the Collective Unconscious, archetypes and synchronicity.
He has also been deeply struck by Wolfgang Pauli's remark that physics must come to terms with "the irrational in matter" and that just as Jung had demonstrated the objective side to Consciousness (the Collective Unconscious) so physics must discover the subjective side to matter.
Ideas on Carl Jung - F. David Peat
http://www.fdavidpeat.com/ideas/jung.htm   (175 words)

  
 Myths-Dreams-Symbols-Carl Jung
Though Jung's analytical psychology derives from Freud's psychoanalysis, there was strife, disagreement and disappointment shared between these two great thinkers, resulting in a rift between once great friends
Two great minds postulating our understanding of dream psychology
http://www.mythsdreamssymbols.com/carljung.html   (126 words)

  
 Carl Gustav Jung
Jung observed that human behavior is not random, but instead follows identifiable patterns that develop from the structure of the human mind.
Psychological type is an explanation of human personality developed by the Swiss psychiatrist Carl G. Jung (1875-1961).
On this page you will find a calendar of Jungian workshops, lectures, and various organizations in the US and Canada, links to articles and books, archives from JUNG-PSYC (a listserv group) and alt.psychology.jung (a usenetgroup), reading groups, information about institutes and training programs, and links to other sites of interest.
http://www.meaning.ca/meaning_therapy/carl_jung.html   (98 words)

  
 Jung.org
THE TAVISTOCK LECTURES: Analytical Psychology, Its Theory and Practice, by C.G. Jung
The Washington Society for Jungian Psychology (WSJP) is a nonprofit, 501(c)(3) tax-exempt educational membership society open to all who are interested in learning more about the psychology of Carl Gustav Jung.
is preparing the Complete Works of C.G. Jung and needs your help
http://www.jung.org   (434 words)

  
 TCG's Jung Page
--"with a focus on the Carl Jung-Joseph Campbell connection, and the use of mythic stories to access the unconscious"
--dream dictionary, et al., plus info on Jung and J. Campbell.
http://www.usd.edu/~tgannon/jung.html   (152 words)

  
 Carl Jung Quotes - The Quotations Page
Carl Jung, "On the Psychology of the Unconciousness", 1917
Carl Jung, "Modern Man in Search of a Soul"
Where love rules, there is no will to power, and where power predominates, love is lacking.
http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Carl_Jung   (354 words)

  
 Carl Gustav Jung Links
Carl Jung: The Collective Unconscious & Archetypes at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/3976/Jung2.html
Carl Gustav Jung collective unconcious biography at http://www.age-of-the-sage.org/psychology/jung.html
You may need to search for the person using your browser's find function
http://elvers.stjoe.udayton.edu/history/people/Jung.html   (80 words)

  
 C. G. Jung
High-quality prints - In Search of C. Jung
http://www.cgjung.com   (8 words)

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