"Collective unconscious" Essays and Research Papers

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    Breath, Eyes, Memory

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    dreams/nightmares. In this instance‚ the mind fishes into the depths of the unconscious and obtrudes the horrific reality into the realm of the conscious. An unfortunate event is termed as a trauma in the eyes of psychoanalysts because of its gravity and accompanying‚ psychological damage (Applebaum 142). Psychoanalysts deconstruct the text usually by privileging the unconscious over the conscious since often the unconscious provides a key to decode the mental conundrum. Freud’s theory of repression

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    Carl Jung had a theory that is known as collective unconsciousness which explains how our increased knowledge comes from human experience ("Benet’s Reader’s Encyclopedia" 542­543). Plato believed there were two worlds in which we live to experience known as the “Intelligible world” and the “Invisible World” (Chaffee 241). Aristotle did not agree completely with Plato’s theory of two worlds but instead believed in two categories of things known as “Matter” and “Form” (Chaffee 251). Carl Jung‚ Plato

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    Jungian Approach Paper

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    of the Jungian Approach. In Jungian psychology‚ the focus is on understanding the relationship between the unconscious and the conscious. Carl Jung investigated people and believed that we are complex and have several qualities. Some of these qualities include introversion and extraversion‚ rational and irrational drives and masculinity and femininity. Jung believed that the unconscious has a profound influence on our thoughts‚ feelings and resulting behaviors. In this‚ he advocated that abstract

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    all that nonsense that we dream about could actually mean something‚ using Freudian and Jungian methods and patterns that I learned in Dr. Greene’s winter term elective‚ “Dreams‚” I realized a significant connection between dreams and the human unconscious. This dream of mine is split into the three scenes. In the first scene‚ I am in the center of Boston with Serbian friend who goes to Boston University. In the midst of a leisurely walk‚ all of a sudden‚ an alien ship starts approaching from the

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    Social Loafing

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    alone. Although group projects are essential‚ they can harbor difficulties in communication‚ time management‚ coordination and other aspects. One phenomenon that can occur while working in groups is called social loafing. It is the conscious or unconscious decrease in exerted effort in group settings due to the decrease in social awareness. These individuals may exert much more effort when working by themselves but when in a group setting they feel less of a need to do so. Social loafing is a complex

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    The Evolution of the Labor and Management Relationship James C. Poll Salt Lake Community College The Evolution of the Labor and Management Relationship Thesis: There has been a dynamic tension in the relationship between labor and management since the beginning of recorded history that remained largely unchanged. The introduction of psychology theory in recent‚ modern history changed the nature of labor and management relations and business but worker unions flourished. The dynamic

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    Evaluate Carl Jung's Theory

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    becoming psychotic. Jung carefully recorded his dreams‚ fantasies‚ and visions‚ he drew and painted and sculptured them as well. Jung dreamt a great deal about the dead‚ the land of the dead and the rising of the dead. These represented the unconscious itself. Critics have claimed that Jung was very simply ill when all this happened. But Jung felt that‚ if you want to understand the jungle‚ you cannot be content just to sail back and forth near the shore. You have got to get into it not matter

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    Chapter 6 * Passive Relaxation – inactivity confused with relaxation * Active Relaxation – becoming aware of your body & physiological reactions in order to consciously reduce your level of arousal * Diaphragmatic breathing – respiration from your abdomen * -Deep‚ slow‚ & rhythmic * -Natural antidote to stress * When stressed‚ breathing becomes quick‚ shallow‚ & irregular (F or F response) * Becomes habit for some people when stressed * Practicing Diaphragmatic

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    Dreams Research Papers

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    doing its job by protecting the conscious mind from the disturbances conjured by the unconscious. So‚ answering the question above‚ why do we dream? We dream to protect our sleep. Dreams are also very helpful in retrieving long-lost memories. Repression is one of the most haunting concepts in psychology (Loftus‚ 1993). Something shocking happens‚ and the mind pushes it into some inaccessible corner of the unconscious‚ the Id. There‚ it sleeps for years‚ or even decades‚ or even forever-isolated from

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    usually reflected most directly in a person’s actions. When pushed to the test or threatened by its tasks‚ it may detail defense mechanisms including denial‚ repression‚ and displacement. Id‚ Ego‚ and Super Ego play in relation to conscious and unconscious thoughts. In the story‚ "The Little Engine that Could" is inspiring to little children to teach them optimism and hard work‚ while developing there id‚ ego‚ and supere-ego. A little railroad engine was assigned to a station yard for such work

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