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Analytical psychology

Analytical psychology (German: Analytische Psychologie, sometimes translated as analytic psychology and referred to as Jungian analysis) is a term coined by Carl Jung, a Swiss psychiatrist, to describe research into his new "empirical science" of the psyche. It was designed to distinguish it from Freud's psychoanalytic theories as their seven-year collaboration on psychoanalysis was drawing to an end between 1912 and 1913.[1][2][3] The evolution of his science is contained in his monumental opus, the Collected Works, written over sixty years of his lifetime.[4]

The history of analytical psychology is intimately linked with the biography of Jung. At the start, it was known as the "Zurich school", whose chief figures were Eugen Bleuler, Franz Riklin, Alphonse Maeder and Jung, all centred in the Burghölzli hospital in Zurich. It was initially a theory concerning psychological complexes until Jung, upon breaking with Sigmund Freud, turned it into a generalised method of investigating archetypes and the unconscious, as well as into a specialised psychotherapy.

Analytical psychology, or "complex psychology", from the German: Komplexe Psychologie, is the foundation of many developments in the study and practice of psychology as of other disciplines. Jung has many followers, and some of them are members of national societies around the world. They collaborate professionally on an international level through the International Association of Analytical Psychologists (IAAP) and the International Association for Jungian Studies (IAJS). Jung's propositions have given rise to a multidisciplinary literature in numerous languages.

Among widely used concepts specific to analytical psychology are anima and animus, archetypes, the collective unconscious, complexes, extraversion and introversion, individuation, the Self, the shadow and synchronicity.[5][6] The Myers–Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) is based on another of Jung's theories on psychological types.[5][7][8] A lesser known idea was Jung's notion of the Psychoid to denote a hypothesised immanent plane beyond consciousness, distinct from the collective unconscious, and a potential locus of synchronicity.[9]

The approximately "three schools" of post-Jungian analytical psychology that are current, the classical, archetypal and developmental, can be said to correspond to the developing yet overlapping aspects of Jung's lifelong explorations, even if he expressly did not want to start a school of "Jungians".[5](pp. 50–53)[10] Hence as Jung proceeded from a clinical practice which was mainly traditionally science-based and steeped in rationalist philosophy, anthropology and ethnography, his enquiring mind simultaneously took him into more esoteric spheres such as alchemy, astrology, gnosticism, metaphysics, myth and the paranormal, without ever abandoning his allegiance to science as his long-lasting collaboration with Wolfgang Pauli attests.[11] His wide-ranging progression suggests to some commentators that, over time, his analytical psychotherapy, informed by his intuition and teleological investigations, became more of an "art".[5]

The findings of Jungian analysis and the application of analytical psychology to contemporary preoccupations such as social and family relationships,[12][page needed] dreams and nightmares, work–life balance,[13] architecture and urban planning,[14][page needed] politics and economics, conflict and warfare,[15][page needed] and climate change are illustrated in several publications and films.[16][17][page needed][18][19][page needed]

Origins edit

 
An 1890 etching of Burghölzli hospital where Carl Jung began his career

Jung began his career as a psychiatrist in Zürich, Switzerland. Already employed at the Burghölzli hospital in 1901, in his academic dissertation for the medical faculty of the University of Zurich he took the risk of using his experiments on somnambulism and the visions of his mediumistic cousin, Helly Preiswerk. The work was entitled, "On the Psychology and Pathology of So-Called Occult Phenomena".[20] It was accepted but caused great upset among his mother's family.[21] Under the direction of psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler, he also conducted research with his colleagues using a galvanometer to evaluate the emotional sensitivities of patients to lists of words during word association.[21][22][23][24] Jung has left a description of his use of the device in treatment.[25][26][27] His research earned him a worldwide reputation and numerous honours, including honorary Doctorates from Clark and Fordham Universities in 1909 and 1910 respectively. Other honours followed later.[28][29]

Although they began corresponding a year earlier, in 1907 Jung travelled to meet Sigmund Freud in Vienna, Austria. At that stage, Jung, aged thirty-two, had a much greater international renown than the forty-nine-year-old neurologist.[21] For a further six years, the two scholars worked and travelled to the United States together. In 1911, they founded the International Psychoanalytical Association, of which Jung was the first president.[21] However, early in the collaboration, Jung had already observed that Freud would not tolerate ideas that were different from his own.[21]

Unlike most modern psychologists, Jung did not believe in restricting himself to the scientific method as a means to understanding the human psyche. He saw dreams, myths, coincidence, and folklore as empirical evidence to further understanding and meaning. So although the unconscious cannot be studied by using direct methods, it acts as a useful working hypothesis, according to Jung.[30] As he said, "The beauty about the unconscious is that it is really unconscious."[31] Hence, the unconscious is 'untouchable' by experimental researches, or indeed any possible kind of scientific or philosophical reach, precisely because it is unconscious.[32][33]

The break with Freud edit

 
Still talking, Jung with psychoanalytic colleagues. Front row, Sigmund Freud, G. Stanley Hall, Carl Jung. Back row, Abraham Brill, Ernest Jones, Sándor Ferenczi. 1909 in front of Clark University.

It was the publication of a book by Jung which provoked the break with psychoanalysis and led to the founding of analytical psychology. In 1912 Jung met "Miss Miller", brought to his notice by the work of Théodore Flournoy and whose case gave further substance to his theory of the collective unconscious.[34]: 213–215  The study of her visions supplied the material which would go on to furnish his reasoning which he developed in Psychology of the Unconscious (Wandlungen und Symbole der Libido) (re-published as Symbols of Transformation in 1952) (C.W. Vol. 5). At this, Freud muttered about "heresy".[35] It was the second part of the work that brought the divergence to light. Freud mentioned to Ernest Jones that it was on page 174 of the original German edition, that Jung, according to him, had "lost his way".[34]: 215  It is the extract where Jung enlarged on his conception of the libido. The sanction was immediate: Jung was officially banned from the Vienna psychoanalytic circle from August 1912. From that date the psychoanalytic movement split into two obediences, with Freud's partisans on one side, Karl Abraham being delegated to write a critical notice about Jung,[36] and with Ernest Jones as defender of Freudian orthodoxy; while on the other side, were Jung's partisans, including Leonhard Seif, Franz Riklin, Johan van Ophuijsen and Alphonse Maeder.[34]: 260 

Jung's innovative ideas with a new formulation of psychology and lack of contrition sealed the end of the Jung-Freud friendship in 1913. From then, the two scholars worked independently on personality development: Jung had already termed his approach analytical psychology (1912), while the approach Freud had founded is referred to as the Psychoanalytic School, (psychoanalytische Schule).[1]

 
Psychology of the Unconscious (1916), the book which precipitated Jung's break with Freud

Jung's postulated unconscious was quite different from the model proposed by Freud, despite the great influence that the founder of psychoanalysis had had on him. In particular, tensions manifested between him and Freud because of various disagreements, including those concerning the nature of the libido.[37] Jung de-emphasized the importance of sexual development as an instinctual drive and focused on the collective unconscious: the part of the unconscious that contains memories and ideas which Jung believed were inherited from generations of ancestors. While he accepted that libido was an important source for personal growth, unlike Freud, Jung did not consider that libido alone was responsible for the formation of the core personality.[38] Due to the particular hardships Jung had endured growing up, he believed his personal development and that of everyone was influenced by factors unrelated to sexuality.[37]

The overarching aim in life, according to Jungian psychology, is the fullest possible actualisation of the "Self" through individuation.[39][6] Jung defines the "self" as "not only the centre but also the whole circumference which embraces both conscious and unconscious; it is the centre of this totality, just as the ego is the centre of the conscious mind".[40] Central to this process of individuation is the individual's continual encounter with the elements of the psyche by bringing them into consciousness.[6] People experience the unconscious through symbols encountered in all aspects of life: in dreams, art, religion, and the symbolic dramas enacted in relationships and life pursuits.[6] Essential to the process is the merging of the individual's consciousness with the collective unconscious through a huge range of symbols. By bringing conscious awareness to bear on what is unconscious, such elements can be integrated with consciousness when they "surface".[6] To proceed with the individuation process, individuals need to be open to the parts of themselves beyond their own ego, which is the "organ" of consciousness.[6] In a famous dictum, Jung said, "the Self, like the unconscious is an a priori existent out of which the ego evolves. It is ... an unconscious prefiguration of the ego. It is not I who create myself, rather I happen to myself'.[41]

It follows that the aim of (Jungian) psychotherapy is to assist the individual to establish a healthy relationship with the unconscious so that it is neither excessively out of balance in relation to it, as in neurosis, a state that can result in depression, anxiety, and personality disorders or so flooded by it that it risks psychosis resulting in mental breakdown. One method Jung applied to his patients between 1913 and 1916 was active imagination, a way of encouraging them to give themselves over to a form of meditation to release apparently random images from the mind to bridge unconscious contents into awareness.[42]

"Neurosis" in Jung's view results from the build up of psychological defences the individual unconsciously musters in an effort to cope with perceived attacks from the outside world, a process he called a "complex", although complexes are not merely defensive in character.[6] The psyche is a self-regulating adaptive system.[6] People are energetic systems, and if the energy is blocked, the psyche becomes sick. If adaptation is thwarted, the psychic energy stops flowing and becomes rigid. This process manifests in neurosis and psychosis. Jung proposed that this occurs through maladaptation of one's internal realities to external ones. The principles of adaptation, projection, and compensation are central processes in Jung's view of psyche's attempts to adapt.

Innovations of Jungian analysis edit

Philosophical and epistemological foundations edit

 
American philosopher of pragmatism William James greatly influenced C. G. Jung's thinking.

Philosophy edit

Jung was an adept principally of the American philosopher William James, founder of pragmatism, whom he met during his trip to the United States in 1909.[21]: 255  He also encountered other figures associated with James, such as John Dewey and the anthropologist, Franz Boas.[21]: 165  Pragmatism was Jung's favoured route to base his psychology on a sound scientific basis according to historian Sonu Shamdasani.[43] His theories consist of observations of phenomena, and according to Jung it is phenomenology. In his view psychologism was suspect.[37]

Displacement into the conceptual deprives experience of its substance and the possibility of being simply named.

Throughout his writings, Jung sees in empirical observation not only a precondition of an objective method but also respect for an ethical code which should guide the psychologist, as he stated in a letter to Joseph Goldbrunner:

I consider it a moral obligation not to make assertions about things one cannot see or whose existence cannot be proved, and I consider it an abuse of epistemological power to do so regardless. These rules apply to all experimental science. Other rules apply to metaphysics. I regard myself as answerable to the rules of experimental science. As a result nowhere in my work are there any metaphysical assertions nor – nota bene – any negations of a metaphysical nature.[44]

According to the Italo-French psychoanalyst Luigi Aurigemma, Jung's reasoning is also marked by Immanuel Kant, and more generally by German rationalist philosophy. His lectures are evidence of his assimilation of Kantian thought, especially the Critique of Pure Reason and Critique of Practical Reason.[45] Aurigemma characterises Jung's thinking as "epistemological relativism" because it does not postulate any belief in the metaphysical.[45]: 19  In fact, Jung uses Kant's teleology to bridle his thinking and to guard himself from straying into any metaphysical excursions.[45]: 21  On the other hand, for French historian of psychology, Françoise Parot, contrary to the alleged rationalist vein, Jung is "heir" to mystics, (Meister Eckhart, Hildegard of Bingen, or Augustine of Hippo,[45]: 96 ) and to the romantics be they scientists, such as Carl Gustav Carus or Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert in particular, or to philosophers and writers, along the lines of Nietzsche, Goethe, and Schopenhauer, in the way he conceptualised the unconscious in particular. Whereas his typology is profoundly dependent on Carl Spitteler.[21]: 255 

Scientific heritage edit

 
Wilhelm Wundt and associates in 1880

As a trained psychiatrist, Jung had a grounding in the state of science in his day. He regularly refers to the experimental psychology of Wilhelm Wundt. His Word Association Test designed with Franz Riklin is actually the direct application of Wundt's theory. Notwithstanding the great debt of analytical psychology to Sigmund Freud, Jung borrowed concepts from other theories of his time. For instance, the expression "abaissement du niveau mental" comes directly from the French psychologist Pierre Janet whose courses Jung attended during his studies in France, during 1901. Jung had always acknowledged how much Janet had influenced his career.

 
Scarlet Ara macaws

Jung's use of the concept of "participation mystique" is owed to the French ethnologist Lucien Lévy-Bruhl:

What Rousseau describes is nothing other than the primitive collective mentality which Lucien Lévy-Bruhl has brilliantly called "participation mystique",[46]

which he uses to illustrate the surprising fact, to him, that some native peoples can experience relations that defy logic, as for instance in the case of the South American tribe, whom he met during his travels, where the men pretended they were scarlet aras birds. Finally, his use of the English expression, "pattern of behaviour", which is synonymous with the term archetype, is drawn from British studies in ethology.

The principal contribution to analytical psychology, nevertheless, remains that of Freud's psychoanalysis, from which Jung took a number of concepts, especially the method of inquiring into the unconscious through free association. Individual analysts' thinking was also integrated into his project, among whom are Sándor Ferenczi (Jung refers to his notion of "affect") or Ludwig Binswanger and his Daseinsanalyse  [de], (Daseinsanalysis). Jung affirms also Freud's contribution to our knowledge of the psyche as being, without doubt, of the highest importance. It reveals penetrating information about the dark corners of the soul and of the human personality, which is of the same order as Nietzsche's On the Genealogy of Morality (1887). In this context, Freud was, according to Jung, one of the great cultural critics of the 19th century.[47]

Divergences from psychoanalysis edit

Jungian Analysis, as is psychoanalysis, is a method to access, experience and integrate unconscious material into awareness. It is a search for the meaning of behaviours, feelings and events. Many are the channels to extend knowledge of the self: the analysis of dreams is one important avenue. Others may include expressing feelings about and through art, poetry or other expressions of creativity, the examination of conflicts and repeating patterns in a person's life. A comprehensive description of the process of dream interpretation is complex, in that it is highly specific to the person who undertakes it. Most succinctly it relies on the associations which the particular dream symbols suggest to the dreamer, which at times may be deemed "archetypal" in so far as they are supposed common to many people throughout history. Examples could be a hero, an old man or woman, situations of pursuit, flying or falling.

