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Jungian psychology

A Wisdom Archive on Jungian psychology

Jungian psychology

A selection of articles related to Jungian psychology

We recommend this article: Jungian psychology - 1, and also this: Jungian psychology - 2.
Jungian psychology, Jungian psychology - Clinical theories, Jungian psychology - Key terms

ARTICLES RELATED TO Jungian psychology

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Transpersonal psychology - The development of the field

Among the thinkers who are considered to have set the stage for transpersonal studies are William James, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Abraham Maslow, and Roberto Assagioli (Cowley & Derezotes, 1994; Miller, 1998; Davis, 2003). A major motivating factor behind the initiative to establish this school of psychology was Abraham Maslow's already published work regarding human peak experiences. Maslows work grew out of the humanistic movement of the 1960's, and gradually the term "transpersonal" was associ ...

See also:

Transpersonal psychology, Transpersonal psychology - The development of the field, Transpersonal psychology - Research Interests, Transpersonal psychology - Contributions to the academic field, Transpersonal psychology - Criticisms of Transpersonal psychology

Read more here: » Transpersonal psychology: Encyclopedia II - Transpersonal psychology - The development of the field

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Robert L. Moore - Biography

A child of the pre-Civil Rights South, Robert Louis Moore was born August 13, 1942. His parents were Golden Franklin Moore, Sr., and Margaret DePriest Moore. Dr. Moore has characterized his roots as "Cajun Catholic, Russian Jewish, and Scotch-Irish Protestant." He is married to Margaret Shanahan. They live in Chicago. His education was extensive: 1964: B.A., Hendrix College (Religion/Behavioral Science); 1967: M.Th., Southern Methodist University (Psychology and Theology); 1968: M.Th., Duke University (Counseling Psychology and Religi ...

See also:

Robert L. Moore, Robert L. Moore - Biography, Robert L. Moore - Contributions in perspective, Robert L. Moore - Introduction, Robert L. Moore - Five key books, Robert L. Moore - Three recent books, Robert L. Moore - Publications, Robert L. Moore - Books by Robert L. Moore, Robert L. Moore - Book with J. Gordon Melton, Robert L. Moore - Books with Douglas Gillette, Robert L. Moore - Books edited by Robert L. Moore, Robert L. Moore - Categories

Read more here: » Robert L. Moore: Encyclopedia II - Robert L. Moore - Biography

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Archetype - Literature

Archetypes are often discussed in literature. William Shakespeare, for example, is known for popularizing many archetypal characters. Although he based many of his characters on existing archetypes from fables and myths, Shakespeare's characters stand out as original by their contrast against a complex, social literary landscape. A pastiche is an imitation of an archetype or prototype in orde ...

See also:

Archetype, Archetype - Literature, Archetype - Jungian archetypes, Archetype - Cultural archetypes analysis, Archetype - Enneagram character archetypes

Read more here: » Archetype: Encyclopedia II - Archetype - Literature

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Masculine Psychology - Males are not born of their own identity

Some psychologists and anthropologists argue that the masculine identity is more fragile than the feminine identity because males are not born of their own identity. Females are born from the female body. Thus females are born of their own identity. Males are born of the female body, and thus are born of an identity foreign to their own. Some argue that early on this establishes a struggle and challange for the male identity. Some scholars have noted that women are born, but men are "made." In other words, males often feel that their ...

See also:

Masculine Psychology, Masculine Psychology - Males are not born of their own identity, Masculine Psychology - The role of the father, Masculine Psychology - The works of Eugene Monick, Masculine Psychology - Related articles, Masculine Psychology - External links

Read more here: » Masculine Psychology: Encyclopedia II - Masculine Psychology - Males are not born of their own identity

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Transpersonal psychology - Criticisms of Transpersonal psychology

Criticisms of transpersonal psychology has come from several commentators. One of the earliest criticisms of the field was issued by the Humanistic psychologist Rollo May, who disputed the conceptual foundations of transpersonal psychology (Aanstos, Serling & Greening, 2000). May was particularly concerned about the low level of reflection on the dark side of human nature, and on human suffering, among the early transpersonal theorists. A similar critique was also put forward by Alexander (1980) who thought that Transpersonal Psychology, ...

