28 Facts About Jungian psychology

1.

Analytical psychology is a term coined by Carl Jung, a Swiss psychiatrist, to describe research into his new "empirical science" of the psyche.

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2.

Approximately "three schools" of post-Jungian analytical psychology that are current, the classical, archetypal and developmental, can be said to correspond to the developing yet overlapping aspects of Jung's lifelong explorations, even if he expressly did not want to start a school of "Jungians".

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3.

Jungian psychology's research earned him a worldwide reputation and numerous honours, including honorary Doctorates from Clark and Fordham Universities in 1909 and 1910 respectively.

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4.

Jungian psychology saw dreams, myths, coincidence, and folklore as empirical evidence to further understanding and meaning.

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5.

Overarching aim in life, according to Jungian psychology, is the fullest possible actualisation of the "Self" through individuation.

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6.

Jungian psychology encountered other figures associated with James, such as John Dewey and the anthropologist, Franz Boas.

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7.

Jungian psychology's theories consist of observations of phenomena, and according to Jung it is phenomenology.

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8.

Jungian psychology's lectures are evidence of his assimilation of Kantian thought, especially the Critique of Pure Reason and Critique of Practical Reason.

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9.

Jungian psychology regularly refers to the experimental psychology of Wilhelm Wundt.

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10.

Principal contribution to analytical Jungian psychology, nevertheless, remains that of Freud's psychoanalysis, from which Jung took a number of concepts, especially the method of inquiring into the unconscious through free association.

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11.

Jungian psychology Analysis, as is psychoanalysis, is a method to access, experience and integrate unconscious material into awareness.

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12.

Jungian psychology remained aware nonetheless that exposure to a patient's unconscious contents always posed a certain risk of contagion to the analyst, as experienced in the countertransference.

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13.

The process of contemporary Jungian analysis depends on the type of "school of analytical psychology" to which the therapist adheres,.

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14.

Unconscious material is expressed in images through the deployment of symbolism which, in Jungian psychology terms, means it has an affective role and an intellectual role.

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15.

Analytical Jungian psychology is recognised for its historical and geographical study of myths as a means to deconstruct, with the aid of symbols, the unconscious manifestations of the psyche.

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16.

Jungian psychology evinced an interest in Hinduism, in Zoroastrianism and Taoism, which all share fundamental images reflected in the psyche.

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17.

However, many modern-day Jungian psychology practitioners do not ascribe to a literal definition, citing that the Jungian psychology concept points to every person having both an anima and an animus.

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18.

Use of archetypes in Jungian psychology was advanced by Jung in an essay entitled "Instinct and the Unconscious" in 1919.

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19.

Jungian psychology made explicit references to hermeneutics in the Collected Works and during his theoretical development of the notion of archetypes.

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20.

Jungian psychology's experiment was faulted for not using a true random sampling method as well as for the use of dubious statistics and astrological material.

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21.

Jungian psychology is associated with developing the symbolism and archetypal significance of several myths: the Child, Creation, the Hero, the Great Mother and Transcendence.

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22.

Mythopoeticists and psychoanalysts such as Clarissa Pinkola Estes who believes that ethnic and aboriginal people are the originators of archetypal Jungian psychology and have long carried the maps for the journey of the soul in their songs, tales, dream-telling, art and rituals; Marion Woodman who proposes a feminist viewpoint regarding archetypal Jungian psychology.

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23.

Major expansion of Jungian psychology theory is credited to Michael Fordham and his wife, Frieda Fordham.

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24.

Analytical Jungian psychology has inspired a number of contemporary academic researchers to revisit some of Jung's own preoccupations with the role of women in society, with philosophy and with literary and art criticism.

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25.

Jungian psychology has continued to mine his work by evaluating his influence on modern literary criticism and as a writer.

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26.

Jungian psychology rejected the Freudian art criticism for reducing complex works of art to Oedipal fantasies of their creators, stressing the danger of simplifying literature to causes found outside of the actual work.

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27.

Since its inception, analytical Jungian psychology has been the object of criticism, emanating from the psychoanalytic sphere.

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28.

Jungian psychology contends that Jung dwells in a world of ideas and abstractions, in a world of books and old secrets lost in ancient books of spells.

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