408 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
408 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
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ARRoGANT CoURiERS WiTH ESSaYS
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Grade Level: Type of Work Subject/Topic is on:
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[ ]6-8 [ ]Class Notes [Gustav Jung and his ]
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[ ]9-10 [ ]Cliff Notes [works in the field of ]
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[ ]11-12 [x]Essay/Report [psychiatry. ]
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[x]College [ ]Misc [ ]
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Dizzed:7/94 # of Words:3699 School: ? State: ?
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<EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>>Chop Here><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>><3E><><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>
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Primer of Jungian Psychology
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============================
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Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) was a son of a minister in Switzerland. He
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was born on July 26, in the small village of Kesswil on Lake Constance. He
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was named after his grandfather, a professor of medicine at the University
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of Basel. He was the oldest child and only surviving son of a Swiss Reform
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pastor. Two brothers died in infancy before Jung was born. Jung's mother
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was a neurotic and often fought with his father. Father was usually lonely
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and very irritable. When the child could not take his mother's depressions
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and his parents' fights, he sought refuge in the attic, where he played
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with a wooden mannikin. Carl was exposed to death early in life, since his
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father was a minister and attended many funerals, taking his son with him.
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Also, Jung saw many fishermen get killed in the waterfalls and also many
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pigs get slaughtered. When he was eleven, he went to a school in Basel, met
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many rich people and realized that he was poor, compared to them. He liked
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to read very much outside of class and detested math and physical education
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classes. Actually, gym class used to give him fainting spells (neurosis)
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and his father worried that Jung wouldn't make a good living because of his
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spells. After Carl found out about his father's concern, the faints
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suddenly stopped, and Carl became much more studious.
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He had to decide his profession. His choices included archeology,
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history, medicine, and philosophy. He decided to go into medicine, partly
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because of his grandfather. Carl went to the University of Basel and had
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to decide then what field of medicine he was going to go into. After
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reading a book on psychiatry, he decided that this was the field for him,
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although psychiatry was not a respectable field at the time. Jung became
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an assistant at the Burgholzli Mental hospital in Zurich, a famous medical
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hospital. He studied under Eugen Bleuler, who was a famous psychiatrist
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who defined schizophrenia. Jung was also influenced by Freud with whom he
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later became good friends. Freud called him his crown-prince. Their
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relationship ended when Jung wrote a book called "Symbols of
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Transformation." Jung disagreed with Freud's fundamental idea that a symbol
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is a disguised representation of a repressed wish. I will go into that
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later. After splitting up with Freud, Jung had a 2 year period of
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non-productivity, but then he came out with his "Psychological Types," a
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famous work. He went on several trips to learn about primitive societies
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and archetypes to Africa, New Mexico to study Pueblo Indians, and to India
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and Ceylon to study eastern philosophy. He studied religious and occult
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beliefs like I Ching, a Chinese method of fortune telling. Alchemy was
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also one of his interests. His book, "Psychology and Alchemy," published
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in 1944 is among his most important writings. He studied what all this
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told about the human mind. One of his methods was word association, which
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is when a person is given a series of words and asked to respond to them.
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Abnormal response or hesitation can mean that the person has a complex
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about that word.
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His basic belief was in complex or analytical psychology. The goal is
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psychosynthesis, or the unification and differentiation of the psyche
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(mind). He believed that the mind started out as a whole and should stay
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that way. That answered structural, dynamic, developmental questions. I
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will attempt to restate the major ideas and terms in this book in a
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pseudo-outline. It will make the understanding a bit more clear.
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STRUCTURE
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---------
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Jung said that there are three levels of mind. Conscious, Personal
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Subconscious, and Collective Subconscious. The conscious level serves four
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functions. The following are the functions of people (not types!):
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A. Thinking: connecting ideas in ordered strings.
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B. Feeling: evaluating ideas upon feelings about them.
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C. Sensing: wanting to get experiences.
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D. Intuiting: following unfounded ideas.
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A & B are called rational, and C & D are called irrational. If they
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don't make much sense, they will be explained in more detail after
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explaining Types.
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There are also 2 classes of conscious behavior:
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A. Introverted, which are people who are content to stay within their
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own psyche. They base their whole life on analyzing their mind.