See also:

Transpersonal psychology, Transpersonal psychology - The development of the field, Transpersonal psychology - Research Interests, Transpersonal psychology - Contributions to the academic field, Transpersonal psychology - Criticisms of Transpersonal psychology

Read more here: » Transpersonal psychology: Encyclopedia II - Transpersonal psychology - Criticisms of Transpersonal psychology

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Robertson Davies - Biography

Robertson Davies - Early life. Growing up, Davies was surrounded by books and language. His father, Senator William Rupert Davies, was a newspaperman, and both his parents were voracious readers. He, in turn, read everything he could. He also participated in theatrical productions as a child, where he developed a lifelong interest in drama. He attended Upper Canada College in Toronto from 1926 to 1932 and then studied at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario from 1932 until 1935. At Queen's he was enroll ...

See also:

Robertson Davies, Robertson Davies - Biography, Robertson Davies - Early life, Robertson Davies - Middle years, Robertson Davies - The 1960s, Robertson Davies - The 1970s, Robertson Davies - The 1980s and 1990s, Robertson Davies - Awards and recognition, Robertson Davies - Bibliography, Robertson Davies - Essays, Robertson Davies - Novels, Robertson Davies - Short stories, Robertson Davies - Plays, Robertson Davies - Libretto, Robertson Davies - Letters, Robertson Davies - Collections

Read more here: » Robertson Davies: Encyclopedia II - Robertson Davies - Biography

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Process Oriented Psychology - Levels of Experience

Viewing experience on the primary-secondary axis tends to emphasize the polarities in the client’s experience, rather than its unity. On this level, which Process Work refers to as “dreaming”, secondary process experience intrudes into the client’s primary process, threatening its integrity and appearing as “problems” that need to be solved. Closer examination of a client’s world of experience reveals a deeper, pre-verbal, pre-conceptual level that unifies experiences that conflict on the dreaming level. This level of ex ...

See also:

Process Oriented Psychology, Process Oriented Psychology - History, Process Oriented Psychology - Core Ideas of Process Work, Process Oriented Psychology - Levels of Experience, Process Oriented Psychology - Applications, Process Oriented Psychology - Process Work Links

Read more here: » Process Oriented Psychology: Encyclopedia II - Process Oriented Psychology - Levels of Experience

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Personality psychology - A typology of personality models

Modern personality models may generally be broken into three types: factorial models, typologies and circumplexes. Factorial models posit that there are dimensions along which human personality differs. The main purpose of a personality model is thus to define the dimensions of personality. Factor analysis is a primary tool of theorists composing factorial models. Such models arise directly from a classical individual differences approach to the study of human personality. Goldberg's Big Five ...

See also:

Personality psychology, Personality psychology - What is personality?, Personality psychology - A typology of personality models, Personality psychology - Personality theories, Personality psychology - Trait theories, Personality psychology - Psychoanalytic theories, Personality psychology - Behaviorist theories, Personality psychology - Cognitive and social-cognitive theories, Personality psychology - Humanistic theories, Personality psychology - Other theories, Personality psychology - Personality tests, Personality psychology - Brain Research

Read more here: » Personality psychology: Encyclopedia II - Personality psychology - A typology of personality models

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - AQAL - Levels or stages

The concept of levels follows closely on the concept of lines of development. The more highly developed you are in a particular line, the higher level you are at in that line. Wilber's conception of the level is clearly based on several theories of developmental psychology, including: Piaget's theory of cognitive development, Kohlberg's stages of moral development, Maslow's hierarchy of needs, Erikson's stages of psychosocial development, and Jane Loevin ...

See also:

AQAL, AQAL - Quadrants, AQAL - Eight indigenous perspectives, AQAL - Lines streams or intelligences, AQAL - Levels or stages, AQAL - States, AQAL - Types

Read more here: » AQAL: Encyclopedia II - AQAL - Levels or stages

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - James Hillman - Archetypal Psychology

Hillman’s archetypal psychology is inspired by and heavily indebted to Jung’s analytical psychology (and to an extent Freud’s psychoanalysis), yet at the same time is a radical departure from it. Whereas Jung’s psychology focused on the Self, its dynamics and its constellations (ego, anima, animus, shadow), Hillman’s archetypal psychology relativizes and deliteralizes the ego and focuses on the psyche, or soul, itself and the archai, the deepest patterns of psychic functioning, “the fundamental fantasies that animat ...

