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Carl Jung

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Believed in importance of unconscious, but added the Collective ... Jung was the forerunner of the humanistic movement, with its emphasis on self-actualization. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Carl Jung


1
Carl Jung
  • Less emphasis on sex than Freud
  • Believed in importance of unconscious, but added
    the Collective Unconscious
  • Called his psychodynamic theory Analytical
    Psychology, to distinguish from Psychoanalysis

2
Carl Jung 1875-1961
  • Kesswill, Switzerland
  • Son of minister, maternal Grandfather minister
  • Dominant childhood beliefs formed his theory
  • Visions Dreams were important-paranormal-collect
    ive unconscious came from this
  • Two different personalities-dual personality
  • Child as he appeared to world-introvert
  • Cultured gentleman from previous century

3
Carl Jung
3 Levels of Consciousness
  • Personal Unconscious individuals thoughts,
    memories, wishes, impulses like Freuds
    Preconscious Unconscious
  • Ego conscious level carries out daily
    activities like Freuds Conscious
  • Collective Unconscious storehouse of memories
    inherited from the common ancestors of the whole
    human race no counterpart in Freuds theory

4
The Concept of Self
The self is the fully developed personality.
It is attained by balancing and integrating
all parts of the personality. Jung was the
forerunner of the humanistic movement, with its
emphasis on self-actualization.
5
Jung The Psyche
  • Psyche (The Personality)
  • Ego (Includes the four functions)
  • Personal Unconscious ( includes complexes)
  • Collective Unconscious (Archetypes)
  • Persona
  • Anima
  • Animus
  • Shadow
  • Self
  • Other Archetypes

6
Jungs Analytic Psychology
  • Mind or psyche is divided into 3 parts
  • Conscious ego-sense of self
  • Personal Unconscious-thoughts feeling not part
    of conscious awareness-past and future
    material-compensates or balances conscious
    attitude and ideas
  • Collective unconscious

7
The Collective Unconscious
It contains archetypes, emotionally charged
images and thought forms that have universal
meaning. Archetypes cause us to respond in
certain ways to common human experiences.
Key archetype Mandala (magic circle), an
image symbolizing the unity of life.
8
Jung Speaks on the Mandala
I had to abandon the idea of the
superordinate position of the ego. ... I saw that
everything, all paths I had been following, all
steps I had taken, were leading back to a single
point -- namely, to the mid-point. It became
increasingly plain to me that the mandala is the
centre. It is the exponent of all paths. It is
the path to the centre, to individuation. ... I
knew that in finding the mandala as an expression
of the self I had attained what was for me the
ultimate. C. G. Jung. Memories, Dreams,
Reflections.
9
Additional Archetypes
  • Persona your public personality, aspects of
    yourself that you reveal to others.
  • Shadow prehistoric fear of wild animals,
    represents animal side of human nature.
  • Anima feminine archetype in men.
  • Animus masculine archetype in women.
  • Others God, Hero, Nurturing Mother, Wise Old
    Man, Wicked Witch, Devil, Powerful Father.

10
Basic Personality Orientations
  • Introversion focused inward the person is
    cautious, shy, timid, reflective.
  • Extroversion focused outward the person is
    outgoing, sociable, assertive, energetic.

11
Mental Functions
  • Thinking naming and interpreting experience.
  • Feeling evaluating an experience for its
    emotional worth to us.
  • Sensing experiencing the world through the
    senses without interpreting or evaluating it.
  • Intuiting relating directly to the world
    without physical sensation, reasoning, or
    interpretation.

12
Jungs Attitudes
  • Introversion
  • Subjectively (Internally) oriented
  • Introspective
  • More withdrawn from the external world
  • Extraversion
  • Objectively (Externally) oriented
  • More aware of the external world
  • Less interested in introspection

13
Jungs four psychological functions

Sensing Thinking
Feeling
Intuiting
14
Concept from Jungs View
  • Group of emotionally charged feelings, thoughts
    and ideas related to a particular theme
  • Strength determined by its libido
    (psychic-energy) or value
  • Personality is made up of opposing forces that
    continually pull against one another

15
COMPLEX
  • Coined by Jung
  • Repressed drives that affect later behavior
  • Adler
  • Childs struggle to repress and thereby overcome
    feelings of being small and powerless
  • Inferiority Complex Adler
  • Intrapsychic struggle to cope with feeling
    inferior when compared to others who outshine
    them-comparisons-rivalries-social interest

16
Jungs Functions of the Mind
  • Sensing Is there something there?
  • Thinking - What is it that is there?
  • Feeling - What is it worth?
  • Intuiting Where did it come from and where is
    it going?
  • Sensing ThinkingRational-Judgment reason
  • Feeling IntuitingIrrational-conscious
    reasoning is virtually absent

17
Jungs Attitudes of the Mind
  • Exists in each person one is more dominant than
    other in each person
  • Extroversion direct psychic energy towards the
    things in external world
  • Introversion direct psychic energy more
    inwardly focused

18
Jungs Attitudes of the Mind
  • Exists in each person one is more dominant than
    other in each person
  • Extroversion direct psychic energy towards the
    things in external world
  • Introversion direct psychic energy more
    inwardly focused

19
Myers-Briggs Types- 4 Functions
  • Sensation (S) seeks fullest possible experience
    of what is immediate and real
  • Intuition (N) seeks the broadest view of what is
    possible and insightful
  • Thinking (T) seeks rational order and plan
    according to impersonal logic
  • Feeling (F) seeks rational order according to
    harmony among subjective values

20
Myers Briggs Attitudes Orientation to Outer
World
  • Attitudes
  • Extroverted (E) attention drawn out to objects
    people in environment
  • Introverted (I) attention on inner world of
    concepts Ideas
  • Orientation-implicit in Jungs work
  • Perceptive (P) attuned to incoming information
  • Judging (J) making decisions, seeking closure,
    planning operations, or organizing activities
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