1) Carl Jung developed analytical psychology, which assumes that occult phenomena and inherited experiences from ancestors influence lives through a collective unconscious and archetypes.
2) Jung believed personality is shaped by both conscious and unconscious thoughts as well as causal and teleological factors. People progress through achieving a balance between inner and outer worlds.
3) Jung identified four levels of psyche - conscious, personal unconscious, collective unconscious, and archetypes like persona and shadow. He also described psychological types based on attitudes of introversion/extraversion and functions of thinking/feeling/sensation/intuition.
1) Carl Jung developed analytical psychology, which assumes that occult phenomena and inherited experiences from ancestors influence lives through a collective unconscious and archetypes.
2) Jung believed personality is shaped by both conscious and unconscious thoughts as well as causal and teleological factors. People progress through achieving a balance between inner and outer worlds.
3) Jung identified four levels of psyche - conscious, personal unconscious, collective unconscious, and archetypes like persona and shadow. He also described psychological types based on attitudes of introversion/extraversion and functions of thinking/feeling/sensation/intuition.
1) Carl Jung developed analytical psychology, which assumes that occult phenomena and inherited experiences from ancestors influence lives through a collective unconscious and archetypes.
2) Jung believed personality is shaped by both conscious and unconscious thoughts as well as causal and teleological factors. People progress through achieving a balance between inner and outer worlds.
3) Jung identified four levels of psyche - conscious, personal unconscious, collective unconscious, and archetypes like persona and shadow. He also described psychological types based on attitudes of introversion/extraversion and functions of thinking/feeling/sensation/intuition.
1) Carl Jung developed analytical psychology, which assumes that occult phenomena and inherited experiences from ancestors influence lives through a collective unconscious and archetypes.
2) Jung believed personality is shaped by both conscious and unconscious thoughts as well as causal and teleological factors. People progress through achieving a balance between inner and outer worlds.
3) Jung identified four levels of psyche - conscious, personal unconscious, collective unconscious, and archetypes like persona and shadow. He also described psychological types based on attitudes of introversion/extraversion and functions of thinking/feeling/sensation/intuition.
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PSYCHODYNAMIC [ANALYTICAL]: CARL JUNG
Analytical Psychology - backward step is essential to a person's forward
movement toward self-realization - Assumes that occult phenomena influence lives a. Progression - Individuals inherit experiences from ancestors in the form - Involves adaptation to the outside world and of collective unconscious forward flow of psychic energy - Archetypes are highly developed elements of the collective b. Regression unconscious - Adaptation to the inner world and backward flow - Aims at achieving a balance between opposing forces of of psychic energy personality - People are motivated by causal and teleological factors and PSYCHOLOGICAL TYPES by both conscious and unconscious thoughts 1. Attitudes LEVELS OF PSYCHE - Predispositions to act or react in a characteristic manner 1. Conscious a. Introversion - Psychic images sensed by the ego - Turning inward of psychic energy a. Ego - orientation toward the subjective - represents the conscious side of personality. b. Extraversion - In the psychologically mature individual, the ego - Turning outward of psychic energy is secondary to the self - oriented toward the objective 2. Personal Unconscious - away from the subjective - Embraces all repressed, forgotten, or subliminally 2. Functions perceived experiences a. Thinking - contains the complexes which are emotionally toned - Logical intellectual activity groups of related ideas. - produces a chain of ideas 3. Collective Unconscious b. Feeling - Ideas from the experiences inherited from our - Process of evaluating an idea or event ancestors c. Sensation - refer to our innate tendency to react in a particular - receives physical stimuli way - transmits them to perceptual consciousness - whenever our personal experiences stimulate an d. Intuition inherited predisposition toward action - Perception beyond the workings of consciousness 4. Archetypes - Archaic images derived from the collective DEVELOPMENT OF PERSONALITY unconscious. a. Persona 1. Stages of Development - side of our personality that we show to others a. Childhood b. Shadow Anarchic - Dark side Monarchic c. Anima Dualistic - Feminine side b. Youth d. Animus - puberty until middle life - Masculine side - time for extraverted development e. Great Mother - being grounded to the real world of schooling, - nourishment and destruction occupation, courtship, marriage, and family f. Wise Old Man c. Middle Life - Wisdom and meaning - 35 or 40 years old to old age g. Hero - time when people should adopt an introverted - conqueror who vanishes evil or subjective attitude - Has one fatal flaw d. Old Age h. Self - time for psychological rebirth, self-realization, - Fulfillment, completion, or perfection and preparation for death 2. Self-Realization DYNAMICS OF PERSONALITY - process of integrating opposites into a harmonious self 1. Causality & Teleology - Represents the highest level of human development - Motivation is shaped by both - Rarely achieved - Humans are motivated both by their past experiences and by their expectations of the future 2. Progression & Regression METHODS OF INVESTIGATION
1. Word Association Test
- Requires a patient to utter the first word that comes to mind after the examiner reads a stimulus word 2. Dream Analysis - May have both a cause and a purpose - can be useful in explaining past events and in making decisions about the future 3. Active Imagination - requires the patient to concentrate on a single image until that image begins to appear in a different form 4. Psychotherapy - Confession of a pathogenic secret - Interpretation, explanation, and elucidation - Education of patients as social beings - Transformation