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Topic: C G Jung


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
  Carl Gustav Jung
Jung was probably unaware of the Friesian background of Otto's term "numinosity" when he began to use it for his Archetypes, but it is unlikely that he would object to the way in which Otto's theory, through Fries, fits into Kantian epistemology and metaphysics.
Jung was often at pains not to complicate his theory of the Archetypes by committing himself to a metaphysical theory -- he wanted the theory to work whether he was talking about the brain or about the Transcendent -- but that was merely a concession to the materialistic bias of contemporary science.
Jung's Kantianism enables him to avoid the materialism and reductionism of Freud ("all of civilization is a substitute for incest") and, with a great breadth of learning, employs principles from Kant, Schopenhauer, and Otto that are easily conformable to the Kant-Friesian tradition.
www.friesian.com /jung.htm   (1284 words)

  
 Carl Jung
Jung felt that there had been a connection, somehow, between himself as an individual and humanity in general that could not be explained away.
According to Jung, someone whose own mother failed to satisfy the demands of the archetype may well be one that spends his or her life seeking comfort in the church, or in identification with "the motherland," or in meditating upon the figure of Mary, or in a life at sea.
Jung borrowed the idea from physics, where entropy refers to the tendency of all physical systems to "run down," that is, for all energy to become evenly distributed.
webspace.ship.edu /cgboer/jung.html   (7366 words)

  
  Carl Jung
Jung felt that there had been a connection, somehow, between himself as an individual and humanity in general that could not be explained away.
According to Jung, someone whose own mother failed to satisfy the demands of the archetype may well be one that spends his or her life seeking comfort in the church, or in identification with "the motherland," or in meditating upon the figure of Mary, or in a life at sea.
Jung borrowed the idea from physics, where entropy refers to the tendency of all physical systems to "run down," that is, for all energy to become evenly distributed.
www.ship.edu /~cgboeree/jung.html   (7375 words)

  
  Carl Jung
Jung's break with Sigmund Freud is one of the famous stories in the early history of psychoanalytic thought.
Carl Gustav Jung was born in Kesswil, Switzerland.
Jung had earlier written a hostile analysis of Ulysses, and Joyce was left bitter at Jung's analysis of his daughter.
www.kirjasto.sci.fi /cjung.htm   (1791 words)

  
 An Introduction to Jung and Analytical Psychology
Jung began to observe, in his work with patients' dreams, the appearance of symbols which seemed to have little or no personal meaning for the dreamer and yet which often had great emotional charge.
Jung became convinced that the source of this symbolic material was what he identified as the collective unconscious, a pool of experience accessible to all humans through history which lies below the personal unconscious.
Jung, C. On the psychology of the unconscious.
www.mageist.net /jungintro.html   (2059 words)

  
 C.G. Jung - CAPT.org
Jung's theories of the human psyche were complex and his style of writing not always easily discernable.
The latter discovery has enabled Jung to describe striking parallels between the unconscious images produced by individuals in dream and vision and the universal motifs found in the religions and mythologies of all ages.
Jung's major contribution to developmental psychology is his concept of individuation.
www.capt.org /using-type/c-g-jung.htm   (7124 words)

  
 Jung, Carl Gustav. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
However, a formal break with Freud came with the publication of Jung’s revolutionary work The Psychology of the Unconscious (1912), which disagreed with the Freudian emphasis on sexual trauma as the basis for all neurosis and with the literal interpretation of the Oedipus complex.
While Jung’s work is of little importance in contemporary psychoanalytic practice, it remains widely influential in such fields as religious studies and literary criticism.
Additionally, he was the first person to introduce into the language such terms and concepts as “anima” and “New Age.” For Jung the most important and lifelong task imposed upon any person is fulfillment through the process of individuation, the achievement of harmony of conscious and unconscious, which makes a person one and whole.
www.bartleby.com /65/ju/Jung-Car.html   (489 words)

  
 C. G. Jung   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Carl Gustav Jung was born in the small village of Kessewil, Switzerland on 26 July 1875.
Jung was concerned that the only available ancient Gnostic myths and traditions were some seventeen or eighteen hundred years old and no link seemed to exist that might join them to Jung's own time.
In 1926, Jung had a remarkable dream where he was transported back into the seventeenth century, and saw himself as an alchemist, engaged in the opus, or great work of alchemy.
members.tripod.com /~norf1666/c__g__jung.htm   (1134 words)