Whereas (Freudian) psychoanalysis relies entirely on the development of the transference in the analysand (the person under treatment) to the analyst, Jung initially used the transference and later concentrated more on a dialectical and didactic approach to the symbolic and archetypal material presented by the patient. Moreover, his attitude towards patients departed from what he had observed in Freud's method. Anthony Stevens has explained it thus:

Though [Jung's] initial formulations arose mainly out of his own creative illness,[48][49] they were also a conscious reaction against the stereotype of the classical Freudian analyst, sitting silent and aloof behind the couch, occasionally emitting ex cathedra pronouncements and interpretations, while remaining totally uninvolved in the patient's guilt, anguish, and need for reassurance and support. Instead, Jung offered the radical proposal that analysis is a dialectical procedure, a two-way exchange between two people, who are equally involved. Although it was a revolutionary idea when he first suggested it, it is a model which has influenced psychotherapists of most schools, though many seem not to realise that it originated with Jung.[50]

In place of Freud's "surgical detachment", Jung demonstrated a more relaxed and warmer welcome in the consulting room.[50] He remained aware nonetheless that exposure to a patient's unconscious contents always posed a certain risk of contagion (he calls it "psychic infection") to the analyst, as experienced in the countertransference.[51] The process of contemporary Jungian analysis depends on the type of "school of analytical psychology" to which the therapist adheres, (see below). The "Zurich School" would reflect the approach Jung himself taught, while those influenced by Michael Fordham and associates in London, would be significantly closer to a Kleinian approach and therefore, concerned with analysis of the transference and countertransference as indicators of repressed material along with the attendant symbols and patterns.[52]

Dream work edit

 
Dream Analysis, 1928–1930 seminars given by Jung, first published in English in 1984

Jung's preoccupation with dreams can be dated from 1902.[53] It was only after the break with Freud that he published in 1916 his "Psychology of the Unconscious" where he elaborated his view of dreams, which contrasts sharply with Freud's conceptualisation.[54] While he agrees that dreams are a highway into the unconscious, he enlarges on their functions further than psychoanalysis did. One of the salient differences is the compensatory function they perform by reinstating psychic equilibrium in respect of judgments made during waking life: thus a man consumed by ambition and arrogance may, for example, dream about himself as small and vulnerable person.[55][56]

According to Jung, this demonstrates that the man's attitude is excessively self-assured and thereby refuses to integrate the inferior aspects of his personality, which are denied by his defensive arrogance. Jung calls this a compensation mechanism, necessary for the maintenance of a healthy mental balance. Shortly before his death in 1961, he wrote:

To secure mental and even physiological stability, it is necessary that the conscious and unconscious should be integrated one with the other. This is so that they evolve in parallel. (Pour sauvegarder la stabilité mentale, et même physiologique, il faut que la conscience et l'inconscient soient intégralement reliés, afin d'évoluer parallèlement)[57]

Unconscious material is expressed in images through the deployment of symbolism which, in Jungian terms, means it has an affective role (in that it can sometimes give rise to a numinous feeling, when associated with an archetypal force) and an intellectual role.[58] Some dreams are personal to the dreamer, others may be collective in origin or "transpersonal" in so far as they relate to existential events.[59] They can be taken to express phases of the individuation process (see below) and may be inspired by literature, art, alchemy or mythology. Analytical psychology is recognized for its historical and geographical study of myths as a means to deconstruct, with the aid of symbols, the unconscious manifestations of the psyche. Myths are said to represent directly the elements and phenomena arising from the collective unconscious and though they may be subject to alteration in their detail through time, their significance remains similar. While Jung relies predominantly on Christian or on Western pagan mythology (Ancient Greece and Rome), he holds that the unconscious is driven by mythologies derived from all cultures. He evinced an interest in Hinduism, in Zoroastrianism and Taoism, which all share fundamental images reflected in the psyche. Thus analytical psychology focusses on meaning, based on the hypothesis that human beings are potentially in constant touch with universal and symbolic aspects common to humankind. In the words of André Nataf:

Jung opens psychoanalysis to a dimension currently obscured by the prevailing scientism: spirituality. His contribution, though questionable in certain respects, remains unique. His explorations of the unconscious carried out both as a scientist and a poet, indicate that it is structured as a language but one which is in a mythical mode. (Jung ouvre la psychanalyse à une dimension cachée par le scientisme ambiant : la spiritualité. Son apport, quoique contestable sur certains points, reste unique. Explorant l'inconscient en scientifique et poète, il montre que celui-ci se structure non-comme une langue mais sur le mode du mythe)[60]

Principal concepts edit

In analytical psychology two distinct types of psychological process may be identified: that deriving from the individual, characterised as "personal", belonging to a subjective psyche, and that deriving from the collective, linked to the structure of an objective psyche, which may be termed "transpersonal".[61] These processes are both said to be archetypal. Some of these processes are regarded as specifically linked to consciousness, such as the animus or anima, the persona or the shadow. Others pertain more to the collective sphere. Jung tended to personify the anima and animus as they are, according to him, always attached to a person and represent an aspect of his or her psyche.[61]

Anima and animus edit

 
Animus and anima as represented by the androgynous alchemical figure in an etching from the 1417 Codex germanicus monacensis

Jung identified the archetypal anima as being the unconscious feminine component of men and the archetypal animus as the unconscious masculine component in women.[62] These are shaped by the contents of the collective unconscious, by others, and by the larger society.[62] However, many modern-day Jungian practitioners do not ascribe to a literal definition, citing that the Jungian concept points to every person having both an anima and an animus.[63] Jung considered, for instance, an "animus of the anima" in men, in his work Aion and in an interview in which he says:

Yes, if a man realizes the animus of his anima, then the animus is a substitute for the old wise man. You see, his ego is in relation to the unconscious, and the unconscious is personified by a female figure, the anima. But in the unconscious is also a masculine figure, the wise old man. And that figure is in connection with the anima as her animus, because she is a woman. So, one could say the wise old man was in exactly the same position as the animus to a woman.[64]

Jung stated that the anima and animus act as guides to the unconscious unified Self, and that forming an awareness and a connection with the anima or animus is one of the most difficult and rewarding steps in psychological growth. Jung reported that he identified his anima as she spoke to him, as an inner voice, unexpectedly one day.

In cases where the anima or animus complexes are ignored, they vie for attention by projecting itself on others.[65] This explains, according to Jung, why we are sometimes immediately attracted to certain strangers: we see our anima or animus in them. Love at first sight is an example of anima and animus projection. Moreover, people who strongly identify with their gender role (e.g. a man who acts aggressively and never cries) have not actively recognized or engaged their anima or animus.

Jung attributes human rational thought to be the male nature, while the irrational aspect is considered to be natural female (rational being defined as involving judgment, irrational being defined as involving perceptions). Consequently, irrational moods are the progenies of the male anima shadow and irrational opinions of the female animus shadow.

Archetypes edit

The use of archetypes in psychology was advanced by Jung in an essay entitled "Instinct and the Unconscious" in 1919.[42] The first element in Greek 'arche' signifies 'beginning, origin, cause, primal source principle', by extension it can signify 'position of a leader, supreme rule and government'. The second element 'type' means 'blow or what is produced by a blow, the imprint of a coin ...form, image, prototype, model, order, and norm', ...in the figurative, modern sense, 'pattern underlying form, primordial form'.[66] In his psychological framework, archetypes are innate, universal or personal prototypes for ideas and may be used to interpret observations. The method he favoured was hermeneutics which was central in his practice of psychology from the start. He made explicit references to hermeneutics in the Collected Works and during his theoretical development of the notion of archetypes. Although he lacks consistency in his formulations, his theoretical development of archetypes is rich in hermeneutic implications. As noted by Smythe and Baydala (2012),

his notion of the archetype as such can be understood hermeneutically as a form of non-conceptual background understanding.[67][page needed]

A group of memories and attitudes associated with an archetype can become a complex, e.g. a mother complex may be associated with a particular mother archetype. Jung treated the archetypes as psychological organs, analogous to physical ones in that both are morphological givens which probably arose through evolution.

Archetypes have been regarded as collective as well as individual, and identifiable in a variety of creative ways. As an example, in his book Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Jung states that he began to see and talk to a manifestation of anima and that she taught him how to interpret dreams. As soon as he could interpret on his own, Jung said that she ceased talking to him because she was no longer needed.[68] However, the essentialism inherent in archetypal theory in general and concerning the anima, in particular, has called for a re‐evaluation of Jung's theory in terms of emergence theory. This would emphasise the role of symbols in the construction of affect in the midst of collective human action. In such a reconfiguration, the visceral energy of a numinous experience can be retained while the problematic theory of archetypes has outlived its usefulness.[69]

Collective unconscious edit

Jung's concept of the collective unconscious has undergone re-interpretation over time. The term "collective unconscious" first appeared in Jung's 1916 essay, "The Structure of the Unconscious".[70] This essay distinguishes between the "personal", Freudian unconscious, filled with fantasies (e. g. sexual) and repressed images, and the "collective" unconscious encompassing the soul of humanity at large.[71]

In "The Significance of Constitution and Heredity in Psychology" (November 1929), Jung wrote:

And the essential thing, psychologically, is that in dreams, fantasies, and other exceptional states of mind the most far-fetched mythological motifs and symbols can appear autochthonously at any time, often, apparently, as the result of particular influences, traditions, and excitations working on the individual, but more often without any sign of them. These "primordial images" or "archetypes," as I have called them, belong to the basic stock of the unconscious psyche and cannot be explained as personal acquisitions. Together they make up that psychic stratum which has been called the collective unconscious. The existence of the collective unconscious means that individual consciousness is anything but a tabula rasa and is not immune to predetermining influences. On the contrary, it is in the highest degree influenced by inherited presuppositions, quite apart from the unavoidable influences exerted upon it by the environment. The collective unconscious comprises in itself the psychic life of our ancestors right back to the earliest beginnings. It is the matrix of all conscious psychic occurrences, and hence it exerts an influence that compromises the freedom of consciousness in the highest degree, since it is continually striving to lead all conscious processes back into the old paths.[72]

Given that in his day he lacked the advances of complexity theory and especially complex adaptive systems (CAS), it has been argued that his vision of archetypes as a stratum in the collective unconscious, corresponds to nodal patterns in the collective unconscious which go on to shape the characteristic patterns of human imagination and experience and in that sense, "seems a remarkable, intuitive articulation of the CAS model".[73]

Individuation edit

Individuation is a complex process that involves going through different stages of growing awareness through the progressive confrontation and integration of personal unconscious elements. This is the central concept of analytical psychology first introduced in 1916.[74][75] It is the objective of Jungian psychotherapy to the extent that it enables the realisation of the Self.[76] As Jung stated:

The aim of individuation is nothing less than to divest the self of the false wrappings of the persona, on the one hand and the suggestive power of primordial images on the other.[77]

Jung started experimenting with individuation after his split with Freud as he confronted what was described as eruptions from the collective unconscious driven by a contemporary malaise of spiritual alienation.[78] According to Jung, individuation means becoming an individual and implies becoming one's own self.[79] Unlike individuality, which emphasizes some supposed peculiarity, Jung described individuation as a better and more complete fulfillment of the collective qualities of the human being.[79] In his experience, Jung explained that individuation helped him, "from the therapeutic point of view, to find the particular images that lie behind emotions".[78]

Individuation is from the first what the analysand must undergo, to integrate the other elements of the psyche.[45]: 35  This pursuit of wholeness aims to establish the Self, which include both the rational conscious mind of the ego and the irrational contents of the unconscious, as the new personality center.[80] Prior to individuation, the analysand is carefully assessed to determine if the ego is strong enough to take the intensity of this process.[81] The elements to be integrated include the persona which acts as the representative of the person in her/his role in society, the shadow which contains all that is personally unknown and what the person considers morally reprehensible and, the anima or the animus, which respectively carry their feminine and masculine values.[82] For Jung many unconscious conflicts at the root of neurosis are caused by the difficulty to accept that such a dynamic can unbalance the subject from his habitual position and confronts her/him with aspects of the self they were accustomed to ignore. Once individuation is completed the ego is no longer at the centre of the personality.[83] The process, however, does not lead to a complete self-realization and that individuation can never be a fixed state due to the unfathomable nature of the depths of the collective unconscious.[84]

Shadow edit

The shadow is an unconscious complex defined as the repressed, suppressed or disowned qualities of the conscious self.[85] According to Jung, the human being deals with the reality of the shadow in four ways: denial, projection, integration and/or transmutation. Jung himself asserted that "the result of the Freudian method of elucidation is a minute elaboration of man's shadow-side unexampled in any previous age."[86]: 63  According to analytical psychology, a person's shadow may have both constructive and destructive aspects. In its more destructive aspects, the shadow can represent those things people do not accept about themselves. For instance, the shadow of someone who identifies as being kind may be harsh or unkind. Conversely, the shadow of a person who perceives himself to be brutal may be gentle. In its more constructive aspects, a person's shadow may represent hidden positive qualities. This has been referred to as the "gold in the shadow". Jung emphasized the importance of being aware of shadow material and incorporating it into conscious awareness to avoid projecting shadow qualities on others.

The shadow in dreams is often represented by dark figures of the same gender as the dreamer.[87]

The shadow may also concern great figures in the history of human thought or even spiritual masters, who became great because of their shadows or because of their ability to live their shadows (namely, their unconscious faults) in full without repressing them.

Persona edit

 
Persona is a social representation of the self, drawn from the Latin term for "mask". It serves as a public face.

Just like the anima and animus, the persona (derived from the Latin term for a mask, as would have been worn by actors) is another key concept in analytical psychology. It is the part of the personality which manages an individual's relations with society in the outside world and works the same way for both sexes.[88]

The persona ... is the individual's system of adaptation to, or the manner assumed in dealing with the world. Every calling or profession, for example, has its own characteristic persona [...] Only the danger is that (people) become identical with their personas: thus the professor with his textbook, the tenor with his voice. One could say with little exaggeration, that the persona is that which in reality one is not, but which oneself as well as others think one is.[37]: 415–416 

The persona, which is at the heart of the psyche, is contrary to the shadow which is actually the true personality but denied by the self. The conscious self identifies primarily with the persona during development in childhood as the individual develops a psychological framework for dealing with others.[89] Identifications with diplomas, social roles, with honours and awards, with a career, all contribute to the apparent constitution of the persona and which do not lead to knowledge of the self. For Jung, the persona has nothing real about it.[90] It can only be a compromise between the individual and society, yielding an illusion of individuality.[91] Individuation consists, in the first instance, of discarding the individual's mask, but not too quickly as often, it is all the patient has as a means of identification.[92] The persona is implicated in a number of symptoms such as compulsive disorders, phobias, shifting moods, and addictions, among others.[93]

Psychological types edit

Analytical psychology distinguishes several psychological types or temperaments.

According to Jung, the psyche is an apparatus for adaptation and orientation, and consists of a number of different psychic functions. Among these he distinguishes four basic functions:[94]

  • Sensation – Perception by means of the sense organs
  • Intuition – Perceiving in unconscious way or perception of unconscious contents
  • Thinking – Function of intellectual cognition; the forming of logical conclusions
  • Feeling – Function of subjective estimation

Complexes edit

Early in Jung's career he coined the term and described the concept of the "complex". Jung claims to have discovered the concept during his free association and galvanic skin response experiments. Freud obviously took up this concept in his Oedipus complex amongst others. Jung seemed to see complexes as quite autonomous parts of psychological life. It is almost as if Jung were describing separate personalities within what is considered a single individual, but to equate Jung's use of complexes with something along the lines of multiple personality disorder would be a step out of bounds.

Jung saw an archetype as always being the central organizing structure of a complex. For instance, in a "negative mother complex", the archetype of the "negative mother" would be seen to be central to the identity of that complex. This is to say, our psychological lives are patterned on common human experiences. Jung saw the Ego (which Freud wrote about in German literally as the "I", one's conscious experience of oneself) as a complex. If the "I" is a complex, what might be the archetype that structures it? Jung, and many Jungians, might say "the hero", one who separates from the community to ultimately carry the community further.

Synchronicity edit

 
A rose chafer, the type of beetle Jung caught in his hand, as he heard a patient's dream containing a golden scarab

Jung first officially used the term synchronicity during a conference held in memory of his sinologist friend, Richard Wilhelm in 1930.[95] It was part of his explanation of the modus operandi of the I Ching.[95] The second reference was made in 1935 in his Tavistock Lectures.

For an overview of the origins of the concept, see Joseph Cambray: "Synchronicity as emergence".[96] It was used to denote the simultaneous occurrence of two events with no causal physical connection, but whose association evokes a meaning for the person experiencing or observing it. The often cited example of the phenomenon is Jung's own account of a beetle (the common rose-chafer, Cetonia aurata) flying into his consulting room directly following on from his patient telling him a dream featuring a golden scarab.[97] The concept only makes sense psychologically and cannot be reduced to a verified or scientific fact. For Jung it constitutes a working hypothesis which has subsequently given rise to many ambiguities.

I chose this term because the simultaneous occurrence of two meaningfully but not causally connected events seemed to me an essential criterion. I am therefore using the general concept of synchronicity in the special sense of a coincidence in time of two or more causally unrelated events which have the same or a similar meaning, in contrast to synchronism, which simply means the simultaneous occurrence of two events. Synchronicity therefore means the simultaneous occurrence of a certain psychic state with one or more external events which appear as meaningful parallels to the momentary subjective state -and, in certain cases, vice versa.[98][99]

According to Jung, an archetype which has been constellated in the psyche can, under certain circumstances, transgress the boundary between substance and psyche.

