“During this period, Jung spent considerable time working on his dreams and fantasies and seeking to understand them as far as possible, in terms of his everyday life” (Memories, Dreams, Reflections p.170, New York Vintage Books), this led to Jung developing his own theories and he travelled far and wide becoming fascinated with how culture affects the psyche (the word he uses for personality).…
Jung was very religious by nature, and his work was based around this religiousness, he also held a fascination with philosophy and the occult. Because of Jung’s strange and unusual beliefs, many considered him to be a little mystic. Jung’s desire was to be seen as a “man of science”, his…
Carl Gustav Jung, (26 July 1875 – 6 June 1961), was a Swiss psychologist and psychiatrist, and the founder of analytical psychology. His father was a Pastor, and he had an isolated childhood, becoming very introverted, it seems he had a schizoid personality. Although Freud was involved with analytical psychology and worked with patients with hysterical neuroses; Jung, however, worked with psychotic patients in hospital. He was struck by the universal symbols (or Archetypes) in their delusions and hallucinations (ref. Dennis Brown and Jonathan Redder (1989) p.107). His work and influence extends way beyond understanding personality, and he is considered to be one of the greatest thinkers to have theorised about life and how people relate to it.…
Jung’s work with patients with a range of different beliefs lead to him forming a link between different types of religions. Jung identified the similarities found in a number of religions for example in Islam Muslim’s refer to god as light ‘nur’ correspondingly in Christianity “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life." (John 8:12) therefore Christians describe his as the ‘Light of the World’. Such comparisons that are too complex to be classed as a consequence caused Jung to declare not only do we all as humans have a un-conscious part and conscious part split in our brain, we also all have a collective un-conscious in our un conscious which we are all born with and is the oldest part of our brain. Due to everybody having the same collective unconscious results to us creating the same images, therefore explaining why everyone shares a similar idea of god, shared…
Carl Jung theory is divided into three parts just as Freud’s theory is. The three are unconscious, personal unconscious, and collective unconscious. Freud and Carl embody…
Although Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung began as colleagues, Jung being the younger of the two, they both had different ideas about the study of psychology and it’s theories. Jung once followed Freud and conducted research with him however he came to develop his own theories which were in contrast to Freud’s ideas. In fact Jung rejected many of Freud’s theories later in his career. While the two were different they also were very much alike. They both studied the unconscious and the way in which it affected an individual and to what extent. The primary differences they had in their careers are very interesting to look at.…
Carl Jung believed that personal unconscious and collective unconscious were the two components of the unconscious. Personal unconscious contains repressed thoughts, forgotten experiences and undeveloped ideas; while the collective unconscious contains memories and behavior patterns from previous generations (Morris, G., & Maisto, A., 2005). Jung believed that libido signified all life forces instead of Freud’s belief that libido signified just the sexual forces. Jung also believed there were two attitude types among people, introverts and extroverts. Introverts are concerned with personal feelings and issues while extroverts are interested in other people and events surrounding them.…
According to Jung the mind or psyche has two levels; conscious and unconscious. Unlike Freud, Jung believes that collective unconscious refers to humans’ “innate tendency to react in a particular way whenever their experiences stimulate a biological inherited response tendency.” This explains why Myra unexpectedly reacts with love and persistence to the house cleanliness, tidiness and orderliness although she had negative or at least neutral feelings toward the job, especially when we know that her mother always took care of their house and thought that it was…
Individuals differ in the way they interact with others and the way they gather and evaluate information for problem solving and decision making. Four psychological functions identified by Carl Jung are related to this process: sensation, intuition, thinking, and feeling.…
However, that only lasted a couple years. “While Freud had viewed Jung as the most innovative and original of his followers, he was unhappy with Jung's disagreement with some of the basic tenets of Freudian theory. For example, Jung believed that Freud was too focused on sexuality as a motivating force. He also felt that Freud's concept of the unconscious was limited and overly negative.” That soon led to the falling apart of their friendship. Carl Jung’s opinion on mythic structures of the human psyche is that myths are not based on history, but as images of the psyche and was put together from many individuals. Sigmund Freud’s opinion on the human psyche, from what I have read, was less scientific and confused me, so I wasn’t really able to absorb much information.…
Carl Jung’s interest in psychology was more overt than and less assuming than Freud’s in that Jung’s approach bordered on the mythology and fantasy of the psychic world. Yet in the beginning, Jung…
Individuation is the process of transformation, where the collective and personal unconscious is expressed through dreams, active imagination and free association. This idea was perpetuated by Carl Jung. Through recorded ideas and the exploration of deeper self, and this includes the daily battles, interpersonal circumstances and situations, which might include both the positive and the negative, self is able to recognise incongruity and discrepancy that might lead to dysfunctionality. Careful observation of chronicled thoughts and feelings, situations and circumstances, allows the person to make informed and constructive choices that often lead to progressive change.…
Utyman, J. D. Rev. of “Complex, Archetype, Symbol in the physchology of C. G. Jung. Ed. Routledge and Kegan Paul (1959): 192 Web. Print.…
1923- Murray immersed himself in the book of “Carl Jung’s Psychological types”, and in other work of Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud.…
Jung's disagreement with Freud started over the latter's emphasis on sexuality alone as the dominant factor in unconscious motivation. "Every form of addiction is bad," Jung later said, "no matter whether the narcotic be alcohol or morphine or idealism." Freud fainted twice in Jung's presence but the ties were broken with the publication of Jung's Wandlungen und Symbole der Libido (1912, Symbols of Transformation), full of mythological images and motifs, and with his acts as the president of the International Congress of Psycho-Analysis. In a letter to Freud he wrote: "If ever you should rid yourself entirely of your complexes and stop playing the father to your sons, and instead of aiming continually at their weak spots took a good look at your own for a change, then I will mend my ways and at one stroke uproot the vice of being in two minds about you." (Jung on December, 18, 1912). The end of his father-son relationship with Freud had a profoundly disturbing effect on Jung. He withdrew from the psychoanalytic movement and suffered a six-year-long breakdown during which he had fantasies of mighty floods sweeping…