  
 C. G. Jung and the Alchemical Renewal
Jung continued to explore Gnostic lore with great diligence, and his own personal matrix of inner experience became so affinitized to Gnostic imagery that he wrote the only published document of his great transformational crisis, The Seven Sermons to the Dead, using purely Gnostic terminology and mythologems of the system of Basilides.
The term "transference is used by Jung as a psychological synonym for love, which in interpersonal relations as well as in depth-psychological analysis serves the role of the great healer of the sorrows and injuries of living.
In 1950 Jung was greatly encouraged when Pope Pius XII used several manifestly alchemical allusions, such as "heavenly marriage", in Apostolic Constitution, "Munificentissimus Deus", the official document declaring the dogma of the assumption of the Virgin Mary, (the Catholic Sophia).
www.gnosis.org /jung_alchemy.htm   (3928 words)

  
 CG Jung Page - Home
The Jung Page is dedicated to exploring questions of meaning which engage the individual as well as the varied cultures in which we live.
This conversation is greatly enlarged by the contributions of C. Jung, (1875-1961) and the rich permutations of analytical psychology which continue to develop.
Founded in 2003 with the mission to prepare for publication the unpublished work of C. Jung, the Philemon Foundation is proud to have its first sponsored volume, The Jung-White Letters, in print and available to interested readers everywhere.
www.cgjungpage.org   (1081 words)

  
 C.G. Jung and Picasso   (Site not responding. Last check: )
To Jung this was very important, for only by undertaking such a journey could an individual ever hope to come to terms with himself spiritually and psychologically.
Picasso like Jung, had a great interest in symbols and it was from this use of symbols that Jung recognised Picasso's Nekyia, an experience that Jung also appears to have undertaken*.
Jung on the other hand openly introduced Alchemical principals to human psychology, much of which has since been embraced by psychologists around the world.
web.org.uk /picasso/jung.html   (423 words)

  
 :: Monroe Library | Bibliography -- C.G.Jung   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Jung, C. The psychology of Kundalini yoga : notes of the seminar given in 1932 by C.G. Jung Edited by Sonu Shamdasani.
Jung, C. "Transformation symbolism in the Mass." in Pagan and Christian mysteries; papers from the Eranos Yearbooks.
Jung's psychology and its social meaning; an introductory statement of C.G. Jung's psychological theories and a first interpretation of their significance for the social sciences.
library.loyno.edu /pubs/bibl/jung.htm   (2189 words)

  
 A Brief Introduction to C. G. Jung
The concept of the archetypes is perhaps the most distinctive of the Jungian concepts (Jung, 1934b, 1936).
The archetypes were, for Jung, "typical modes of expression" arising from layer.
Jung, C. (1934a), A review of the complex theory, In The structure and dynamics of the psyche, Collected works 8.
www.voidspace.org.uk /psychology/jung_intro.shtml   (2107 words)

  
 Carl Jung - Life and Work
Carl Jung is the author of a genuine method of exploration of the psyche which follows the completion of the individuation process.
Jung created also the concept of synchronicity in order to explain the paranormal and occult phenomena, the functioning of the Oracle of Changes (I Ching), etc.
Dream Interpretation: From Primitives to Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung.
www.freudfile.org /jung   (208 words)

  
 Jung New Media | Webdesign, Wiesbaden
Jung New Media Wiesbaden - Webdesign, Web-Entwicklung, TYPO3
Jung New Media ist eine freie Kooperation von Freiberuflern.
Wir sind unter anderen spezialisiert auf die Installation, Konfiguration, Templateerstellung und Extension Entwicklung des Content Management Systems TYPO3.
www.jung-newmedia.de   (48 words)

  
 Jung, Carl Gustav
Jung's therapeutic approach aimed at reconciling the diverse states of personality, which he saw divided not only into the opposites of introvert and extrovert, but also into those of sensing and intuiting, and of feeling and thinking.
Jung wrote voluminously, especially on analytical methods and the relationships between psychotherapy and religious belief.
Jung and Shamanism in Dialogue: Retrieving the Soul/Retrieving the Sacred (Jung and Spirituality).
www.occultopedia.com /j/jung.htm   (5183 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Memories, Dreams, Reflections: Books: C.G. Jung,Aniela Jaffe,Clara Winston,Richard Winston   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Other books by Jung are more intellectual and scientific, whereas, this autobiography has the wisdom of a person in the later part of life and it was written not so much to teach but to leave with us his legacy.
According to Jung, the unconscious tries to "compensate" the "lopsidedness" in the conscious attitude, and dreams are part of this process.
I think Carl Jung was very ahead of his time and he was in sense an explorer like Columbus, except that his territory was the vast space of his own interior.
www.amazon.com /Memories-Dreams-Reflections-C-G-Jung/dp/0679723951   (1439 words)

