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    tries different foods which include Ethiopian food‚ and she also loves to travel. 3. McCrae and Costa’s concept of introversion and extraversion is very similar to that of Carl Jung. They both see extraverts as outgoing‚ open‚ sociable‚ and lively and oriented to the external world‚ introverts are seen as shy people. Carl believes that everyone possesses both attitudes and can exhibit both but only one is dominant‚ and while Eysenck believes that these attitudes or traits tends to remain stable

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    about understanding the unconscious than the development of personality‚ Carl Jung divided life into four basic stages: childhood‚ youth and young adulthood‚ middle age‚ and old age (Sharf 2008‚ p.94). Although Jung studied all of the stages thoroughly‚ his most interest was in that of the middle age stage (p. 94). Jung believed that the Archetypes were the inherited predisposition for certain thoughts and ideas (p. 88). Jung also divided the psyche into three different levels of consciousness:

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    The Collective Unconscious Carl Jung worked with Sigmund Freud‚ who assumed the unconscious mind was a personal thing within an individual . But Carl Jung saw the unconscious mind as the inherited part of the human psyche that could not be developed from personal experience. The collective unconscious is expressed through archetypes‚ which are universal symbols and thoughts that influence the way we express our emotions and actions. It’s the way we connect with each other and understand things.

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    can be effective in the counselling environment. Origins of Person-centred Counselling. The beginnings of person-centred approaches can be attributed to the work of an American psychologist Carl Rogers (1902-1987) and the how he developed what he termed as client centred

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    that could potentially influence the mental functioning of adults. His examination of the genetic and then the developmental aspects gave the psychoanalytic theory its characteristics. The Neo-Analytic theory usually includes such theorists as Carl Jung‚ Alfred Adler‚ Karen Horney‚ and Erik Erikson. Essentially this school of thought is an attempt to extend and modernize the theories of Freud. Neo-analytic thinkers acknowledge the role of the unconscious in influencing behavior‚ their focus of

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    | PSY/250 | Psychoanalytic Personality Assessment | | Dorian Durham | 11/9/2011 | Instructor: Tara Hodgens | Understanding the meaning of “Personality” is to know oneself by placing descriptors such as kind‚ understanding‚ honest‚ loving‚ and many more descriptors can be added to describe personality. To obtain what personality is “we” have to enter the minds Psychoanalysis. Sigmund Freud theories are the corner stone of Psychoanalytical concepts and Defense Mechanisms. Freud’s

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    Development in Midlife

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    Running head: DEVELOPMENT IN MIDLIFE Development in Midlife: I’m Not as Jung as I Used to Be Michael V. Anderson Central Community College Abstract The developmental stage of midlife has traditionally been studied less than many of the other developmental stages of life. The goal of this paper is to examine some of the aspects of midlife that are of particular interest as a greater number of people pass through this stage of their lives than

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    literature in 1983‚ for his first writing Lord of the Flies‚ in which symbolism is wildly used and attributes lots of symbolic meanings to the characters and events. The story thus becomes vivid and profound. This paper aims at using Swiss psychologist Carl Gustav Jung’s collective unconscious and archetypal theories to interpret the archetypes of characters‚ natural scenes and themes. Key words: symbolism‚ Lord of the Flies‚ collective unconscious‚ archetypal theory 0. Introduction Lord of the Flies

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    an objective and constructive manner and when elevated to this higher level it becomes "Typewatching" In the early 1920 ’s the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung developed a theory of personality types where he said behavioral differences were "a result of preferences related to the basic functions our personalities perform throughout life" (p. 8). Jung ’s theory was published in his book titled Personality Types in 1923. Meanwhile‚ earlier in the century‚ Katherine Briggs was researching human behavior

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    of individuation. In Herman Hesse’s novel‚ Demian‚ Hesse strives to represent the process of individuation‚ as defined by Carl Jung. The protagonist of the novel Emil Sinclair‚ finds within himself the means to resolve inner conflicts to reach a new enlightened order. Thus he is able to come to terms with life. This quest of individuation can only be achieved through what Jung terms the unity of the conscious and unconscious. This is what this novel strives to prove and what Neuer’s article comments

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