See also:

James Hillman, James Hillman - Brief Biography, James Hillman - Archetypal Psychology, James Hillman - Influences, James Hillman - Psyche or Soul, James Hillman - Dream Analysis, James Hillman - The Soul's Code, James Hillman - Select Bibliography

Read more here: » James Hillman: Encyclopedia II - James Hillman - Archetypal Psychology

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - AQAL - States

A state is basically a level that is attained only temporarily. Once you have unlimited access to a state of consciousness, then it is a permanent structure, or a developmental level. States of consciousness include: waking, dreaming, dreamless sleep, and nondual. (In the mystical traditions of which Wilber is a part, these four states correspond to four realms: gross, subtle, causal, and nondual.) Thus it is theoretically possible for someone at a low cognitive level to experie ...

See also:

AQAL, AQAL - Quadrants, AQAL - Eight indigenous perspectives, AQAL - Lines streams or intelligences, AQAL - Levels or stages, AQAL - States, AQAL - Types

Read more here: » AQAL: Encyclopedia II - AQAL - States

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Cognitive function dynamics in each type

In each type, all four of the cognitive, or mental functions, which are sensing, intuition, thinking and feeling, are present and arranged in a different order. The type acronym is used as a quick way to figure out this order, which is slightly different in introverts and extroverts. An important point to remember is that the first and last letter of the type are used as guides to figure out the order of the middle two letters, which are the main priority. The chart below this section has the dynamics worked o ...

See also:

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Historical development, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - About the indicator, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - The preferences, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Type dynamics, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - The type table, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Descriptions of the function-attitudes, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Cognitive function dynamics in each type, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Introverts, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Extroverts, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Function table, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Controversy surrounding the cognitive functions, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Temperament, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - About the test scoring and psychometrics, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Statistical studies, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Ethics, Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Skeptical view

Read more here: » Myers-Briggs Type Indicator: Encyclopedia II - Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - Cognitive function dynamics in each type

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Analytical psychology - Assumptions

The basic assumption is that the personal unconscious is a potent part — probably the more active part — of the normal human psyche. Reliable communication between the conscious and unconscious parts of the psyche is necessary for happiness. Also crucial is the belief that dreams show ideas, beliefs, and feelings of which individuals may not be readily aware, but need to be, and that such material is expressed in a personalized vocabulary of visual metaphors. Things "known but unknown" are contained in the unconscious, and dreams ...

See also:

Analytical psychology, Analytical psychology - Assumptions, Analytical psychology - Psychological types, Analytical psychology - Post-Jung, Analytical psychology - Classical school, Analytical psychology - Developmental school, Analytical psychology - Archetypal school

Read more here: » Analytical psychology: Encyclopedia II - Analytical psychology - Assumptions

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Transpersonal psychology - Contributions to the academic field

Although any model of human development can only be understood as an intellectual abstraction of reality, transpersonal psychology has made significant contributions to the understanding of human development and consciousness. While authors like Wilber and Battista tend to emphasize the understanding of development in the form of levels, where each superior level includes and integrates its junior dimensions, theorists like Washburn and Grof tend to emphasize the regressive nature of consciousness. Regressive in the sense that the individual ...

See also:

Transpersonal psychology, Transpersonal psychology - The development of the field, Transpersonal psychology - Research Interests, Transpersonal psychology - Contributions to the academic field, Transpersonal psychology - Criticisms of Transpersonal psychology

Read more here: » Transpersonal psychology: Encyclopedia II - Transpersonal psychology - Contributions to the academic field

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Traumatic incident reduction - Metapsychology

Traumatic incident reduction - Background of metapsychology. "I may use the name of metapsychology for any psychology that leads behind consciousness," wrote Sigmund Freud nearly a century ago. In his system of psychoanalysis, Freud had incorporated the concept of abreaction, or "the talking cure", from his own mentor Josef Breuer. It was based on a recalling or re-experiencing of those stressful or disturbing situations or events which precipitated a neurosis. Freud noted that the key to a recent disturbance lay ...