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B. Extroverted, which are people who seek out other people. They care
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about the outside world and adjust to it.
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Also, one of the two classes usually dominates, and rarely does one see
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an individual with perfectly balanced classes of behavior. Jung said that
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an ego is a filter from the senses to the conscious mind. All ego
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rejections go to the personal subconscious. The ego is highly selective.
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Every day we are subjected to a vast number of experiences, most of which
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do not become conscious because the ego eliminates them before they reach
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consciousness. This differs from Freud's definition of ego, which we
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studied in class. The personal subconscious acts like a filing cabinet for
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those ego rejections. Clusters of related thoughts in the personal
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subconscious form Complexes. One type of complex we have talked about in
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class is the Oedipus Complex. For example, if one has a mother complex,
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(s)he can not be independent of his/her mother or a similar figure.
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Complexes are often highly visible to people, but unfelt by the individual
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who has the complex. As already mentioned, complexes can be revealed by
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word association, which will cause hang-ups, if mentioned. A strong or
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total complex will dominate the life of a person, and weak or partial
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complex will drive a person in a direction of it, but not too strongly. A
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complex, as Jung discovered, need not be a hindrance to a person's
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adjustment. In fact, quite the contrary. They can be and often are
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sources of inspiration and drive which are essential for outstanding
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achievement. Complexes are really suppressed feelings. Say you want to be
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a fireman, but your parents don't let you, so you might have suppressed
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feelings about it and let it drive you, so you might think that firemen are
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heroes, because you never could be one.
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The Collective Subconscious is hereditary. It sets up the pattern of
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one's psyche. A collection of so called primordial images which people
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inherit, also called archetypes are stored here. They are universal
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inclinations that all people have in common somewhere by means of heredity.
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The four important archetypes that play very significant roles in
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everyone's personality are Persona, Anima(us), Shadow, and the Self. Here
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is a brief explan ation of each.
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Persona - from Latin word meaning "mask." Something actors wore to portray
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a certain personality. In Jungian psychology, the persona
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archetype serves a similar purpose; it enables one to portray a
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character that is not necessarily his own. The persona is the
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mask or facade one exhibits publicly, with the intention of
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presenting a favourable impression so that society will accept
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him. This is necessary for survival, for the reason that it
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enables us to get along with people, even those we diskike, in an
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amicable manner. Say, you have to get a job, and what is expected
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of you is such personal characteristics such as grooming,
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clothing, and manners, so even if you don't exhibit those at
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home, you have to demonstrate them at work, in order to get this
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job. A person may also have more than one persona.
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Anima, Animus - Jung called the persona the "outward face" of the psyche
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because it is that face which the world sees. The "inward face"
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he called the anima in males and the animus in females. The anima
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archetype is the female side of the masculine psyche; the animus
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archetype is the masculine side of the female psyche. Man has
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developed his anima archetype by continous exposure to women over
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many generations, and woman has developed her animus arch etype
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by her exposure to men. Anima and animus archetype, like that of
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the persona, have strong survival value. If a man exhibits only
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masculine traits, his feminine traits remain unconscious and
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therefore these traits remain undevel oped and primitive. This,
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if you will remember, is like Jack, who was a macho guy, and was
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encouraged to discard all feminine traits. Jung said that since
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this image is unconscious, it is always unconsciously projected
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upon the person of the beloved, (i.e. girlfriend) and is one of
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the chief reasons for passionate attraction or aversion. So, for
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example, if I always thought that women were nagging, then I
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would project that notion onto my wife, and think that she is
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nagging, although she is perfectly customary. If he experiences
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a "passionate attraction," then the woman undoubtedly has the
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same traits as his anima-image of woman. Western civilization
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seems to place a high value on conformity and to disparage
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femininity in men and masculinity in women. The disparagement
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beings in childhood when "sissies" and "tomboys" are ridiculed.
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Peter was expected to be kind and gentle, which would bring deri
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sion. Boys are simply expected to conform to a culturally
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specified masculine role and girls to a feminine role. Thus, the
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persona takes precedence over and stifles the anima or animus.