 
Wolfgang Pauli, c. 1924

Jung had studied such phenomena with the physicist and Nobel Prize winner, Wolfgang Pauli, who did not always agree with Jung, and with whom he carried on an extensive correspondence, enriched by the contributions of both specialists in their own fields.[100] Pauli had given a series of lectures to the C. G. Jung Institute, Zürich whose member and patron he had been since 1947.[34] It gave rise to a joint essay: Synchronicity, an a-causal principle (1952)[101][102] The two men saw in the idea of synchronicity a potential way of explaining a particular relationship between "incontrovertible facts", whose occurrence is tied to unconscious and archetypal manifestations,

The psyche and matter are ordered according to principles which are common, neutral, and incontrovertible.[103]

Borrowing the notion from Arthur Schopenhauer, Jung calls it Unus mundus, a state where neither matter nor the psyche are distinguishable.[34] whereas for Pauli it was a limiting concept, in two senses, in that it is at once scientific and symbolic. According to him, the phenomenon is dependent on the observer.[104] Nevertheless, both men were in accord that there existed the possibility of a conjunction between physics and psychology. Jung wrote in a letter to Pauli:

These researches (Jung's research into alchemy), have shown me that modern physics can symbolically represent psychological processes down to the minutest detail.[105]

Marie-Louise von Franz also had a lengthy exchange of letters with Wolfgang Pauli. On Pauli's death in 1958, his widow, Franca, deliberately destroyed all the letters von Franz had sent to her husband, and which he had kept locked inside his writing desk. However, the letters from Pauli to von Franz were all saved and were later made available to researchers and published.[106]

Synchronicity is among the most developed ideas by Jung's followers, notably by Michel Cazenave  [fr], James Hillman, Roderick Main,[107] Carl Alfred Meier and by the British developmental clinician, George Bright.[108] It has been explored also in a range of spiritual currents who have sought in it a scientific rigour.[109]

Although Synchronicity as conceived by Jung within the bounds of the science available in his day, has been categorised as pseudoscience, recent developments in complex adaptive systems argue for a revision of such a view.[73] Critics cite that Jung's experiments that sought to provide statistical proof for this theory did not yield satisfactory result.[110] His experiment was also faulted for not using a true random sampling method as well as for the use of dubious statistics and astrological material.[110]

Post-Jungian approaches edit

Andrew Samuels (1985) has distinguished three distinct traditions or approaches of "post-Jungian" psychology – classical, developmental and archetypal. Today there are more developments.

Classical edit

 
The C.G. Jung Institute in Kusnacht, Switzerland

The classical approach tries to remain faithful to Jung's proposed model, his teachings and the substance of his 20 volume Collected Works, together with recently published works, such as the Liber Novus,[111] and the Black Books.[112] Prominent advocates of this approach, according to Samuels (1985), include Emma Jung, Jung's wife, an analyst in her own right, Marie-Louise von Franz, Joseph L. Henderson, Aniela Jaffé, Erich Neumann, Gerhard Adler and Jolande Jacobi. Jung credited Neumann, author of "Origins of Conscious" and "Origins of the Child", as his principal student to advance his (Jung's) theory into a mythology-based approach.[113] He is associated with developing the symbolism and archetypal significance of several myths: the Child, Creation, the Hero, the Great Mother and Transcendence.[10]

Archetypal edit

One archetypal approach, sometimes called "the imaginal school" by James Hillman, was written about by him in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Its adherents, according to Samuels (1985), include Gerhard Adler, Irene Claremont de Castillejo, Adolf Guggenbühl-Craig, Murray Stein, Rafael López-Pedraza  [es] and Wolfgang Giegerich. Thomas Moore also was influenced by some of Hillman's work. Developed independently, other psychoanalysts have created strong approaches to archetypal psychology. Mythopoeticists and psychoanalysts such as Clarissa Pinkola Estés who believes that ethnic and aboriginal people are the originators of archetypal psychology and have long carried the maps for the journey of the soul in their songs, tales, dream-telling, art and rituals; Marion Woodman who proposes a feminist viewpoint regarding archetypal psychology. Some of the mythopoetic/archetypal psychology creators either imagine the Self not to be the main archetype of the collective unconscious as Jung thought, but rather assign each archetype equal value.[citation needed] Others, who are modern progenitors of archetypal psychology (such as Estés), think of the Self as the thing that contains and yet is suffused by all other archetypes, each giving life to the other.

Robert L. Moore has explored the archetypal level of the human psyche in a series of five books co-authored with Douglas Gillette, which have played an important role in the men's movement in the United States. Moore studies computerese so he uses a computer's hard wiring (its fixed physical components) as a metaphor for the archetypal level of the human psyche. Personal experiences influence the access to the archetypal level of the human psyche, but personalized ego consciousness can be likened to computer software.[citation needed]

Developmental edit

A major expansion of Jungian theory is credited to Michael Fordham and his wife, Frieda Fordham. It can be considered a bridge between traditional Jungian analysis and Melanie Klein's object relations theory. Judith Hubback and William Goodheart MD are also included in this group.[114] Andrew Samuels (1985) considers J.W.T. Redfearn, Richard Carvalho and himself as representatives of the developmental approach. Samuels notes how this approach differs from the classical by giving less emphasis to the Self and more emphasis to the development of personality; he also notes how, in terms of practice in therapy, it gives more attention to transference and counter-transference than either the classical or the archetypal approaches.

Sandplay therapy edit

 
An example of a sandplay scenario

Sandplay is a non-directive, creative form of therapy using the imagination, originally used with children and adolescents, later also with adults. Jung had stressed the importance of finding the image behind the emotion. The use of sand in a suitable tray with figurines and other small toys, farm animals, trees, fences and cars enables a narrative to develop through a series of scenarios. This is said to express an ongoing dialogue between the conscious and the unconscious aspects of the psyche, which in turn activates a healing process whereby the patient and therapist can together view the evolving sense of self.[115]

Jungian Sandplay started as a therapeutic method in the 1950s. Although its origin has been credited to a Swiss Jungian analyst, Dora Kalff it was in fact, her mentor and trainer, Dr. Margaret Lowenfeld, a British paediatrician, who had developed the Lowenfeld World Technique inspired by the writer H. G. Wells in her work with children,[116] using a sand tray and figurines in the 1930s.[117] Jung had witnessed a demonstration of the technique while on a visit to the UK in 1937. Kalff saw in it potential as a further application of analytical psychology. Encouraged by Jung, Kalff developed the new application over a number of years and called it Sandplay.[118] From 1962 she began to train Jungian Analysts in the method including in the United States, Europe and Japan. Both Kalff and Jung believed an image can offer greater therapeutic engagement and insight than words alone. Through the sensory experience of working with sand and objects, and their symbolic resonance new areas of awareness can be brought into consciousness, as in dreams, which through their frames and storyline can bring material into consciousness as part of an integrating and healing process. The historian of psychology, Sonu Shamdasani has commented:

Historical reflection suggests the spirit of Jung's practice of the image, his engagement with his own figures, is indeed more alive in Sandplay than in other Jungian conclaves.[119]

One of Dora Kalff's trainees was the American concert pianist, Joel Ryce-Menuhin, whose music career was ended by illness and who retrained as a Jungian analyst and exponent of sandplay.[120]

Process-oriented psychology edit

Process-oriented psychology (also called Process work) is associated with the Zurich-trained Jungian analyst Arnold Mindell. Process work developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s and was originally identified as a "daughter of Jungian psychology".[121] Process work stresses awareness of the "unconscious" as an ongoing flow of experience. This approach expands Jung's work beyond verbal individual therapy to include body experience, altered and comatose states as well as multicultural group work.

The Analytic attitude edit

Formally Jungian analysis differs little from psychoanalysis. However, variants of each school have developed overlaps and specific divergences through the century, or more, of their existence. They share a "frame" consisting of regular spatio-temporal meetings, one or more times a week, focusing on patient material, using dialogue which may consist of elaboration, amplification and abreaction and which may last on average three years (sometimes more briefly or far longer). The spatial arrangement between analyst and analysand may differ: seated face to face or the patient may use the couch with the analyst seated behind.[122]

In some approaches alternative elements of expression can take place, such as active imagination, sandplay,[123] drawing or painting, even music. The session may at times become semi-directed (in contrast to psychoanalytic treatment which is essentially a non-directive encounter).[122]: 738  The patient is at the heart of the therapy, as Marie Louise von Franz has it in her work, "Psychotherapy: the practitioner's experience", where she recounts Jung's thinking on that point.[124] The transference is sought out (contrary to psychoanalytic treatment which distinguishes positive and negative transferences) and, the interpretation of dreams is one of the central pillars of Jungian psychotherapy. In all other respects, the rules correspond to those of classical psychoanalysis: the analyst examines free associations and tries to be objective and ethical, meaning respectful of the patient's pace and rhythm of unfolding progress. In fact, the task of Jungian analysis is not merely to explore the patient's past, but to connect conscious awareness with the unconscious such that a better adaptation to their emotional and social life may ensue.

Neurosis is not a symptom of the re-emergence of a repressed past, but is regarded as the functional, sometimes somatic, incapacity to face certain aspects of lived reality. In Jungian analysis the unconscious is the motivator whose task it is to bring into awareness the patient's shadow, in alliance with the analyst, the more so since unconscious processes enacted in the transference provoke a dependent relationship by the analysand on the analyst, leading to a falling away of the usual defences and references. This requires that the analyst guarantee the safety of the transference.[125] The responsibilities and accountability of individual analysts and their membership organisations, matters of clinical confidentiality and codes of ethics and professional relations with the public sphere are explored in a volume edited by Solomon and Twyman, with contributions from Jungian analysts and psychoanalysts.[126] Solomon has characterised the nature of the patient – analyst relationship as one where the analytic attitude is an ethical attitude since:

The ethical attitude presupposes special responsibilities that we choose to adopt in relation to another. Thus, a parallel situation pertains between caregiver and child and between analyst and patient: they are not equal partners, but nevertheless are in a situation of mutuality, shared subjectivity, and reciprocal influence.[127]

Jungian social, literary and art criticism edit

Analytical psychology has inspired a number of contemporary academic researchers to revisit some of Jung's own preoccupations with the role of women in society, with philosophy and with literary and art criticism.[128][129] Leading figures to explore these fields include the British-American, Susan Rowland, who produced the first feminist revision of Jung and the fundamental contributions made to his work by the creative women who surrounded him.[130] She has continued to mine his work by evaluating his influence on modern literary criticism and as a writer.[131] Leslie Gardner has devoted a series of volumes to analytical psychology in 21st century life, one of which concentrates on the "Feminine Self".[132] Paul Bishop, a British German scholar, has placed analytical psychology in the context of precursors such as, Goethe, Schiller and Nietzsche.[133][134]

The Franco-Swiss art historian and analytical psychologist, Christian Gaillard, has examined Jung's place as an artist and art critic in his series of Fay lectures at the Texas A&M University.[135] These scholars draw from Jung's works that apply analytical psychology to literature such as the lecture "On the Relation of Analytical Psychology to Poetry".[136] In this presentation, which was delivered in 1922, Jung stated that the psychologist cannot replace the art critic.[137] He rejected the Freudian art criticism for reducing complex works of art to Oedipal fantasies of their creators, stressing the danger of simplifying literature to causes found outside of the actual work.[137]

Criticism edit

 
Main critics of Analytical Psychology: seated from left to right: Sigmund Freud, Sándor Ferenczi (IPA-President 1918–19), Hanns Sachs; standing: Otto Rank, Karl Abraham (IPA-President 1914–18 und 1924–25), Max Eitingon (IPA-President 1925–32), Ernest Jones (IPA-President 1920–24 and 1932–49). photo 1922.

Since its inception, analytical psychology has been the object of criticism, emanating from the psychoanalytic sphere. Freud himself characterised Jung as a "mystic and a snob".[138] In his introduction to the 2011 edition of Jung's "Lectures on the Theory of Psychoanalysis", given in New York City in 1912, Sonu Shamdasani contends that Freud orchestrated a round of critical reviews of Jung's writings from Karl Abraham, Jung's former colleague at the Burghölzli hospital, and from the early Welsh Freudian, Ernest Jones.[139][140][141] Such criticisms multiplied during the 20th century, focusing primarily on the "mysticism" in Jung's writings. Other psychoanalysts, including Jungian analysts, objected to the cult of personality around the Swiss psychiatrist.[citation needed][142] It reached a crescendo with Jung's perceived collusion with Nazism in the build-up and during World War II and is still a recurrent theme. Thomas Kirsch writes: "Successive generations of Jungian analysts and analysands have wrestled with the question of Jung's complex relations to Germany."[109] Other considered evaluations come from Andrew Samuels and from Robert Withers.[143][144]

 
Aurora thesaurusque philosophorum 1577 title page of a work by Paracelsus, studied by Jung

The French philosopher, Yvon Brès  [fr], considers that the concept of the collective unconscious, "shows also how easily one can slip from the psychological unconscious into perspectives from a universe of thought, quite alien from traditional philosophy and science, where this idea arose." ("Le concept jungien d'inconscient collectif "témoigne également de la facilité avec laquelle on peut glisser du concept d'inconscient psychologique vers des perspectives relevant d'un univers de pensée étranger à la tradition philosophique et scientifique dans laquelle ce concept est né'").[145]

In his Le Livre Rouge de la psychanalyse ("Red Book of psychoanalysis"), the French psychoanalyst, Alain Amselek  [fr], criticizes Jung's tendency to be fascinated by the image and to reduce the human to an archetype. He contends that Jung dwells in a world of ideas and abstractions, in a world of books and old secrets lost in ancient books of spells (fr: grimoires). While claiming to be an empiricist, Amselek finds Jung to be an idealist, a pure thinker who has unquestionably demonstrated his intellectual talent for speculation and the invention of ideas. While he considers his epistemology to be in advance of that of Freud, Jung remains stuck in his intellectualism and in his narrow provincial outlook.[clarification needed] In fact, his hypotheses are determined by the concept of his postulated pre-existing world and he has constantly sought to find confirmations of it in the old traditions of Western Medieval Europe.[146]

More problematic has been, at times, the ad hominem criticism of academics outside the field of analytical psychology. One, a Catholic historian of psychiatry, Richard Noll, wrote three volumes but was able to publish only the first two in 1994 and 1997.[147][148] Nolls argued that analytical psychology is based on a neo-pagan Hellenistic cult.[128] These attacks on Jung and his work prompted the French psychoanalyst, Élisabeth Roudinesco, to state in a review: "Even if Noll's theses are based on a solid familiarity with the Jungian corpus [...], they deserve to be re-examined, such is the detestation of the author for the object of his study that it diminishes the credibility of the arguments." ("Même si les thèses de Noll sont étayées par une solide connaissance du corpus jungien [...], elles méritent être réexaminées, tant la détestation de l'auteur vis-à-vis de son objet d'étude diminue la crédibilité de l'argumentation.")[149] Another, a French ethnographer and anthropologist, Jean-Loïc Le Quellec  [fr], criticized Jung over his alleged misuse of the term archetype and his "suspect motives" in dealings with some of his colleagues.[150]