See also:

Traumatic incident reduction, Traumatic incident reduction - Origins of TIR, Traumatic incident reduction - What is TIR useful for?, Traumatic incident reduction - What are the contraindications and risks of TIR?, Traumatic incident reduction - Historical antecedents of TIR, Traumatic incident reduction - How and why does TIR work?, Traumatic incident reduction - How does TIR compare with other techniques for addressing traumatic stress?, Traumatic incident reduction - Metapsychology, Traumatic incident reduction - Background of metapsychology, Traumatic incident reduction - Early influences in the development of metapsychology, Traumatic incident reduction - Medical history in TIR, Traumatic incident reduction - The need for anamnesis recovery of repressed memories, Traumatic incident reduction - Time and intention, Traumatic incident reduction - The contents of present time, Traumatic incident reduction - Activity Cycles, Traumatic incident reduction - The Ruling Intention, Traumatic incident reduction - Ending an Intention, Traumatic incident reduction - The Effects of Repression, Traumatic incident reduction - To Repress or Not to Repress?, Traumatic incident reduction - Effects of Charge, Traumatic incident reduction - A Sequence of Traumatic Incidents, Traumatic incident reduction - The Traumatic Incident Network, Traumatic incident reduction - The Solution to the Net, Traumatic incident reduction - Undoing Amnesia, Traumatic incident reduction - Basic vs. Thematic TIR, Traumatic incident reduction - End Points, Traumatic incident reduction - Results

Read more here: » Traumatic incident reduction: Encyclopedia II - Traumatic incident reduction - Metapsychology

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - James Keir Baxter - Selected works

James Keir Baxter - Posthumously published. Runes, 1973. Two Obscene Poems, 1974 Barney Flanagan and Other Poems, read by James K. Baxter, 1973 (record) The Labyrinth: Some Uncollected Poems 1944-72, 1974. The Tree House and Other Poems for Children, 1974. The Bone Chanter, 1976 (ed. and introd. by J.E. Weir) The Holy Life and Death of Concrete Grady, 1976 (ed. and introd. by J.E. Weir) Baxter Basics, 1979 Collected Poems, 1979 (edited ...

See also:

James Keir Baxter, James Keir Baxter - Selected works, James Keir Baxter - Posthumously published, James Keir Baxter - Sources

Read more here: » James Keir Baxter: Encyclopedia II - James Keir Baxter - Selected works

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Xenosaga - Story

Xenosaga - Plot summary. It is the year T.C. 4767, and mankind exists on distant planets and artificial colonies. Earth is seemingly gone; it has been erased from starmaps and renamed "Lost Jerusalem". The capital of all known space is Fifth Jerusalem, where the Galaxy Federation supposedly keeps watch over mankind. For the last fourteen years, a mysterious enemy known as the Gnosis has started to attack man's colonies seemingly indiscriminately. It is largely believed that the Gnosis were brought into the ...

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Xenosaga, Xenosaga - Story, Xenosaga - Plot summary, Xenosaga - Allusions and influences, Xenosaga - Xenosaga Episode I: Der Wille zur Macht, Xenosaga - Game notes, Xenosaga - Criticism, Xenosaga - Music notes, Xenosaga - Xenosaga: Episode I Reloaded, Xenosaga - Xenosaga Freaks, Xenosaga - Xenosaga Episode II: Jenseits von Gut und Böse, Xenosaga - Game notes, Xenosaga - Criticism, Xenosaga - Post-game issues, Xenosaga - Music notes, Xenosaga - Xenosaga Episode III: Also sprach Zarathustra, Xenosaga - Game notes, Xenosaga - Story, Xenosaga - Music notes, Xenosaga - Xenosaga side stories, Xenosaga - Xenosaga: Pied Piper, Xenosaga - Xenosaga I & II, Xenosaga - Xenosaga: The Animation, Xenosaga - Xenosaga: The Manga, Xenosaga - Series controversy, Xenosaga - Notes and references

Read more here: » Xenosaga: Encyclopedia II - Xenosaga - Story

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Esotericism - Esoteric themes

What, in a nutshell, does "esotericism" teach? No possible answer could do justice to the myriad groups which are subsumed under this name. However, we may venture some representative examples: Kabbalah preserves traditions describing the origin and destiny of humanity and the universe, as well as practices aimed at restoring ourselves and the world to our true stations. These are of course typical religious concerns, which in this case parallel or amplify the teachings and practices of mainstream Judaism. Gnosticism te ...