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The Shadow - This is another archetype that represents one's own gender and
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that influences a person's relationships with his own sex. The
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shadow contains more of man's basic animal nature than any other
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archetype does. Because of its extremely deep roots in
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evolutionary history, it is probably the most powerful and
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potentially the most dangerous of all the archetypes. It is the
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source of all that is best and worst in man, especially in his
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relations with others of the same sex. In order for a person to
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become an integral member of the community, it is necessary to
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tame his animal spirits contained in the shadow. This taming is
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accomplished by suppressing manifestations of the shadow and by
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developing a strong persona which counteracts the power of the
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shadow. For example, if a person suppresses the animal side of
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his nature, he may become civilized, but he does so at the
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expense of decreasing the motive power for spontaneity,
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creativity, strong emotions, and deep insights. A shadowless
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life tends to become shallow and spiritless. The shadow is
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extremely persistent and does not yield easily to suppression.
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Say, a farmer was in spired to be a psychology teacher.
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Inspirations are always the work of the shadow. The farmer does
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not think this inspiration is feasible at the time, probable
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since his persona as a farmer is too strong, so he rejects it.
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But the idea keeps plaguing him, because of the persistent
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pressure exerted by the shadow. Finally, one day he gives in and
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turns from farming to teaching psychology. When the ego and the
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shadow work in close harmony, the person feels full of life and
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vigor.
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The Self - The concept of the total personality or psyche is a central
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feature of Jung's psychology. This wholeness, as pointed out in
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the discussion of the psyche, is not achieved by putting the
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parts together in a jigsaw fashion; it is there to begin with,
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although it takes time to mature. It is sometimes manifested in
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dreams, it leads to self realization, its the driving force to be
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a complete person! The self is the central archetype in the col
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lective unconscious, much as the sun us the center of the solar
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system. It unites the personality. When a person says he feels
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in harmony with himself and with the world, we can be sure that
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the self archetype is performing its work effectively.
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There are three ways how your psyche works together. One structure may
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compensate for the weakness of another structure, one component may oppose
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another component, and two or more structures may unite to form a
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synthesis. Compensation may be illustrated by the contrasting attitudes of
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extraversion and introversion. If extraversion is the dominant or superior
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attitude of the conscious ego, then the unconscious will compensate by
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devel oping the repressed attitude of introversion. Compensation also
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occurs between function, which I briefly mentioned earlier. A person who
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stresses thinking or feeling in his conscious mind will be an intuitive,
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sensation type unconsciously. As we studied in class, this balance, which
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compensation provides us with, is healthy. It prevents our psyches from
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becoming neurotically unbalanced. We need to have a little Peter and Jack
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in all of us. Opposition exists everywhere in the personality: between
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the persona and the shadow, between the persona and the anima, and between
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the shadow and the anima. The contest between the rational and irrational
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forces of the psyche never ceases either. One's integrity of "self" can
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actually determine whether or not this opposition will cause a shattering
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of a personality. Must personality always by a house divided against
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itself, though? Jung thought not. There can always be a union of
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opposites, a theme that looms very large in Jung's writings.
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DYNAMICS
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--------
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The psyche is a relatively closed system that has only a fixed amount of
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energy also called Values, which is the amount of energy devoted to a
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component of the mind. There are some channels into the psyche through
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which ene rgy can enter in form of experiences. If the psyche were a
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totally closed systems, it could reach a state of perfect balance, for it
|
|||
|
would not be subjected to interference from the outside. The slightest
|
|||
|
stimulus may have far-reaching consequences on one's mental stability.
|
|||
|
This shows that it is not the amount of energy that is added, but the
|
|||
|
disruptive effects that the added energy produces within the psyche. These
|
|||
|
disruptive effects are caused by massive redistributions of energy within
|
|||
|
the system. It takes only the slightest pressure on the trigger of a
|
|||
|
loaded gun to cause a great disaster. Similarly, it may take only the
|
|||
|
slightest addition of energy to an unstable psyche to produce large effects
|
|||
|
in a person's behavior. Psychic energy is also called Libido. It is not
|
|||
|
to be confused with Freud's definition of libido. Jung did not restrict
|
|||
|
libido to sexual energy as Freud did. In fact, this is one of the
|
|||
|
essential differences in the theories of the two men. It can be classified
|
|||
|
as actual or potential forces that perform psychological work. It is often
|
|||
|
expressed in desires and wants for objects. The values for things are
|
|||
|
hidden in complexes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The psyche is always active, yet it is still very difficult for people to
|
|||
|
accept this view of a continuously active psyche, because there is a strong
|
|||
|
tendency to equate psychic activity with conscious activity. Jung, as well
|
|||
|
as Freud, hammered away at this misconception, but it persists even today.