See also edit

References edit

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  97. ^ Jung, C.G. CW, 8. para. 845. "A young woman I was treating had, at a critical moment, a dream in which she was given a golden scarab. While she was telling me this dream I sat with my back to the closed window. Suddenly I heard a noise behind me, like a gentle tapping. I turned round and saw a flying insect knocking against the window-pane from outside. I opened the window and caught the creature in the air as it flew in. It was the nearest analogy to a golden scarab that one finds in our latitudes, a scarabaeid beetle, the common rose chafer (Cetonia aurata), which contrary to its usual habits had evidently felt an urge to get into a dark room at this particular moment. I must admit that nothing like it ever happened to me before or since, and that the dream of the patient has remained unique in my experience."
  98. ^ Jung, C.G. CW, 8. paras. 849–850.
  99. ^ Pallud, Pierre (1981). "L'idée de synchronicité dans l'œuvre de Jung". Cahiers jungiens de psychanalyse (in French) (28): 2..
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  101. ^ Jung, Carl Gustav, and Wolfgang Ernst Pauli. [1952] 1955. The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche, translated from German Naturerklärung und Psyche.
  102. ^ A summary of their research is available in German. Pauli, W. (December 1954). "Naturwissenschaftliche und erkenntnistheoretische aspekte der ideen vom unbewussten". Dialectica (in German). 8 (4): 283–301. doi:10.1111/j.1746-8361.1954.tb01265.x.
  103. ^ The Correspondence of Pauli and Jung ', Albin Michel, 2007, p.162.
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  105. ^ Pauli, Wolfgang; Jung, Carl (2007). Correspondance Pauli-Jung, (Pauli-Jung correspondence) (in French). Albin Michel. p. 248.
  106. ^ Gieser, Suzanne (2005). The innermost kernel : depth psychology and quantum physics : Wolfgang Pauli's dialogue with C.G. Jung. Berlin [u.a.]: Springer. ISBN 9783540208563.
  107. ^ Main, Roderick (1997). Jung on Synchronicity and the Paranormal. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691058375.
  108. ^ Bright, George (2006). "Synchronicity as A Basis of Analytic Attitude". Journal of Analytical Psychology. 42 (4): 613–635. doi:10.1111/j.1465-5922.1997.00613.x.
  109. ^ a b Kirsch, Thomas (2000). The Jungians: a comparative and historical perspective. Routledge. pp. 244–245.
  110. ^ a b Aziz, Robert (1990). C. G. Jung's Psychology of Religion and Synchronicity. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. p. 224. ISBN 0-7914-0166-9.
  111. ^ The Red Book: Liber Novus. tr. M. Kyburz, J. Peck and S. Shamdasani. New York: W. W. Norton, 2009. ISBN 978-0-393-06567-1.
  112. ^ Jung, C.G. (October 2020). Shamdasani, Sonu (ed.). The Black Books of C.G. Jung (1913–1932). Translated by Liebscher, Martin; Peck, John; Shamdasani, Sonu. Philemon Foundation & W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-3930-8864-9.
  113. ^ Jung, C. G.; Neumann, Erich (2015). Liebscher, Martin (ed.). Analytical Psychology in Exile: The Correspondence of C. G. Jung and Erich Neumann (Philemon Foundation Series). Translated by Heather McCartney. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691166179.
  114. ^ "Obituary: William Godheart (1934–2020)". www.legacy.com.
  115. ^ . British and Irish Sandplay Society. Archived from the original on 8 May 2019. Retrieved 13 January 2021.
  116. ^ H. G. Wells' Floor Games has been regarded as a precursor not only of learning through play but also of nonverbal child psychotherapy. See Barbara A. Turner's 2004 edition, published by Temenos Press of Coverdale, CA.
  117. ^ Sandplay History – Techniques developed from Lowenfeld's World Technique 12 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved, 28 June 2009
  118. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Sandplay - Dora Kalff". YouTube.
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  121. ^ Julie Diamond (2004). A Path Made by Walking. Lao Tse Press. p. 6. In the mid-1980s, Arnold Mindell presented a lecture called 'Jungian Psychology has a Daughter' to the Jungian community in Zurich.
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  124. ^ von Franz, M-L. 1990 Psychotherapie. Erfahrungen aus der Praxis. (Gesammelte Aufsätze Bd. 3). Daimon, Einsiedeln/Zürich. ISBN 3-85630-036-8. (in German)
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  126. ^ Woodhead, J. (2004). "SOLOMON, HESTER MCFARLAND & TWYMAN, MARY (Eds.). The Ethical Attitude in Analytic Practice. London: Free Association Books, 2003. Pp. 178. Pbk. £18.95". Journal of Analytical Psychology. 49 (4): 587–589.
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  130. ^ Rowland, Susan (2002). Jung: A feminist revision. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-7456-2517-1.
  131. ^ Rowland, Susan (2005). Jung as a Writer. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-5839-1902-6.
  132. ^ Gardner, Leslie; Miller, Catriona, eds. (2020). Exploring Depth Psychology and the Female Self: Feminist Themes from Somewhere. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-3673-3065-1.
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  145. ^ Brès, Yvon (2002). L'Inconscient. Philo (in French). Paris: Ellipses. p. 123. ISBN 2-7298-0974-0.
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  148. ^ Noll, Richard. The Aryan Christ: The Secret Life of Carl Jung. New York: Random House. 1997. ISBN 0-679-44945-0
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Further reading edit

  • Arundale, Jean; Covington, Coline; Knox, Jean; Williams, Paul, eds. (2002). Terrorism and War: Unconscious Dynamics of Political Violence. Karnac Books. ISBN 978-1-7804-9692-4.
  • Atmanspacher, Harald; Primas, Hans (1996). "The Hidden Side of Wolfgang Pauli: An Eminent Physicist's Extraordinary Encounter with Depth Psychology". Journal of Consciousness Studies (3): 112–126.
  • Aziz, Robert (1999). "Synchronicity and the Transformation of the Ethical in Jungian Psychology". In Becker, Carl (ed.). Asian and Jungian Views of Ethics. Greenwood. ISBN 0-313-30452-1.
  • Aziz, Robert (2007). The Syndetic Paradigm: The Untrodden Path Beyond Freud and Jung. The State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-6982-8.
  • Aziz, Robert (2008). "Foreword". In Storm, Lance (ed.). Synchronicity: Multiple Perspectives on Meaningful Coincidence. Pari Publishing. ISBN 978-88-95604-02-2.
  • Bishop, Paul (2000). Synchronicity and Intellectual Intuition in Kant, Swedenborg and Jung. Ceredigion, Wales: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 978-07734-7593-9.
  • Casement, Ann; Goss, Phil; Nobus, Dany, eds. (2020). Thresholds and Pathways Between Jung and Lacan: On the Blazing Sublime. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-3675-4543-7.
  • Christopher, Elphis; Solomon McFarland, Hester, eds. (2000). Jungian Thought in the Modern World. Free Association Books. ISBN 978-1-853434662.
  • Clift, Wallace (1982). Jung and Christianity: The Challenge of Reconciliation. The Crossroad Publishing Company. ISBN 0-8245-0409-7.
  • Clift, Jean Dalby; Clift, Wallace (1996). The Archetype of Pilgrimage: Outer Action With Inner Meaning. The Paulist Press. ISBN 0-8091-3599-X.
  • Dohe, Carrie B. Jung's Wandering Archetype: Race and Religion in Analytical Psychology. London: Routledge, 2016. ISBN 978-1138888401
  • Fappani, Frederic (2008). Education and Archetypal Psychology. Cursus.
  • Fordham, Frieda (1966). An Introduction to Jung's Psychology. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0140202731.
  • Formaini, Heather, ed. (2001). Landmarks: Papers by Jungian Analysts from Australia and New Zealand. Australia: Australian and New Zealand Society of Jungian Analysts. ISBN 0-646-41184-5.
  • Glinka, Lukasz Andrzej (2014) Aryan Unconscious: Archetype of Discrimination, History & Politics. Great Abington: Cambridge International Science Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907343-59-9
  • Kimbles, Samuel; Singer, Thomas, eds. (2004). The Cultural Complex: Contemporary Jungian Perspectives on Psyche and Society. United Kingdom: Brunner-Routledge.
  • Kirsch, Jean; Stein, Murray, eds. (2013). How and Why We Still Read Jung: Personal and Professional Reflections. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-4156-8648-8.
  • Mayes, Clifford (2005). Jung and education; elements of an archetypal pedagogy. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-57886-254-2.
  • Mayes, Clifford (2007). Inside Education: Depth Psychology in Teaching and Learning. Atwood Publishing. ISBN 978-1-891859-68-7.
  • Remo, F. Roth: Return of the World Soul, Wolfgang Pauli, C.G. Jung and the Challenge of Psychophysical Reality [unus mundus], Part 1: The Battle of the Giants. Pari Publishing, 2011, ISBN 978-88-95604-12-1.
  • Rowland, Susan (2016). Remembering Dionysus: Revisioning Psychology and Literature in C.G. Jung and James Hillman. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-4158-5584-6.
  • Rust, Mary-Jayne; Totton, Nick, eds. (2012). Vital Signs Psychological Responses to Ecological Crisis. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-7804-9048-9.
  • Samuels, Andrew (1993). The Political Psyche. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-08102-5.
  • Samuels, Andrew (2001). Politics on the Couch: Citizenship and the Internal Life. Profile. ISBN 1-86197-219-9.
  • Stein, Murray (2008). Minding the Self: Jungian Meditations on Contemporary Spirituality. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-4153-7784-3.
  • Stevens, Anthony (1989). The Roots of War: A Jungian Perspective. New York: Paragon House.
  • Storr, Anthony (1997). Feet of Clay; Saints, Sinners, and Madmen: A Study of Gurus. New York: Free Press Paperbacks. pp. 139–140. ISBN 0-684-83495-2.

External links edit

  • Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism
  • Website of the Journal of Analytical Psychology, considered the foremost international publication on AP
  • Harvest a scholarly journal of the Jung Club, London
  • International Association of Analytical Psychology
  • Pacifica Graduate Institute, a graduate school offering programs in Jungian and post-Jungian studies
  • ADEPAC Colombia, Colombian analytical psychology news, biographies and resources