See also:

Esotericism, Esotericism - Etymology, Esotericism - Esoteric vs. Esotericism, Esotericism - Nuances, Esotericism - Scope, Esotericism - Historical sketch, Esotericism - Esoteric themes, Esotericism - Traditions, Esotericism - Esotericism in popular culture

Read more here: » Esotericism: Encyclopedia II - Esotericism - Esoteric themes

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Symbol - Nature of symbols

A symbol can be a material object whose shape or origin is related, by nature or convention, to the thing it represents: for instance, the cross is the main symbol of Christianity, and the scepter is a traditional symbol of royal power. A symbol can also be a more or less conventional image (i.e. an icon), or a detail of an image, or even a pattern or color: for example, the olive branch in heraldry represents peace, the halo is a conventional symbol of sainthood in Christian imagery, tartans are symbols of Scottish clans, and the color red is often used as a symbol fo ...

See also:

Symbol, Symbol - Nature of symbols, Symbol - Use of symbols, Symbol - Etymology

Read more here: » Symbol: Encyclopedia II - Symbol - Nature of symbols

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - James Hillman - The Soul's Code

His book The Soul's Code: In Search of Character and Calling outlines what he calls the acorn theory of the soul. This theory states that each individual holds the potential for their unique possibilites inside themselves already, much as an acorn holds the pattern for an oak, invisible within itself. It argues against the parental fallacy whereby our parents are seen as crucial in determining who we are by supplying us with genetic material and behavioral patterns. Instead the book suggests for a reconnection with what is invisible w ...

See also:

James Hillman, James Hillman - Brief Biography, James Hillman - Archetypal Psychology, James Hillman - Influences, James Hillman - Psyche or Soul, James Hillman - Dream Analysis, James Hillman - The Soul's Code, James Hillman - Select Bibliography

Read more here: » James Hillman: Encyclopedia II - James Hillman - The Soul's Code

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Validity of astrology - How astrologers view astrology

To those who practice astrology professionally see it as a science that seeks to investigate the influence of celestial bodies relative to the Earth and the influences therein. Through direct observation of the influences of the Sun, Moon, planets and stars; astrology is essentially a study of patterns and cycles in time and space. They reject claims by skeptics and scientific cynics that astrology is "unscientific" or defined as a "pseudo-science" by conventional science, when it was astrologers who invented such mathematics used in modern ...

See also:

Validity of astrology, Validity of astrology - How astrologers view astrology, Validity of astrology - How skeptics view astrology, Validity of astrology - Arguments for astrology, Validity of astrology - Frank Brown's Experiment, Validity of astrology - The Mars effect, Validity of astrology - Age among peer groups, Validity of astrology - Percy Seymour, Validity of astrology - The thirteenth zodiacal constellation, Validity of astrology - Arguments against astrology, Validity of astrology - Gravitational forces aspect, Validity of astrology - Magnetic influence, Validity of astrology - The question of distance, Validity of astrology - Extra heavenly bodies, Validity of astrology - Inconsistency of effect, Validity of astrology - Astrological and astronomical zodiac differences, Validity of astrology - Arbitrary nature of modern and old zodiac mismatch, Validity of astrology - Time of birth, Validity of astrology - Forer effect, Validity of astrology - Modern solar system bodies discoveries, Validity of astrology - Psychological points, Validity of astrology - Knowing about things which can not be changed. A paradox?, Validity of astrology - Relationship to various sciences

Read more here: » Validity of astrology: Encyclopedia II - Validity of astrology - How astrologers view astrology

Jungian psychology: Encyclopedia II - Method acting - Technique

Method acting is considered one of the most difficult acting techniques to teach. It is characterized by the lack of any specific or technical approach to acting; it usually forms an antithesis to clichéd, unrealistic, and so-called rubber-stamp acting. Depending on the exact version taught by the numerous directors and teachers who claim to propagate the fundamentals of this technique, the process can include various ideologies and practices such as "as ...

See also:

Method acting, Method acting - Origins, Method acting - Technique, Method acting - Teachers, Method acting - External references

Read more here: » Method acting: Encyclopedia II - Method acting - Technique




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