|
|||
|
The source of psychic energy is derived from one's instincts and diverted
|
|||
|
into other uses. Like a waterfall is used to create energy, you have to
|
|||
|
use your instincts to turn into energy as well. Otherwise, just like the
|
|||
|
waterfall, your instincts are completely fruitless. For example, if you
|
|||
|
think that to get a beautiful wife, you have to be rich, so you direct your
|
|||
|
sexual drive into a business persona, which will bring you money.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are two principles of psychic dynamics. What happens to all that
|
|||
|
energy?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Principle of Equivalence. Energy is not created nor destroyed. If
|
|||
|
it leaves something, it has to surface. For example, if a child devoted a
|
|||
|
lot of energy to reading comics, it might be redirected into a different
|
|||
|
persona, som ething like being Mr. Cool Dude! He then will loose interest
|
|||
|
in reading comics. Energy also has an inclination to carry tendencies of
|
|||
|
its source to its destination.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Principle of Entropy. Energy usually flows from high to low. If you
|
|||
|
have a highly developed structure (persona, for example), instead of
|
|||
|
equalizing, it may start drawing values from other systems to boost itself
|
|||
|
even higher. Such highly energized systems have a tendency to go BOOOOM!
|
|||
|
So, entropy can destroy those high energy systems if they get too big. The
|
|||
|
operation of the entropy principle results in an equilibrium of forces.
|
|||
|
Just like two bodies of different temperatures touching each other would
|
|||
|
soon equalize temperatures. The hotter one will transfer heat to the
|
|||
|
cooler one. Once a balance is reached in your psyche, according to Jung, it
|
|||
|
will be then difficult to disturb. Tho se two principles influence the
|
|||
|
following:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Progression and Regression. Progression is the advance of psychological
|
|||
|
adaptation. For example, if you need a shadow (creativity, perhaps), you
|
|||
|
will try to develop one. When conflicting traits loose power, your psyche
|
|||
|
enters regression. Say, your persona and shadow are in opposition and
|
|||
|
because they are in opposition, they both would be suppressed, because
|
|||
|
neither would get enough libido, or energy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DEVELOPMENT
|
|||
|
-----------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jung stated that there are basically four stages of life. They are
|
|||
|
Childhood, Youth and Young Adulthood, Middle Age, and Old Age. In the
|
|||
|
beginning (childhood), a person's psyche is undefferentiated and this
|
|||
|
person becomes a projection of the parents psyche. Children are not
|
|||
|
individuals in the beginning of their life, because their ir memories don't
|
|||
|
have too much stored in them and they lack a sense of continuity because of
|
|||
|
that. As they gain experience, they realize that they are their own person
|
|||
|
and not their parents' projection. The stage of youth and adulthood is
|
|||
|
announced by the physiological changes that occur during puberty. During
|
|||
|
this stage, an individual establishes his/her position in life. His
|
|||
|
vocation and marriage partner are determined. A person usually uses his
|
|||
|
Anima and Shadow to d ecide those things. Values are channeled into his
|
|||
|
establishment in the outside world. Once one is independent, even a small
|
|||
|
experience can influence him greatly. The Middle Age is the one often
|
|||
|
neglected by psychiatrists. Lots of people have problems in this stage.
|
|||
|
They usually don't know what to do with the energy left over that was
|
|||
|
devoted to establishing positions in society as youth. As the principle of
|
|||
|
entropy suggests, the energy is conserved, so once an adult put it to use,
|
|||
|
he must redirect it elsewhere. Jung stated that those left-over energies
|
|||
|
can be usefully diverted into spiritual contemplation and expansion.