analytical, psychology, analytic, psychology, redirects, here, wilhelm, dilthey, concept, analytic, psychology, analytic, psychology, dilthey, george, stout, concept, analytic, psychology, analytic, psychology, stout, analysis, psyche, general, psychoanalysis,. Analytic psychology redirects here For Wilhelm Dilthey s concept of analytic psychology see Analytic psychology Dilthey For George Stout s concept of analytic psychology see Analytic psychology Stout For analysis of psyche in general see Psychoanalysis This article is missing information about status of this theory in modern scientific circles Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page November 2022 Analytical psychology German Analytische Psychologie sometimes translated as analytic psychology and referred to as Jungian analysis is a term coined by Carl Jung a Swiss psychiatrist to describe research into his new empirical science of the psyche It was designed to distinguish it from Freud s psychoanalytic theories as their seven year collaboration on psychoanalysis was drawing to an end between 1912 and 1913 1 2 3 The evolution of his science is contained in his monumental opus the Collected Works written over sixty years of his lifetime 4 Carl JungThe history of analytical psychology is intimately linked with the biography of Jung At the start it was known as the Zurich school whose chief figures were Eugen Bleuler Franz Riklin Alphonse Maeder and Jung all centred in the Burgholzli hospital in Zurich It was initially a theory concerning psychological complexes until Jung upon breaking with Sigmund Freud turned it into a generalised method of investigating archetypes and the unconscious as well as into a specialised psychotherapy Analytical psychology or complex psychology from the German Komplexe Psychologie is the foundation of many developments in the study and practice of psychology as of other disciplines Jung has many followers and some of them are members of national societies around the world They collaborate professionally on an international level through the International Association of Analytical Psychologists IAAP and the International Association for Jungian Studies IAJS Jung s propositions have given rise to a multidisciplinary literature in numerous languages Among widely used concepts specific to analytical psychology are anima and animus archetypes the collective unconscious complexes extraversion and introversion individuation the Self the shadow and synchronicity 5 6 The Myers Briggs Type Indicator MBTI is based on another of Jung s theories on psychological types 5 7 8 A lesser known idea was Jung s notion of the Psychoid to denote a hypothesised immanent plane beyond consciousness distinct from the collective unconscious and a potential locus of synchronicity 9 The approximately three schools of post Jungian analytical psychology that are current the classical archetypal and developmental can be said to correspond to the developing yet overlapping aspects of Jung s lifelong explorations even if he expressly did not want to start a school of Jungians 5 pp 50 53 10 Hence as Jung proceeded from a clinical practice which was mainly traditionally science based and steeped in rationalist philosophy anthropology and ethnography his enquiring mind simultaneously took him into more esoteric spheres such as alchemy astrology gnosticism metaphysics myth and the paranormal without ever abandoning his allegiance to science as his long lasting collaboration with Wolfgang Pauli attests 11 His wide ranging progression suggests to some commentators that over time his analytical psychotherapy informed by his intuition and teleological investigations became more of an art 5 The findings of Jungian analysis and the application of analytical psychology to contemporary preoccupations such as social and family relationships 12 page needed dreams and nightmares work life balance 13 architecture and urban planning 14 page needed politics and economics conflict and warfare 15 page needed and climate change are illustrated in several publications and films 16 17 page needed 18 19 page needed Contents 1 Origins 1 1 The break with Freud 2 Innovations of Jungian analysis 2 1 Philosophical and epistemological foundations 2 1 1 Philosophy 2 1 2 Scientific heritage 2 1 3 Divergences from psychoanalysis 2 2 Dream work 2 3 Principal concepts 2 3 1 Anima and animus 2 3 2 Archetypes 2 3 3 Collective unconscious 2 3 4 Individuation 2 3 5 Shadow 2 3 6 Persona 2 3 7 Psychological types 2 3 8 Complexes 2 3 9 Synchronicity 3 Post Jungian approaches 3 1 Classical 3 2 Archetypal 3 3 Developmental 3 4 Sandplay therapy 3 5 Process oriented psychology 4 The Analytic attitude 5 Jungian social literary and art criticism 6 Criticism 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksOrigins edit nbsp An 1890 etching of Burgholzli hospital where Carl Jung began his careerJung began his career as a psychiatrist in Zurich Switzerland Already employed at the Burgholzli hospital in 1901 in his academic dissertation for the medical faculty of the University of Zurich he took the risk of using his experiments on somnambulism and the visions of his mediumistic cousin Helly Preiswerk The work was entitled On the Psychology and Pathology of So Called Occult Phenomena 20 It was accepted but caused great upset among his mother s family 21 Under the direction of psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler he also conducted research with his colleagues using a galvanometer to evaluate the emotional sensitivities of patients to lists of words during word association 21 22 23 24 Jung has left a description of his use of the device in treatment 25 26 27 His research earned him a worldwide reputation and numerous honours including honorary Doctorates from Clark and Fordham Universities in 1909 and 1910 respectively Other honours followed later 28 29 Although they began corresponding a year earlier in 1907 Jung travelled to meet Sigmund Freud in Vienna Austria At that stage Jung aged thirty two had a much greater international renown than the forty nine year old neurologist 21 For a further six years the two scholars worked and travelled to the United States together In 1911 they founded the International Psychoanalytical Association of which Jung was the first president 21 However early in the collaboration Jung had already observed that Freud would not tolerate ideas that were different from his own 21 Unlike most modern psychologists Jung did not believe in restricting himself to the scientific method as a means to understanding the human psyche He saw dreams myths coincidence and folklore as empirical evidence to further understanding and meaning So although the unconscious cannot be studied by using direct methods it acts as a useful working hypothesis according to Jung 30 As he said The beauty about the unconscious is that it is really unconscious 31 Hence the unconscious is untouchable by experimental researches or indeed any possible kind of scientific or philosophical reach precisely because it is unconscious 32 33 The break with Freud edit nbsp Still talking Jung with psychoanalytic colleagues Front row Sigmund Freud G Stanley Hall Carl Jung Back row Abraham Brill Ernest Jones Sandor Ferenczi 1909 in front of Clark University It was the publication of a book by Jung which provoked the break with psychoanalysis and led to the founding of analytical psychology In 1912 Jung met Miss Miller brought to his notice by the work of Theodore Flournoy and whose case gave further substance to his theory of the collective unconscious 34 213 215 The study of her visions supplied the material which would go on to furnish his reasoning which he developed in Psychology of the Unconscious Wandlungen und Symbole der Libido re published as Symbols of Transformation in 1952 C W Vol 5 At this Freud muttered about heresy 35 It was the second part of the work that brought the divergence to light Freud mentioned to Ernest Jones that it was on page 174 of the original German edition that Jung according to him had lost his way 34 215 It is the extract where Jung enlarged on his conception of the libido The sanction was immediate Jung was officially banned from the Vienna psychoanalytic circle from August 1912 From that date the psychoanalytic movement split into two obediences with Freud s partisans on one side Karl Abraham being delegated to write a critical notice about Jung 36 and with Ernest Jones as defender of Freudian orthodoxy while on the other side were Jung s partisans including Leonhard Seif Franz Riklin Johan van Ophuijsen and Alphonse Maeder 34 260 Jung s innovative ideas with a new formulation of psychology and lack of contrition sealed the end of the Jung Freud friendship in 1913 From then the two scholars worked independently on personality development Jung had already termed his approach analytical psychology 1912 while the approach Freud had founded is referred to as the Psychoanalytic School psychoanalytische Schule 1 nbsp Psychology of the Unconscious 1916 the book which precipitated Jung s break with FreudJung s postulated unconscious was quite different from the model proposed by Freud despite the great influence that the founder of psychoanalysis had had on him In particular tensions manifested between him and Freud because of various disagreements including those concerning the nature of the libido 37 Jung de emphasized the importance of sexual development as an instinctual drive and focused on the collective unconscious the part of the unconscious that contains memories and ideas which Jung believed were inherited from generations of ancestors While he accepted that libido was an important source for personal growth unlike Freud Jung did not consider that libido alone was responsible for the formation of the core personality 38 Due to the particular hardships Jung had endured growing up he believed his personal development and that of everyone was influenced by factors unrelated to sexuality 37 The overarching aim in life according to Jungian psychology is the fullest possible actualisation of the Self through individuation 39 6 Jung defines the self as not only the centre but also the whole circumference which embraces both conscious and unconscious it is the centre of this totality just as the ego is the centre of the conscious mind 40 Central to this process of individuation is the individual s continual encounter with the elements of the psyche by bringing them into consciousness 6 People experience the unconscious through symbols encountered in all aspects of life in dreams art religion and the symbolic dramas enacted in relationships and life pursuits 6 Essential to the process is the merging of the individual s consciousness with the collective unconscious through a huge range of symbols By bringing conscious awareness to bear on what is unconscious such elements can be integrated with consciousness when they surface 6 To proceed with the individuation process individuals need to be open to the parts of themselves beyond their own ego which is the organ of consciousness 6 In a famous dictum Jung said the Self like the unconscious is an a priori existent out of which the ego evolves It is an unconscious prefiguration of the ego It is not I who create myself rather I happen to myself 41 It follows that the aim of Jungian psychotherapy is to assist the individual to establish a healthy relationship with the unconscious so that it is neither excessively out of balance in relation to it as in neurosis a state that can result in depression anxiety and personality disorders or so flooded by it that it risks psychosis resulting in mental breakdown One method Jung applied to his patients between 1913 and 1916 was active imagination a way of encouraging them to give themselves over to a form of meditation to release apparently random images from the mind to bridge unconscious contents into awareness 42 Neurosis in Jung s view results from the build up of psychological defences the individual unconsciously musters in an effort to cope with perceived attacks from the outside world a process he called a complex although complexes are not merely defensive in character 6 The psyche is a self regulating adaptive system 6 People are energetic systems and if the energy is blocked the psyche becomes sick If adaptation is thwarted the psychic energy stops flowing and becomes rigid This process manifests in neurosis and psychosis Jung proposed that this occurs through maladaptation of one s internal realities to external ones The principles of adaptation projection and compensation are central processes in Jung s view of psyche s attempts to adapt Innovations of Jungian analysis editMain article Psychoanalysis Philosophical and epistemological foundations edit nbsp American philosopher of pragmatism William James greatly influenced C G Jung s thinking Philosophy editJung was an adept principally of the American philosopher William James founder of pragmatism whom he met during his trip to the United States in 1909 21 255 He also encountered other figures associated with James such as John Dewey and the anthropologist Franz Boas 21 165 Pragmatism was Jung s favoured route to base his psychology on a sound scientific basis according to historian Sonu Shamdasani 43 His theories consist of observations of phenomena and according to Jung it is phenomenology In his view psychologism was suspect 37 Displacement into the conceptual deprives experience of its substance and the possibility of being simply named Throughout his writings Jung sees in empirical observation not only a precondition of an objective method but also respect for an ethical code which should guide the psychologist as he stated in a letter to Joseph Goldbrunner I consider it a moral obligation not to make assertions about things one cannot see or whose existence cannot be proved and I consider it an abuse of epistemological power to do so regardless These rules apply to all experimental science Other rules apply to metaphysics I regard myself as answerable to the rules of experimental science As a result nowhere in my work are there any metaphysical assertions nor nota bene any negations of a metaphysical nature 44 According to the Italo French psychoanalyst Luigi Aurigemma Jung s reasoning is also marked by Immanuel Kant and more generally by German rationalist philosophy His lectures are evidence of his assimilation of Kantian thought especially the Critique of Pure Reason and Critique of Practical Reason 45 Aurigemma characterises Jung s thinking as epistemological relativism because it does not postulate any belief in the metaphysical 45 19 In fact Jung uses Kant s teleology to bridle his thinking and to guard himself from straying into any metaphysical excursions 45 21 On the other hand for French historian of psychology Francoise Parot contrary to the alleged rationalist vein Jung is heir to mystics Meister Eckhart Hildegard of Bingen or Augustine of Hippo 45 96 and to the romantics be they scientists such as Carl Gustav Carus or Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert in particular or to philosophers and writers along the lines of Nietzsche Goethe and Schopenhauer in the way he conceptualised the unconscious in particular Whereas his typology is profoundly dependent on Carl Spitteler 21 255 Scientific heritage edit nbsp Wilhelm Wundt and associates in 1880As a trained psychiatrist Jung had a grounding in the state of science in his day He regularly refers to the experimental psychology of Wilhelm Wundt His Word Association Test designed with Franz Riklin is actually the direct application of Wundt s theory Notwithstanding the great debt of analytical psychology to Sigmund Freud Jung borrowed concepts from other theories of his time For instance the expression abaissement du niveau mental comes directly from the French psychologist Pierre Janet whose courses Jung attended during his studies in France during 1901 Jung had always acknowledged how much Janet had influenced his career nbsp Scarlet Ara macawsJung s use of the concept of participation mystique is owed to the French ethnologist Lucien Levy Bruhl What Rousseau describes is nothing other than the primitive collective mentality which Lucien Levy Bruhl has brilliantly called participation mystique 46 which he uses to illustrate the surprising fact to him that some native peoples can experience relations that defy logic as for instance in the case of the South American tribe whom he met during his travels where the men pretended they were scarlet aras birds Finally his use of the English expression pattern of behaviour which is synonymous with the term archetype is drawn from British studies in ethology The principal contribution to analytical psychology nevertheless remains that of Freud s psychoanalysis from which Jung took a number of concepts especially the method of inquiring into the unconscious through free association Individual analysts thinking was also integrated into his project among whom are Sandor Ferenczi Jung refers to his notion of affect or Ludwig Binswanger and his Daseinsanalyse de Daseinsanalysis Jung affirms also Freud s contribution to our knowledge of the psyche as being without doubt of the highest importance It reveals penetrating information about the dark corners of the soul and of the human personality which is of the same order as Nietzsche s On the Genealogy of Morality 1887 In this context Freud was according to Jung one of the great cultural critics of the 19th century 47 Divergences from psychoanalysis edit Jungian Analysis as is psychoanalysis is a method to access experience and integrate unconscious material into awareness It is a search for the meaning of behaviours feelings and events Many are the channels to extend knowledge of the self the analysis of dreams is one important avenue Others may include expressing feelings about and through art poetry or other expressions of creativity the examination of conflicts and repeating patterns in a person s life A comprehensive description of the process of dream interpretation is complex in that it is highly specific to the person who undertakes it Most succinctly it relies on the associations which the particular dream symbols suggest to the dreamer which at times may be deemed archetypal in so far as they are supposed common to many people throughout history Examples could be a hero an old man or woman situations of pursuit flying or falling Whereas Freudian psychoanalysis relies entirely on the development of the transference in the analysand the person under treatment to the analyst Jung initially used the transference and later concentrated more on a dialectical and didactic approach to the symbolic and archetypal material presented by the patient Moreover his attitude towards patients departed from what he had observed in Freud s method Anthony Stevens has explained it thus Though Jung s initial formulations arose mainly out of his own creative illness 48 49 they were also a conscious reaction against the stereotype of the classical Freudian analyst sitting silent and aloof behind the couch occasionally emitting ex cathedra pronouncements and interpretations while remaining totally uninvolved in the patient s guilt anguish and need for reassurance and support Instead Jung offered the radical proposal that analysis is a dialectical procedure a two way exchange between two people who are equally involved Although it was a revolutionary idea when he first suggested it it is a model which has influenced psychotherapists of most schools though many seem not to realise that it originated with Jung 50 In place of Freud s surgical detachment Jung demonstrated a more relaxed and warmer welcome in the consulting room 50 He remained aware nonetheless that exposure to a patient s unconscious contents always posed a certain risk of contagion he calls it psychic infection to the analyst as experienced in the countertransference 51 The process of contemporary Jungian analysis depends on the type of school of analytical psychology to which the therapist adheres see below The Zurich School would reflect the approach Jung himself taught while those influenced by Michael Fordham and associates in London would be significantly closer to a Kleinian approach and therefore concerned with analysis of the transference and countertransference as indicators of repressed material along with the attendant symbols and patterns 52 Dream work edit Main article Dream analysis Jung nbsp Dream Analysis 1928 1930 seminars given by Jung first published in English in 1984Jung s preoccupation with dreams can be dated from 1902 53 It was only after the break with Freud that he published in 1916 his Psychology of the Unconscious where he elaborated his view of dreams which contrasts sharply with Freud s conceptualisation 54 While he agrees that dreams are a highway into the unconscious he enlarges on their functions further than psychoanalysis did One of the salient differences is the compensatory function they perform by reinstating psychic equilibrium in respect of judgments made during waking life thus a man consumed by ambition and arrogance may for example dream about himself as small and vulnerable person 55 56 According to Jung this demonstrates that the man s attitude is excessively self assured and thereby refuses to integrate the inferior aspects of his personality which are denied by his defensive arrogance Jung calls this a compensation mechanism necessary for the maintenance of a healthy mental balance Shortly before his death in 1961 he wrote To secure mental and even physiological stability it is necessary that the conscious and unconscious should be integrated one with the other This is so that they evolve in parallel Pour sauvegarder la stabilite mentale et meme physiologique il faut que la conscience et l inconscient soient integralement relies afin d evoluer parallelement 57 Unconscious material is expressed in images through the deployment of symbolism which in Jungian terms means it has an affective role in that it can sometimes give rise to a numinous feeling when associated with an archetypal force and an intellectual role 58 Some dreams are personal to the dreamer others may be collective in origin or transpersonal in so far as they relate to existential events 59 They can be taken to express phases of the individuation process see below and may be inspired by literature art alchemy or mythology Analytical psychology is recognized for its historical and geographical study of myths as a means to deconstruct with the aid of symbols the unconscious manifestations of the psyche Myths are said to represent directly the elements and phenomena arising from the collective unconscious and though they may be subject to alteration in their detail through time their significance remains similar While Jung relies predominantly on Christian or on Western pagan mythology Ancient Greece and Rome he holds that the unconscious is driven by mythologies derived from all cultures He evinced an interest in Hinduism in Zoroastrianism and Taoism which all share fundamental images reflected in the psyche Thus analytical psychology focusses on meaning based on the hypothesis that human beings are potentially in constant touch with universal and symbolic aspects common to humankind In the words of Andre Nataf Jung opens psychoanalysis to a dimension currently obscured by the prevailing scientism spirituality His contribution though questionable in certain respects remains unique His explorations of the unconscious carried out both as a scientist and a poet indicate that it is structured as a language but one which is in a mythical mode Jung ouvre la psychanalyse a une dimension cachee par le scientisme ambiant la spiritualite Son apport quoique contestable sur certains points reste unique Explorant l inconscient en scientifique et poete il montre que celui ci se structure non comme une langue mais sur le mode du mythe 60 Principal concepts edit In analytical psychology two distinct types of psychological process may be identified that deriving from the individual characterised as personal belonging to a subjective psyche and that deriving from the collective linked to the structure of an objective psyche which may be termed transpersonal 61 These processes are both said to be archetypal Some of these processes are regarded as specifically linked to consciousness such as the animus or anima the persona or the shadow Others pertain more to the collective sphere Jung tended to personify the anima and animus as they are according to him always attached to a person and represent an aspect of his or her psyche 61 Anima and animus edit nbsp Animus and anima as represented by the androgynous alchemical figure in an etching from the 1417 Codex germanicus monacensisMain article Anima and animus Jung identified the archetypal anima as being the unconscious feminine component of men and the archetypal animus as the unconscious masculine component in women 62 These are shaped by the contents of the collective unconscious by others and by the larger society 62 However many modern day Jungian practitioners do not ascribe to a literal definition citing that the Jungian concept points to every person having both an anima and an animus 63 Jung considered for instance an animus of the anima in men in his work Aion and in an interview in which he says Yes if a man realizes the animus of his anima then the animus is a substitute for the old wise man You see his ego is in relation to the unconscious and the unconscious is personified by a female figure the anima But in the unconscious is also a masculine figure the wise old man And that figure is in connection with the anima as her animus because she is a woman So one could say the wise old man was in exactly the same position as the animus to a woman 64 Jung stated that the anima and animus act as guides to the unconscious unified Self and that forming an awareness and a connection with the anima or animus is one of the most difficult and rewarding steps in psychological growth Jung reported that he identified his anima as she spoke to him as an inner voice unexpectedly one day In cases where the anima or animus complexes are ignored they vie for attention by projecting itself on others 65 This explains according to Jung why we are sometimes immediately attracted to certain strangers we see our anima or animus in them Love at first sight is an example of anima and animus projection Moreover people who strongly identify with their gender role e g a man who acts aggressively and never cries have not actively recognized or engaged their anima or animus Jung attributes human rational thought to be the male nature while the irrational aspect is considered to be natural female rational being defined as involving judgment irrational being defined as involving perceptions Consequently irrational moods are the progenies of the male anima shadow and irrational opinions of the female animus shadow Archetypes edit Main article Jungian archetypesThe use of archetypes in psychology was advanced by Jung in an essay entitled Instinct and the Unconscious in 1919 42 The first element in Greek arche signifies beginning origin cause primal source principle by extension it can signify position of a leader supreme rule and government The second element type means blow or what is produced by a blow the imprint of a coin form image prototype model order and norm in the figurative modern sense pattern underlying form primordial form 66 In his psychological framework archetypes are innate universal or personal prototypes for ideas and may be used to interpret observations The method he favoured was hermeneutics which was central in his practice of psychology from the start He made explicit references to hermeneutics in the Collected Works and during his theoretical development of the notion of archetypes Although he lacks consistency in his formulations his theoretical development of archetypes is rich in hermeneutic implications As noted by Smythe and Baydala 2012 his notion of the archetype as such can be understood hermeneutically as a form of non conceptual background understanding 67 page needed A group of memories and attitudes associated with an archetype can become a complex e g a mother complex may be associated with a particular mother archetype Jung treated the archetypes as psychological organs analogous to physical ones in that both are morphological givens which probably arose through evolution Archetypes have been regarded as collective as well as individual and identifiable in a variety of creative ways As an example in his book Memories Dreams Reflections Jung states that he began to see and talk to a manifestation of anima and that she taught him how to interpret dreams As soon as he could interpret on his own Jung said that she ceased talking to him because she was no longer needed 68 However the essentialism inherent in archetypal theory in general and concerning the anima in particular has called for a re evaluation of Jung s theory in terms of emergence theory This would emphasise the role of symbols in the construction of affect in the midst of collective human action In such a reconfiguration the visceral energy of a numinous experience can be retained while the problematic theory of archetypes has outlived its usefulness 69 Collective unconscious edit Main article Collective unconscious Jung s concept of the collective unconscious has undergone re interpretation over time The term collective unconscious first appeared in Jung s 1916 essay The Structure of the Unconscious 70 This essay distinguishes between the personal Freudian unconscious filled with fantasies e g sexual and repressed images and the collective unconscious encompassing the soul of humanity at large 71 In The Significance of Constitution and Heredity in Psychology November 1929 Jung wrote And the essential thing psychologically is that in dreams fantasies and other exceptional states of mind the most far fetched mythological motifs and symbols can appear autochthonously at any time often apparently as the result of particular influences traditions and excitations working on the individual but more often without any sign of them These primordial images or archetypes as I have called them belong to the basic stock of the unconscious psyche and cannot be explained as personal acquisitions Together they make up that psychic stratum which has been called the collective unconscious The existence of the collective unconscious means that individual consciousness is anything but a tabula rasa and is not immune to predetermining influences On the contrary it is in the highest degree influenced by inherited presuppositions quite apart from the unavoidable influences exerted upon it by the environment The collective unconscious comprises in itself the psychic life of our ancestors right back to the earliest beginnings It is the matrix of all conscious psychic occurrences and hence it exerts an influence that compromises the freedom of consciousness in the highest degree since it is continually striving to lead all conscious processes back into the old paths 72 Given that in his day he lacked the advances of complexity theory and especially complex adaptive systems CAS it has been argued that his vision of archetypes as a stratum in the collective unconscious corresponds to nodal patterns in the collective unconscious which go on to shape the characteristic patterns of human imagination and experience and in that sense seems a remarkable intuitive articulation of the CAS model 73 Individuation edit Further information IndividuationIndividuation is a complex process that involves going through different stages of growing awareness through the progressive confrontation and integration of personal unconscious elements This is the central concept of analytical psychology first introduced in 1916 74 75 It is the objective of Jungian psychotherapy to the extent that it enables the realisation of the Self 76 As Jung stated The aim of individuation is nothing less than to divest the self of the false wrappings of the persona on the one hand and the suggestive power of primordial images on the other 77 Jung started experimenting with individuation after his split with Freud as he confronted what was described as eruptions from the collective unconscious driven by a contemporary malaise of spiritual alienation 78 According to Jung individuation means becoming an individual and implies becoming one s own self 79 Unlike individuality which emphasizes some supposed peculiarity Jung described individuation as a better and more complete fulfillment of the collective qualities of the human being 79 In his experience Jung explained that individuation helped him from the therapeutic point of view to find the particular images that lie behind emotions 78 Individuation is from the first what the analysand must undergo to integrate the other elements of the psyche 45 35 This pursuit of wholeness aims to establish the Self which include both the rational conscious mind of the ego and the irrational contents of the unconscious as the new personality center 80 Prior to individuation the analysand is carefully assessed to determine if the ego is strong enough to take the intensity of this process 81 The elements to be integrated include the persona which acts as the representative of the person in her his role in society the shadow which contains all that is personally unknown and what the person considers morally reprehensible and the anima or the animus which respectively carry their feminine and masculine values 82 For Jung many unconscious conflicts at the root of neurosis are caused by the difficulty to accept that such a dynamic can unbalance the subject from his habitual position and confronts her him with aspects of the self they were accustomed to ignore Once individuation is completed the ego is no longer at the centre of the personality 83 The process however does not lead to a complete self realization and that individuation can never be a fixed state due to the unfathomable nature of the depths of the collective unconscious 84 Shadow edit Main article Shadow psychology The shadow is an unconscious complex defined as the repressed suppressed or disowned qualities of the conscious self 85 According to Jung the human being deals with the reality of the shadow in four ways denial projection integration and or transmutation Jung himself asserted that the result of the Freudian method of elucidation is a minute elaboration of man s shadow side unexampled in any previous age 86 63 According to analytical psychology a person s shadow may have both constructive and destructive aspects In its more destructive aspects the shadow can represent those things people do not accept about themselves For instance the shadow of someone who identifies as being kind may be harsh or unkind Conversely the shadow of a person who perceives himself to be brutal may be gentle In its more constructive aspects a person s shadow may represent hidden positive qualities This has been referred to as the gold in the shadow Jung emphasized the importance of being aware of shadow material and incorporating it into conscious awareness to avoid projecting shadow qualities on others The shadow in dreams is often represented by dark figures of the same gender as the dreamer 87 The shadow may also concern great figures in the history of human thought or even spiritual masters who became great because of their shadows or because of their ability to live their shadows namely their unconscious faults in full without repressing them Persona edit Main articles Persona psychology and False self nbsp Persona is a social representation of the self drawn from the Latin term for mask It serves as a public face Just like the anima and animus the persona derived from the Latin term for a mask as would have been worn by actors is another key concept in analytical psychology It is the part of the personality which manages an individual s relations with society in the outside world and works the same way for both sexes 88 The persona is the individual s system of adaptation to or the manner assumed in dealing with the world Every calling or profession for example has its own characteristic persona Only the danger is that people become identical with their personas thus the professor with his textbook the tenor with his voice One could say with little exaggeration that the persona is that which in reality one is not but which oneself as well as others think one is 37 415 416 The persona which is at the heart of the psyche is contrary to the shadow which is actually the true personality but denied by the self The conscious self identifies primarily with the persona during development in childhood as the individual develops a psychological framework for dealing with others 89 Identifications with diplomas social roles with honours and awards with a career all contribute to the apparent constitution of the persona and which do not lead to knowledge of the self For Jung the persona has nothing real about it 90 It can only be a compromise between the individual and society yielding an illusion of individuality 91 Individuation consists in the first instance of discarding the individual s mask but not too quickly as often it is all the patient has as a means of identification 92 The persona is implicated in a number of symptoms such as compulsive disorders phobias shifting moods and addictions among others 93 Psychological types edit Main article Psychological types Analytical psychology distinguishes several psychological types or temperaments Extravert IntrovertAccording to Jung the psyche is an apparatus for adaptation and orientation and consists of a number of different psychic functions Among these he distinguishes four basic functions 94 Sensation Perception by means of the sense organs Intuition Perceiving in unconscious way or perception of unconscious contents Thinking Function of intellectual cognition the forming of logical conclusions Feeling Function of subjective estimationSee also Myers Briggs Type Indicator and Socionics Complexes edit Main article Complex psychology Early in Jung s career he coined the term and described the concept of the complex Jung claims to have discovered the concept during his free association and galvanic skin response experiments Freud obviously took up this concept in his Oedipus complex amongst others Jung seemed to see complexes as quite autonomous parts of psychological life It is almost as if Jung were describing separate personalities within what is considered a single individual but to equate Jung s use of complexes with something along the lines of multiple personality disorder would be a step out of bounds Jung saw an archetype as always being the central organizing structure of a complex For instance in a negative mother complex the archetype of the negative mother would be seen to be central to the identity of that complex This is to say our psychological lives are patterned on common human experiences Jung saw the Ego which Freud wrote about in German literally as the I one s conscious experience of oneself as a complex If the I is a complex what might be the archetype that structures it Jung and many Jungians might say the hero one who separates from the community to ultimately carry the community further Synchronicity edit Main article Synchronicity nbsp A rose chafer the type of beetle Jung caught in his hand as he heard a patient s dream containing a golden scarabJung first officially used the term synchronicity during a conference held in memory of his sinologist friend Richard Wilhelm in 1930 95 It was part of his explanation of the modus operandi of the I Ching 95 The second reference was made in 1935 in his Tavistock Lectures For an overview of the origins of the concept see Joseph Cambray Synchronicity as emergence 96 It was used to denote the simultaneous occurrence of two events with no causal physical connection but whose association evokes a meaning for the person experiencing or observing it The often cited example of the phenomenon is Jung s own account of a beetle the common rose chafer Cetonia aurata flying into his consulting room directly following on from his patient telling him a dream featuring a golden scarab 97 The concept only makes sense psychologically and cannot be reduced to a verified or scientific fact For Jung it constitutes a working hypothesis which has subsequently given rise to many ambiguities I chose this term because the simultaneous occurrence of two meaningfully but not causally connected events seemed to me an essential criterion I am therefore using the general concept of synchronicity in the special sense of a coincidence in time of two or more causally unrelated events which have the same or a similar meaning in contrast to synchronism which simply means the simultaneous occurrence of two events Synchronicity therefore means the simultaneous occurrence of a certain psychic state with one or more external events which appear as meaningful parallels to the momentary subjective state and in certain cases vice versa 98 99 According to Jung an archetype which has been constellated in the psyche can under certain circumstances transgress the boundary between substance and psyche nbsp Wolfgang Pauli c 1924Jung had studied such phenomena with the physicist and Nobel Prize winner Wolfgang Pauli who did not always agree with Jung and with whom he carried on an extensive