|
|||
|
Nothing much happens in old age. People have so much energy of experiences
|
|||
|
in their psyche that even a major experience won't upset their
|
|||
|
psychological balance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Often, society will force people to assume prefered types. Types are
|
|||
|
categories of classifications of psyches which are non-absolute and have no
|
|||
|
definite boundaries. There are eight "types." Types are combinations of
|
|||
|
functions and attitudes (page 3). The following are the eight main types:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Extraverted Thinking Type. This type of man elevates objective
|
|||
|
thinking into the ruling passion of his life. He is typified by the
|
|||
|
scientist who devotes his energy to learning as much as he can about
|
|||
|
the objective world. The most developed extraverted thinker is an
|
|||
|
Einstein.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Introverted Thinking Type. This type is inward-directed in his
|
|||
|
thinking. He is exemplified by the philosopher or existential
|
|||
|
psychologist who seeks to understand the reality of his own being.
|
|||
|
He may eventually break his ties with reality and become
|
|||
|
schizophrenic.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. Extraverted Feeling Type. This type, which Jung observes is more
|
|||
|
frequently found in women, subordinates thinking to feeling.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. Introverted Feeling Type. This type is also more commonly found
|
|||
|
among women. Unlike their extraverted sisters, introverted feeling
|
|||
|
persons keep their feelings hidden from the world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. Extraverted Sensation Type. People of this type, mainly men, take an
|
|||
|
interest in accumulating facts about the external world. They are
|
|||
|
realistic, practical, and hardheaded, but they are not particularly
|
|||
|
concerned about what things mean.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Introverted Sensation Type. Like all introverts, the introverted
|
|||
|
sensation type stands aloof from external objects, immersing himself
|
|||
|
in his own psychic sensations. He considers the world to be banal
|
|||
|
and uninteresting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. Extraverted Intuitive Type. People of this type, commonly women, are
|
|||
|
characterized by flightiness and instability. They jump from
|
|||
|
situation to situation to discover new possibilities in the external
|
|||
|
world. They are always looking for new worlds to conquer before they
|
|||
|
have conquered old ones.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. Introverted Intuitive Type. The artist is a representative of this
|
|||
|
type, but it also contains dreamers, prophets, visionaries, and
|
|||
|
cranks. He usually thinks of himself as a misunderstood genius.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Variations in the degree to which each of the attitudes and functions are
|
|||
|
consciously developed or remain unconscious and undeveloped can produce a
|
|||
|
wide range of differences among individuals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This book is an extremely valuable source of thought provoking logic.
|
|||
|
Jung wrote with common sense, passion, and compassion, and the reader
|
|||
|
experiences a "shock of recognition"; he will recognize truths he has
|
|||
|
known, but which he has not been able to express in words. This book made
|
|||
|
me think about myself, and people in general. How people's minds work,
|
|||
|
including my own. I found a lot of "truth" or at least I though I did in
|
|||
|
Jung's teachings. I could relate some of the reading material to elements
|
|||
|
studied in class. One will be astounded by the number of Jung's ideas that
|
|||
|
anticipated those of later writers. Many of the new trends in psychology
|
|||
|
and related fields are indebted to Jung, who first gave them their
|
|||
|
direction. The book is also interesting, because of its challenging
|
|||
|
nature. I suppose that not all people would enjoy reading such type of
|
|||
|
literature, since many people in this world are sensational types. I
|
|||
|
certainly did enjoy it, and have found out some things about myself in the
|
|||
|
process. The book is very well written. It has many good analogies and
|
|||
|
explanations which even the most sensational type would understand. The
|
|||
|
collection of information is tremendous. There is so much information
|
|||
|
bundled in 130 pages, that it makes you think that 500 pages would not be
|
|||
|
enough to really explain deeply the subject matter. This book can be
|
|||
|
faultlessly us ed as a textbook, which could prove to be salutary in
|
|||
|
psychology classes. I strongly recommend reading this book to all
|
|||
|
audiences that want to. A person, content with the world around him, not
|
|||
|
wishing to challenge the puzzles of nature, should not. This book is a
|
|||
|
treasure for all who seek to explore the human mind.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ilya Shmulevich
|