correspondence enriched by the contributions of both specialists in their own fields 100 Pauli had given a series of lectures to the C G Jung Institute Zurich whose member and patron he had been since 1947 34 It gave rise to a joint essay Synchronicity an a causal principle 1952 101 102 The two men saw in the idea of synchronicity a potential way of explaining a particular relationship between incontrovertible facts whose occurrence is tied to unconscious and archetypal manifestations The psyche and matter are ordered according to principles which are common neutral and incontrovertible 103 Borrowing the notion from Arthur Schopenhauer Jung calls it Unus mundus a state where neither matter nor the psyche are distinguishable 34 whereas for Pauli it was a limiting concept in two senses in that it is at once scientific and symbolic According to him the phenomenon is dependent on the observer 104 Nevertheless both men were in accord that there existed the possibility of a conjunction between physics and psychology Jung wrote in a letter to Pauli These researches Jung s research into alchemy have shown me that modern physics can symbolically represent psychological processes down to the minutest detail 105 Marie Louise von Franz also had a lengthy exchange of letters with Wolfgang Pauli On Pauli s death in 1958 his widow Franca deliberately destroyed all the letters von Franz had sent to her husband and which he had kept locked inside his writing desk However the letters from Pauli to von Franz were all saved and were later made available to researchers and published 106 Synchronicity is among the most developed ideas by Jung s followers notably by Michel Cazenave fr James Hillman Roderick Main 107 Carl Alfred Meier and by the British developmental clinician George Bright 108 It has been explored also in a range of spiritual currents who have sought in it a scientific rigour 109 Although Synchronicity as conceived by Jung within the bounds of the science available in his day has been categorised as pseudoscience recent developments in complex adaptive systems argue for a revision of such a view 73 Critics cite that Jung s experiments that sought to provide statistical proof for this theory did not yield satisfactory result 110 His experiment was also faulted for not using a true random sampling method as well as for the use of dubious statistics and astrological material 110 Post Jungian approaches editAndrew Samuels 1985 has distinguished three distinct traditions or approaches of post Jungian psychology classical developmental and archetypal Today there are more developments Classical edit Main articles The Red Book Jung and Black Books Jung nbsp The C G Jung Institute in Kusnacht SwitzerlandThe classical approach tries to remain faithful to Jung s proposed model his teachings and the substance of his 20 volume Collected Works together with recently published works such as the Liber Novus 111 and the Black Books 112 Prominent advocates of this approach according to Samuels 1985 include Emma Jung Jung s wife an analyst in her own right Marie Louise von Franz Joseph L Henderson Aniela Jaffe Erich Neumann Gerhard Adler and Jolande Jacobi Jung credited Neumann author of Origins of Conscious and Origins of the Child as his principal student to advance his Jung s theory into a mythology based approach 113 He is associated with developing the symbolism and archetypal significance of several myths the Child Creation the Hero the Great Mother and Transcendence 10 Archetypal edit Main articles Archetypal psychology Archetypal and Mythopoetic men s movement One archetypal approach sometimes called the imaginal school by James Hillman was written about by him in the late 1960s and early 1970s Its adherents according to Samuels 1985 include Gerhard Adler Irene Claremont de Castillejo Adolf Guggenbuhl Craig Murray Stein Rafael Lopez Pedraza es and Wolfgang Giegerich Thomas Moore also was influenced by some of Hillman s work Developed independently other psychoanalysts have created strong approaches to archetypal psychology Mythopoeticists and psychoanalysts such as Clarissa Pinkola Estes who believes that ethnic and aboriginal people are the originators of archetypal psychology and have long carried the maps for the journey of the soul in their songs tales dream telling art and rituals Marion Woodman who proposes a feminist viewpoint regarding archetypal psychology Some of the mythopoetic archetypal psychology creators either imagine the Self not to be the main archetype of the collective unconscious as Jung thought but rather assign each archetype equal value citation needed Others who are modern progenitors of archetypal psychology such as Estes think of the Self as the thing that contains and yet is suffused by all other archetypes each giving life to the other Robert L Moore has explored the archetypal level of the human psyche in a series of five books co authored with Douglas Gillette which have played an important role in the men s movement in the United States Moore studies computerese so he uses a computer s hard wiring its fixed physical components as a metaphor for the archetypal level of the human psyche Personal experiences influence the access to the archetypal level of the human psyche but personalized ego consciousness can be likened to computer software citation needed Developmental edit A major expansion of Jungian theory is credited to Michael Fordham and his wife Frieda Fordham It can be considered a bridge between traditional Jungian analysis and Melanie Klein s object relations theory Judith Hubback and William Goodheart MD are also included in this group 114 Andrew Samuels 1985 considers J W T Redfearn Richard Carvalho and himself as representatives of the developmental approach Samuels notes how this approach differs from the classical by giving less emphasis to the Self and more emphasis to the development of personality he also notes how in terms of practice in therapy it gives more attention to transference and counter transference than either the classical or the archetypal approaches Sandplay therapy edit Main article Play therapy Models nbsp An example of a sandplay scenarioSandplay is a non directive creative form of therapy using the imagination originally used with children and adolescents later also with adults Jung had stressed the importance of finding the image behind the emotion The use of sand in a suitable tray with figurines and other small toys farm animals trees fences and cars enables a narrative to develop through a series of scenarios This is said to express an ongoing dialogue between the conscious and the unconscious aspects of the psyche which in turn activates a healing process whereby the patient and therapist can together view the evolving sense of self 115 Jungian Sandplay started as a therapeutic method in the 1950s Although its origin has been credited to a Swiss Jungian analyst Dora Kalff it was in fact her mentor and trainer Dr Margaret Lowenfeld a British paediatrician who had developed the Lowenfeld World Technique inspired by the writer H G Wells in her work with children 116 using a sand tray and figurines in the 1930s 117 Jung had witnessed a demonstration of the technique while on a visit to the UK in 1937 Kalff saw in it potential as a further application of analytical psychology Encouraged by Jung Kalff developed the new application over a number of years and called it Sandplay 118 From 1962 she began to train Jungian Analysts in the method including in the United States Europe and Japan Both Kalff and Jung believed an image can offer greater therapeutic engagement and insight than words alone Through the sensory experience of working with sand and objects and their symbolic resonance new areas of awareness can be brought into consciousness as in dreams which through their frames and storyline can bring material into consciousness as part of an integrating and healing process The historian of psychology Sonu Shamdasani has commented Historical reflection suggests the spirit of Jung s practice of the image his engagement with his own figures is indeed more alive in Sandplay than in other Jungian conclaves 119 One of Dora Kalff s trainees was the American concert pianist Joel Ryce Menuhin whose music career was ended by illness and who retrained as a Jungian analyst and exponent of sandplay 120 Process oriented psychology edit Main article Process oriented psychology Process oriented psychology also called Process work is associated with the Zurich trained Jungian analyst Arnold Mindell Process work developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s and was originally identified as a daughter of Jungian psychology 121 Process work stresses awareness of the unconscious as an ongoing flow of experience This approach expands Jung s work beyond verbal individual therapy to include body experience altered and comatose states as well as multicultural group work The Analytic attitude editFormally Jungian analysis differs little from psychoanalysis However variants of each school have developed overlaps and specific divergences through the century or more of their existence They share a frame consisting of regular spatio temporal meetings one or more times a week focusing on patient material using dialogue which may consist of elaboration amplification and abreaction and which may last on average three years sometimes more briefly or far longer The spatial arrangement between analyst and analysand may differ seated face to face or the patient may use the couch with the analyst seated behind 122 In some approaches alternative elements of expression can take place such as active imagination sandplay 123 drawing or painting even music The session may at times become semi directed in contrast to psychoanalytic treatment which is essentially a non directive encounter 122 738 The patient is at the heart of the therapy as Marie Louise von Franz has it in her work Psychotherapy the practitioner s experience where she recounts Jung s thinking on that point 124 The transference is sought out contrary to psychoanalytic treatment which distinguishes positive and negative transferences and the interpretation of dreams is one of the central pillars of Jungian psychotherapy In all other respects the rules correspond to those of classical psychoanalysis the analyst examines free associations and tries to be objective and ethical meaning respectful of the patient s pace and rhythm of unfolding progress In fact the task of Jungian analysis is not merely to explore the patient s past but to connect conscious awareness with the unconscious such that a better adaptation to their emotional and social life may ensue Neurosis is not a symptom of the re emergence of a repressed past but is regarded as the functional sometimes somatic incapacity to face certain aspects of lived reality In Jungian analysis the unconscious is the motivator whose task it is to bring into awareness the patient s shadow in alliance with the analyst the more so since unconscious processes enacted in the transference provoke a dependent relationship by the analysand on the analyst leading to a falling away of the usual defences and references This requires that the analyst guarantee the safety of the transference 125 The responsibilities and accountability of individual analysts and their membership organisations matters of clinical confidentiality and codes of ethics and professional relations with the public sphere are explored in a volume edited by Solomon and Twyman with contributions from Jungian analysts and psychoanalysts 126 Solomon has characterised the nature of the patient analyst relationship as one where the analytic attitude is an ethical attitude since The ethical attitude presupposes special responsibilities that we choose to adopt in relation to another Thus a parallel situation pertains between caregiver and child and between analyst and patient they are not equal partners but nevertheless are in a situation of mutuality shared subjectivity and reciprocal influence 127 Jungian social literary and art criticism editAnalytical psychology has inspired a number of contemporary academic researchers to revisit some of Jung s own preoccupations with the role of women in society with philosophy and with literary and art criticism 128 129 Leading figures to explore these fields include the British American Susan Rowland who produced the first feminist revision of Jung and the fundamental contributions made to his work by the creative women who surrounded him 130 She has continued to mine his work by evaluating his influence on modern literary criticism and as a writer 131 Leslie Gardner has devoted a series of volumes to analytical psychology in 21st century life one of which concentrates on the Feminine Self 132 Paul Bishop a British German scholar has placed analytical psychology in the context of precursors such as Goethe Schiller and Nietzsche 133 134 The Franco Swiss art historian and analytical psychologist Christian Gaillard has examined Jung s place as an artist and art critic in his series of Fay lectures at the Texas A amp M University 135 These scholars draw from Jung s works that apply analytical psychology to literature such as the lecture On the Relation of Analytical Psychology to Poetry 136 In this presentation which was delivered in 1922 Jung stated that the psychologist cannot replace the art critic 137 He rejected the Freudian art criticism for reducing complex works of art to Oedipal fantasies of their creators stressing the danger of simplifying literature to causes found outside of the actual work 137 Criticism edit nbsp Main critics of Analytical Psychology seated from left to right Sigmund Freud Sandor Ferenczi IPA President 1918 19 Hanns Sachs standing Otto Rank Karl Abraham IPA President 1914 18 und 1924 25 Max Eitingon IPA President 1925 32 Ernest Jones IPA President 1920 24 and 1932 49 photo 1922 Since its inception analytical psychology has been the object of criticism emanating from the psychoanalytic sphere Freud himself characterised Jung as a mystic and a snob 138 In his introduction to the 2011 edition of Jung s Lectures on the Theory of Psychoanalysis given in New York City in 1912 Sonu Shamdasani contends that Freud orchestrated a round of critical reviews of Jung s writings from Karl Abraham Jung s former colleague at the Burgholzli hospital and from the early Welsh Freudian Ernest Jones 139 140 141 Such criticisms multiplied during the 20th century focusing primarily on the mysticism in Jung s writings Other psychoanalysts including Jungian analysts objected to the cult of personality around the Swiss psychiatrist citation needed 142 It reached a crescendo with Jung s perceived collusion with Nazism in the build up and during World War II and is still a recurrent theme Thomas Kirsch writes Successive generations of Jungian analysts and analysands have wrestled with the question of Jung s complex relations to Germany 109 Other considered evaluations come from Andrew Samuels and from Robert Withers 143 144 nbsp Aurora thesaurusque philosophorum 1577 title page of a work by Paracelsus studied by JungThe French philosopher Yvon Bres fr considers that the concept of the collective unconscious shows also how easily one can slip from the psychological unconscious into perspectives from a universe of thought quite alien from traditional philosophy and science where this idea arose Le concept jungien d inconscient collectif temoigne egalement de la facilite avec laquelle on peut glisser du concept d inconscient psychologique vers des perspectives relevant d un univers de pensee etranger a la tradition philosophique et scientifique dans laquelle ce concept est ne 145 In his Le Livre Rouge de la psychanalyse Red Book of psychoanalysis the French psychoanalyst Alain Amselek fr criticizes Jung s tendency to be fascinated by the image and to reduce the human to an archetype He contends that Jung dwells in a world of ideas and abstractions in a world of books and old secrets lost in ancient books of spells fr grimoires While claiming to be an empiricist Amselek finds Jung to be an idealist a pure thinker who has unquestionably demonstrated his intellectual talent for speculation and the invention of ideas While he considers his epistemology to be in advance of that of Freud Jung remains stuck in his intellectualism and in his narrow provincial outlook clarification needed In fact his hypotheses are determined by the concept of his postulated pre existing world and he has constantly sought to find confirmations of it in the old traditions of Western Medieval Europe 146 More problematic has been at times the ad hominem criticism of academics outside the field of analytical psychology One a Catholic historian of psychiatry Richard Noll wrote three volumes but was able to publish only the first two in 1994 and 1997 147 148 Nolls argued that analytical psychology is based on a neo pagan Hellenistic cult 128 These attacks on Jung and his work prompted the French psychoanalyst Elisabeth Roudinesco to state in a review Even if Noll s theses are based on a solid familiarity with the Jungian corpus they deserve to be re examined such is the detestation of the author for the object of his study that it diminishes the credibility of the arguments Meme si les theses de Noll sont etayees par une solide connaissance du corpus jungien elles meritent etre reexaminees tant la detestation de l auteur vis a vis de son objet d etude diminue la credibilite de l argumentation 149 Another a French ethnographer and anthropologist Jean Loic Le Quellec fr criticized Jung over his alleged misuse of the term archetype and his suspect motives in dealings with some of his colleagues 150 See also edit nbsp Psychology portalActive imagination Michael Fordham Jungian interpretation of religion Keirsey Temperament Sorter Mythopoetic men s movement Positive disintegration Socionics Edward Armstrong BennetReferences edit a b Jung C G 1912 Neue Bahnen in der Psychologie in German Zurich a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link New Pathways in Psychology Samuels Andrew Shorter B Plaut F 1986 A Critical Dictionary of Jungian Analysis London Routledge and Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 415 05910 7 Analytic Psychology Encyclopaedia Britannica Collected Works of C G Jung Complete Digital Edition Princeton University Press March 2014 ISBN 9781400851065 Retrieved 23 January 2014 a b c d Fordham Michael 1978 Jungian Psychotherapy A Study in Analytical Psychology London Wiley amp Sons pp 1 8 ISBN 0 471 99618 1 a b c d e f g h Anthony Stevens 1990 Archetype A Natural History of the Self Hove Routledge ISBN 978 0 415052207 Jung Carl Gustav 1 August 1971 Psychological Types Collected Works of C G Jung Volume 6 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 09770 1 page needed McCrae R Costa P 1989 Reinterpreting the Myers Briggs Type Indicator from the perspective of the five factor model of personality Ann Addison 2009 Jung vitalism and the psychoid an historical reconstruction Journal of Analytical Psychology 54 1 123 142 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5922 2008 01762 x PMID 19161521 a b Samuels Andrew 1985 Jung and the Post Jungians London and Boston Routledge amp Kegan Paul plc pp 11 21 ISBN 0 7100 9958 4 Remo F Roth 2012 Return of the World Soul Wolfgang Pauli C G Jung and the Challenge of Psychophysical Reality unus mundus Part 2 A Psychophysical Theory Pari Publishing ISBN 978 88 95604 16 9 Samuels Andrew ed 1985 The Father Contemporary Jungian Perspectives London Free Association Books ISBN 978 0 946960 28 6 Kutek Ann 1999 The terminal as a substitute for the interminable Psychodynamic Counselling 5 7 24 doi 10 1080 13533339908404188 Huskinson Lucy 2018 Architecture and the Mimetic Self A Psychoanalytic Study of How Buildings Make and Break Our Lives Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 69303 5 Redfearn J W T 1992 The Exploding Self The Creative and Destructive Nucleus of the Personality Chiron Wisdom of the Dream Carl Jung https www youtube com watch v Ci9nfJbvBjY a Stephen Segaller production Hubback Judith 2013 People Who Do Things to Each Other Chiron Publishers ISBN 978 0 933029279 Schaverien Joy 2015 Boarding School Syndrome Routledge ISBN 978 0415690034 Mathers Dale ed 2021 Depth Psychology and Climate Change The Green Book Routledge ISBN 978 0 367 23721 9 Jung CW 1 pp 3 88 a b c d e f g h Bair Deirdre 2004 Jung A Biography London Little Brown ISBN 0 316 85434 4 Binswanger L 1919 XII In Jung Carl ed Studies in Word Association New York NY Moffat Yard amp company pp 446 et seq Retrieved 30 March 2015 Note Jung was so impressed with EDA monitoring he allegedly cried Aha a looking glass into the unconscious Brown Barbara 9 November 1977 Skin Talks And It May Not Be Saying What You Want To Pocatello Idaho Field Enterprises Inc Idaho State Journal p 32 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Mitchell Gregory Carl Jung amp Jungian Analytical Psychology Mind Development Courses Retrieved 9 April 2015 Daniels Victor Notes on Carl Gustav Jung Sonoma State University Retrieved 4 April 2015 By 1906 Jung was using GSR and breath measurement to note changes in respiration and skin resistance to emotionally charged worlds He found that indicators cluster around stimulus words which indicate the nature of the subject s complexes The Biofeedback Monitor Archived 15 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Wehr Gerhard 1987 Jung A Biography Translated by Weeks David M Boston Shambala pp 501 505 ISBN 0 87773 455 0 Roazen Paul 1976 Erik Erikson pp 8 9 The Harvard Fellowship was intended for Freud who was too ill to travel so to save emoluments going elsewhere it was offered to Jung who accepted Martin Vallas Francois 2013 Quelques remarques a propos de la theorie des archetypes et de son epistemologie Revue de Psychologie Analytique in French 1 1 99 134 doi 10 3917 rpa 001 0099 Jung on film Jungian Psychoanalysis new Retrieved 21 November 2021 Vaughan Alan G 9 August 2013 Jung Analytical Psychology and Transpersonal Psychology The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of Transpersonal Psychology 141 154 doi 10 1002 9781118591277 ch7 ISBN 9781119967552 a b c d e Bair Deirdre 2004 Jung A Biography Little Brown p 553 ISBN 0 316 85434 4 Baudouin Charles L Œuvre de Carl Jung et la psychologie complexe Paris Petite bibliotheque Payot coll numero 133 2002 ISBN 978 2 228 89570 5 in French Karl Abraham 1969 Critique de l essai d une presentation de la theorie psychanalytique de C G Jung pp 207 224 a b c d Jung Carl 1963 Memories Dreams Reflections Pantheon Books p 206 Carlson Heth 2010 Psychology The Science of Behavior Upper Saddle River NJ Pearson p 434 ISBN 978 0 205 64524 4 Jung CW 7 para 266 Jung CW 12 para 44 Jung CW 11 para 391 a b Hoerni Ulrich Fischer Thomas Kaufmann Bettina eds 2019 The Art of C G Jung W W Norton amp Company p 260 ISBN 978 0 393 25487 7 Shamdasani Sonu 2003 Jung and the making of modern psychology the dream of a science Cambridge University Press p 59 Jung C G 1994 Correspondence in French Vol 3 1950 1954 Albin Michel p Letter of 14 May 1950 to Joseph Goldbrunner a b c d e Aurigemma Luigi 2009 L Eveil de la conscience in French Paris L Herne coll Carnets p 54 ISBN 978 2 85197 446 4 C G Jung 1950 Psychological Types Georg pp 85 86 M L Hoffman of The New York Times in Geneva as part of research for an article about Freud Jung answered point by point questions concerning his attitude to the psychoanalysis of the Viennese doctor on 24 July 1953 in Replies to questions about Freud adequations org Retrieved 23 December 2009 Jung C G The Red Book Liber Novus Philemon Foundation and W W Norton amp Co 2009 ISBN 978 0 393 06567 1 manuscript produced circa 1915 1932 Jung C G The Black Books Philemon Foundation and W W Norton amp Co 2020 ISBN 978 0 3930 8864 9 private journals produced circa 1913 1932 on which the Red Book is based a b Stevens Anthony 1998 An Intelligent Person s Guide to Psychotherapy London Gerald Duckworth amp Co p 67 ISBN 0 7156 2820 8 Jung CW 16 paras 364 65 Fordham Michael 1978 Jungian Psychotherapy A Study in Analytical Psychology London John Wiley amp Sons Ltd ISBN 0 471 99618 1 Jung C G Psychiatric Studies The Collected Works of C G Jung Vol 1 1953 edited by Michael Fordham London Routledge amp Kegan Paul Princeton NJ Bollingen Jung C G Psychology of the Unconscious a study of the transformations and symbolisms of the libido a contribution to the history of the evolution of thought translated by B M Hinkle 1916 London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner Revised in 1952 as Symbols of Transformation Agnel Aime Cazenave Michel Dorly Claire Krakowiak Suzanne Thibaudier Vivianne Vandenbroucke Bernadette eds 2005 Le Vocabulaire de Jung coll Vocabulaire de in French Paris Ellipses pp 80 ff ISBN 978 2 7298 2599 7 Baudouin Charles 2002 L Œuvre de Carl Jung et la psychologie complexe coll numero 133 in French Paris Petite bibliotheque Payot p 116 ISBN 978 2 228 89570 5 Jung C G 1964 Man and his Symbols in French Robert Laffont p 52 Jung C G 1988 Essai d exploration de l inconscient in French Gallimard p 43 ISBN 978 2 07 032476 7 Naiman Rubin 2020 We Live in a Wake centric World Losing Touch with our Dreams Retrieved 20 December 2020 Nataf Andre 1985 Jung Le Monde de in French Paris Edition MA p 209 ISBN 978 2 86676 192 9 a b de Mijolla Alain ed 2005 International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis MacMillan Reference Books ISBN 0 02 865924 4 a b Jackson Kathy Merlock 2005 Rituals and Patterns in Children s Lives Madison The University of Wisconsin Press p 225 ISBN 0 299 20830 3 Ivancevic Vladimir G Ivancevic Tijana T 2007 Computational Mind A Complex Dynamics Perspective Berlin Springer p 108 ISBN 9783540714651 Jung C G 21 September 1988 Nietzsche s Zarathustra Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691099538 Maciocia Giovanni 2009 The Psyche in Chinese Medicine Treatment of Emotional and Mental Disharmonies with Acupuncture and Chinese Herbs Edinburgh Churchill Livingstone Elsevier p 301 ISBN 978 0 7020 2988 2 Stevens Anthony Archetype Revisited an Updated Natural History of the Self Toronto ON Inner City Books 2003 p 74 Smythe William E Baydala Angelina 2012 The hermeneutic background of C G Jung Journal of Analytical Psychology 57 1 57 75 doi 10 1111 j 1468 5922 2011 01951 x PMID 22288541 Wikischool Wikischool Archived from the original on 4 September 2017 Retrieved 15 May 2020 Colman Warren 2018 Are Archetypes Essential Journal of Analytical Psychology 63 3 336 346 doi 10 1111 1468 5922 12414 PMID 29750343 Young Eisendrath amp Dawson Cambridge Companion to Jung 2008 Chronology pp xxiii xxxvii According to the 1953 Collected Works editors the 1916 essay was translated by M Marsen from German into French and published as La Structure de l inconscient in Archives de Psychologie XVI 1916 they state that the original German manuscript no longer exists Jung Collected Works vol 7 1953 The Structure of the Unconscious 1916 437 507 pp 263 292 Jung Collected Works vol 8 1960 The Significance of Constitution and Heredity in Psychology 1929 229 230 p 112 a b Cambray Joseph Synchronicity as emergence In Cambray Joseph Carter Linda eds Analytical Psychology Contemporary Perspectives in Jungian Analysis Brunner Routledge p 232 Roudinesco p 731 Baudouin Charles 2002 L Œuvre de Carl Jung et la psychologie complexe coll no 133 in French Paris Petite bibliotheque Payot ISBN 978 2 228 89570 5 Aurigemma p 43 Jung C G 1977 The Relations between the ego and the Unconscious Collected Works Vol 7 Routledge amp Kegan Paul p 172 a b Jung C G Keller Adolf 2020 On Theology and Psychology The Correspondence of C G Jung and Adolf Keller Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 691 19877 4 a b Jung Carl Gustav 1999 Two Essays on Analytical Psychology London Routledge p 173 ISBN 0 415 08028 2 Wenzel Amy 2017 The SAGE Encyclopedia of Abnormal and Clinical Psychology Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1 5063 5322 7 Harris Judith 2001 Jung and Yoga The Psyche body Connection Toronto ON Inner City Books p 23 ISBN 0 919123 95 3 Aurigemma p 35 Roudinesco p 732 Brooke Roger 2015 Jung and Phenomenology Classic Edition New York Routledge p 22 ISBN 978 1 138 78727 8 Anthony Stevens On Jung London 1990 p 43 Jung C G 1993 The Practice of Psychotherapy London Jung C G 1958 1967 Psyche and Symbol R F C Hull Trans Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press published 1991 Roudinesco p 727 Gordon Susan 2013 Neurophenomenology and Its Applications to Psychology New York Springer Science amp Business Media p 140 ISBN 978 1 4614 7238 4 Moacanin Radmila 2019 Jung and Islam Two Pilgrims Leading to the Soul Pittsburgh PA Dorrance Publishing p 107 ISBN 978 1 4809 9169 9 Hockley Luke Fadina Nadi 2015 The Happiness Illusion How the media sold us a fairytale Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 57982 3 Jung C G CW 9 pp 122 ff Brinich Paul Shelley Christopher 2002 The Self and Personality Structure Philadelphia PA McGraw Hill Education UK p 72 ISBN 0 335 20564 X Jung C G Psychological Types The Collected Works of C G Jung Vol 6 a b Jung C G 2012 Synchronicity An Acausal Connecting Principle From Vol 8 of the Collected Works of C G Jung Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp xiii ISBN 978 1 4008 3916 2 Cambray Joseph Carter Linda eds 2004 9 Synchronicity as emergence Analytical Psychology Contemporary Perspectives in Jungian Analysis PDF Hove New York Brunner Routledge pp 223 248 ISBN 1 58391 999 6 Jung C G CW 8 para 845 A young woman I was treating had at a critical moment a dream in which she was given a golden scarab While she was telling me this dream I sat with my back to the closed window Suddenly I heard a noise behind me like a gentle tapping I turned round and saw a flying insect knocking against the window pane from outside I opened the window and caught the creature in the air as it flew in It was the nearest analogy to a golden scarab that one finds in our latitudes a scarabaeid beetle the common rose chafer Cetonia aurata which contrary to its usual habits had evidently felt an urge to get into a dark room at this particular moment I must admit that nothing like it ever happened to me before or since and that the dream of the patient has remained unique in my experience Jung C G CW 8 paras 849 850 Pallud Pierre 1981 L idee de synchronicite dans l œuvre de Jung Cahiers jungiens de psychanalyse in French 28 2 Jung C G Pauli Wolfgang Meier C A Zabriskie Beverley Roscoe David 1 July 2014 Atom and Archetype The Pauli Jung Letters 1932 1958 Princeton University Press p xxxiii ISBN 978 0 691 16147 1 Jung Carl Gustav and Wolfgang Ernst Pauli 1952 1955 The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche translated from German Naturerklarung und Psyche A summary of their research is available in German Pauli W December 1954 Naturwissenschaftliche und erkenntnistheoretische aspekte der ideen vom unbewussten Dialectica in German 8 4 283 301 doi 10 1111 j 1746 8361 1954 tb01265 x The Correspondence of Pauli and Jung Albin Michel 2007 p 162 Liard Veronique 2007 Carl Gustav Jung Kulturphilosoph in French Presses Paris Sorbonne p 148 ISBN 9782840504146 Pauli Wolfgang Jung Carl 2007 Correspondance Pauli Jung Pauli Jung correspondence in French Albin Michel p 248 Gieser Suzanne 2005 The innermost kernel depth psychology and quantum physics Wolfgang Pauli s dialogue with C G Jung Berlin u a Springer ISBN 9783540208563 Main Roderick 1997 Jung on Synchronicity and the Paranormal Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691058375 Bright George 2006 Synchronicity as A Basis of Analytic Attitude Journal of Analytical Psychology 42 4 613 635 doi 10 1111 j 1465 5922 1997 00613 x a b Kirsch Thomas 2000 The Jungians a comparative and historical perspective Routledge pp 244 245 a b Aziz Robert 1990 C G Jung s Psychology of Religion and Synchronicity Albany NY State University of New York Press p 224 ISBN 0 7914 0166 9 The Red Book Liber Novus tr M Kyburz J Peck and S Shamdasani New York W W Norton 2009 ISBN 978 0 393 06567 1 Jung C G October 2020 Shamdasani Sonu ed The Black Books of C G Jung 1913 1932 Translated by Liebscher Martin Peck John Shamdasani Sonu Philemon Foundation amp W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 3930 8864 9 Jung C G Neumann Erich 2015 Liebscher Martin ed Analytical Psychology in Exile The Correspondence of C G Jung and Erich Neumann Philemon Foundation Series Translated by Heather McCartney Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691166179 Obituary William Godheart 1934 2020 www legacy com Jungian Sandplay British and Irish Sandplay Society Archived from the original on 8 May 2019 Retrieved 13 January 2021 H G Wells Floor Games has been regarded as a precursor not only of learning through play but also of nonverbal child psychotherapy See Barbara A Turner s 2004 edition published by Temenos Press of Coverdale CA Sandplay History Techniques developed from Lowenfeld s World Technique Archived 12 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 28 June 2009 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Sandplay Dora Kalff YouTube Shamdasani S 2015 Jung s Practice of the Image Journal of Sandplay Therapy 24 1 Ryce Menuhin J 1992 Jungian sandplay The wonderful therapy London amp New York Routledge Press ISBN 0415047757 Julie Diamond 2004 A Path Made by Walking Lao Tse Press p 6 In the mid 1980s Arnold Mindell presented a lecture called Jungian Psychology has a Daughter to the Jungian community in Zurich a b Roudinesco Elisabeth Plon Michel 2011 Entree Jung Dictionnaire de la psychanalyse in French Paris Fayard ISBN 978 2 253 08854 7 Kirsch Thomas B 2012 The Jungians A Comparative and Historical Perspective Routledge pp 233 236 ISBN 9781134725519 von Franz M L 1990 Psychotherapie Erfahrungen aus der Praxis Gesammelte Aufsatze Bd 3 Daimon Einsiedeln Zurich ISBN 3 85630 036 8 in German Extracted from Code de deontologie de la SFPA Code of Ethics of the French Society of Analytical Psychology in French cgjungfrance com Archived from the original on 1 March 2011 Retrieved 7 March 2011 Woodhead J 2004 SOLOMON HESTER MCFARLAND amp TWYMAN MARY Eds The Ethical Attitude in Analytic Practice London Free Association Books 2003 Pp 178 Pbk 18 95 Journal of Analytical Psychology 49 4 587 589 Solomon Hester McFarland 2002 Origins of the ethical attitude Journal of Analytical Psychology 46 3 443 454 doi 10 1111 1465 5922 00256 PMID 11471333 a b Bishop Paul 2008 Analytical Psychology and German Classical Aesthetics Goethe Schiller and Jung Volume 1 The Development of the Personality Oxon Routledge pp 5 7 ISBN 978 1 58391 808 1 Samuels Andrew 2015 Passions Persons Psychotherapy Politics The selected works of Andrew Samuels East Sussex Routledge pp 97 98 ISBN 978 1 317 64385 2 Rowland Susan 2002 Jung A feminist revision Wiley ISBN 978 0 7456 2517 1 Rowland Susan 2005 Jung as a Writer Routledge ISBN 978 1 5839 1902 6 Gardner Leslie Miller Catriona eds 2020 Exploring Depth Psychology and the Female Self Feminist Themes from Somewhere Routledge ISBN 978 0 3673 3065 1 Bishop Paul 2007 Analytical Psychology and German Classical Aesthetics Goethe Schiller and Jung Routledge ISBN 978 1 58391 809 8 Bishop P 2016 On the Blissful Islands With Nietzsche and Jung in the Shadow of the Superman London Routledge ISBN 978 1 1387 9161 9 Gaillard Christian 2019 Rosen David ed The Soul of Art Analysis and Creation Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 6234 9526 8 Young Eisendrath Polly Dawson Terence 2008 The Cambridge Companion to Jung Second Edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 271 ISBN 978 0 521 86599 9 a b Rowland Susan 2018 Jungian Literary Criticism The Essential Guide Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 20229 5 Vandermeersch Patrick 1991 Unresolved Questions in the Freud Jung Debate On Psychosis Sexual Identity and Religion Retrieved 1 December 2020 Jung C G 2011 Shamdasani Sonu ed Jung Contra Freud The 1912 New York Lectures on the Theory of Psychoanalysis Translated by Hull R F C Princeton University Press p XX ISBN 978 0 6911 5251 6 Abraham Karl 1955 Abraham Hilda ed Clinical Papers and Essays on Psychoanalysis Translated by Abraham Hilda Ellison D R London Hogarth Press pp 101 15 Jones Ernest 1911 Zur Psychoanalyse der christlichen Religion Internationale Zeitschrift fur Arztliche Psychoanalyse 2 83 86 Steven Anthony October 1997 The Jung Cult Origins of a Charismatic Movement The Aryan Christ The Secret Life of Carl Jung book Journal of Analytical Psychology 42 4 671 via EBSCOhost Samuels A 1985 Jung and the Post Jungians London Routledge and Kegan Paul ISBN 0 7100 9958 4 Withers Robert 2003 Controversies in Analytical Psychology Hove Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 23305 7 Bres Yvon 2002 L Inconscient Philo in French Paris Ellipses p 123 ISBN 2 7298 0974 0 Amselek Alain 2010 Le Livre Rouge de la psychanalyse in French Paris Desclee de Brouwer pp 85 119 Noll Richard The Jung Cult Origins of a Charismatic Movement Princeton Princeton University Press 1994 ISBN 0 684 83423 5 Noll Richard The Aryan Christ The Secret Life of Carl Jung New York Random House 1997 ISBN 0 679 44945 0 Roudinesco Elisabeth Intervention d Elisabeth Roudinesco sur R Noll resume Liberation in French psychologies com Archived from the original on 21 April 2008 Retrieved 1 December 2020 Le Quellec J L 2013 Jung et les archetypes Un mythe contemporain in French Auxerre Editions Sciences Humaines pp 117 132 ISBN 978 2 36106 045 9 Further reading editArundale Jean Covington Coline Knox Jean Williams Paul eds 2002 Terrorism and War Unconscious Dynamics of Political Violence Karnac Books ISBN 978 1 7804 9692 4 Atmanspacher Harald Primas Hans 1996 The Hidden Side of Wolfgang Pauli An Eminent Physicist s Extraordinary Encounter with Depth Psychology Journal of Consciousness Studies 3 112 126 Aziz Robert 1999 Synchronicity and the Transformation of the Ethical in Jungian Psychology In Becker Carl ed Asian and Jungian Views of Ethics Greenwood ISBN 0 313 30452 1 Aziz Robert 2007 The Syndetic Paradigm The Untrodden Path Beyond Freud and Jung The State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 6982 8 Aziz Robert 2008 Foreword In Storm Lance ed Synchronicity Multiple Perspectives on Meaningful Coincidence Pari Publishing ISBN 978 88 95604 02 2 Bishop Paul 2000 Synchronicity and Intellectual Intuition in Kant Swedenborg and Jung Ceredigion Wales Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 978 07734 7593 9 Casement Ann Goss Phil Nobus Dany eds 2020 Thresholds and Pathways Between Jung and Lacan On the Blazing Sublime London Routledge ISBN 978 0 3675 4543 7 Christopher Elphis Solomon McFarland Hester eds 2000 Jungian Thought in the Modern World Free Association Books ISBN 978 1 853434662 Clift Wallace 1982 Jung and Christianity The Challenge of Reconciliation The Crossroad Publishing Company ISBN 0 8245 0409 7 Clift Jean Dalby Clift Wallace 1996 The Archetype of Pilgrimage Outer Action With Inner Meaning The Paulist Press ISBN 0 8091 3599 X Dohe Carrie B Jung s Wandering Archetype Race and Religion in Analytical Psychology London Routledge 2016 ISBN 978 1138888401 Fappani Frederic 2008 Education and Archetypal Psychology Cursus Fordham Frieda 1966 An Introduction to Jung s Psychology Harmondsworth Penguin Books Ltd ISBN 978 0140202731 Formaini Heather ed 2001 Landmarks Papers by Jungian Analysts from Australia and New Zealand Australia Australian and New Zealand Society of Jungian Analysts ISBN 0 646 41184 5 Glinka Lukasz Andrzej 2014 Aryan Unconscious Archetype of Discrimination History amp Politics Great Abington Cambridge International Science Publishing ISBN 978 1 907343 59 9 Kimbles Samuel Singer Thomas eds 2004 The Cultural Complex Contemporary Jungian Perspectives on Psyche and Society United Kingdom Brunner Routledge Kirsch Jean Stein Murray eds 2013 How and Why We Still Read Jung Personal and Professional Reflections Routledge ISBN 978 0 4156 8648 8 Mayes Clifford 2005 Jung and education elements of an archetypal pedagogy Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 57886 254 2 Mayes Clifford 2007 Inside Education Depth Psychology in Teaching and Learning Atwood Publishing ISBN 978 1 891859 68 7 Remo F Roth Return of the World Soul Wolfgang Pauli C G Jung and the Challenge of Psychophysical Reality unus mundus Part 1 The Battle of the Giants Pari Publishing 2011 ISBN 978 88 95604 12 1 Rowland Susan 2016 Remembering Dionysus Revisioning Psychology and Literature in C G Jung and James Hillman Routledge ISBN 978 0 4158 5584 6 Rust Mary Jayne Totton Nick eds 2012 Vital Signs Psychological Responses to Ecological Crisis Routledge ISBN 978 1 7804 9048 9 Samuels Andrew 1993 The Political Psyche Routledge ISBN 0 415 08102 5 Samuels Andrew 2001 Politics on the Couch Citizenship and the Internal Life Profile ISBN 1 86197 219 9 Stein Murray 2008 Minding the Self Jungian Meditations on Contemporary Spirituality London Routledge ISBN 978 0 4153 7784 3 Stevens Anthony 1989 The Roots of War A Jungian Perspective New York Paragon House Storr Anthony 1997 Feet of Clay Saints Sinners and Madmen A Study of Gurus New York Free Press Paperbacks pp 139 140 ISBN 0 684 83495 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Analytical psychology Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism Website of the Journal of Analytical Psychology considered the foremost 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