  
 C.G. Jung Club of Orange County, CA
We are very proud to announce that the C.G. Jung Club of Orange County has become a Collaborating institution of the Philemon Foundation whose purpose is the publication of the Complete Works of C.G. Jung in English and German.
Among the current projects are Jung's legendary Red Book, the Children's Dreams Seminars, the Lectures at the ETH from 1933 to 1941, as well as Jung's remarkable correspondence with Father Victor White.
Jung's alchemical writings are challenging to read, yet these works represent his magnum opus.
www.junginoc.org /home.htm   (430 words)

  
 [No title]
A perspective of Jung's works from a Friesian philosophical perspective.
Jung's most famous concept, the collective unconscious, has had a deep influence
Jung's break with Sigmund Freud is one of the famous stories in the...
www.geocities.com /kikos_stuff/jung   (200 words)

  
 C. G. Jung Institute Boston - Training Program
The C. Jung Institute of Boston was established in 1976.
Its aims are to advance the ideas of C. Jung and to train carefully selected people to become Analytical Psychologists, a term used by Jung to differentiate his followers from other psychoanalysts.
Training at the C. Jung Institute-Boston is a post-graduate one and it is hoped that every candidate will enrich the program by bringing valuable insights and unique points of view into the mix.
www.cgjungboston.com /jungtraining.htm   (1661 words)

  
 CG Jung Page - A Brief Note on Carl Jung
Carl Jung was one of the creators of modern depth psychology, which seeks to facilitate a conversation with the unconscious energies which move through each of us.
In his memoir, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Jung wrote that meaning comes “when people feel they are living the symbolic life, that they are actors in the divine drama.
For more information on the life and thought of Carl Jung, visit our Resources section, which appears on the main menu located in the left column.
www.cgjungpage.org /index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=743&Itemid=54   (366 words)

  
 Carl Jung
Jung was a close colleague of Freud -- in fact, Freud himself considered Jung to be his theoretical heir, thus casting himself in a father-like role with Jung as the crowned prince of psychoanalysis.
Joseph Campbell, influenced by Jung, traced archetypal patterns in the mythologies of all cultures.
For Jung, the structures of the psyche are organized by unseen archetypal forces.
mythosandlogos.com /Jung.html   (2946 words)

  
 C.G. Jung Society, Seattle: Home Page
The C.G. Jung Society, Seattle is hosting a special event, "Journey to El Camino de Santiago de Compostela." This Jungian-oriented pilgrimage into the ancient Western Mystery tradition will be take place May 12-25, 2007, with leaders Terry Gibson and Linda Leonard.
When so many devoted their genius to creating the means to destroy the world, Jung went inward on a lonely and dangerous journey, discovering those creative synthesizing forces within the human psyche that might enable the world to survive.
Jung's life, his mission, and his voice are a challenge and a source of illuminating hope.
www.jungseattle.org /index1.html   (585 words)

  
 My MBTI Personality Type - MBTI Basics - C. G. Jung's Theory
The theory of psychological type comes from Swiss psychiatrist Carl G. Jung (1875-1961) who wrote that what appears to be random behavior is actually the result of differences in the way people prefer to use their mental capacities.
Finally, Jung observed, “Each person seems to be energized more by either the external world (extraversion) or the internal world (introversion).” What Jung called a person’s psychological type consists of his or her preference in each category.
They wanted people to be able to identify their psychological types without having to sift through Jung’s academic theory.
www.myersbriggs.org /my_mbti_personality_type/mbti_basics/c_g_jungs_theory.asp   (324 words)

  
 The C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology | Book Service
The C.G. Jung Foundation Book Service is both a bookstore and a mail-order service, offering a large and unique collection of Jung’s writings and Jungian-related literature.
The Book Service is housed on the first floor of the C.G. Jung Center, a brownstone conveniently located in midtown Manhattan.
A bookstore small in size, but large in scope, offering a selection of books by and about C.G. Jung and the field of analytical psychology as well as works in the field of mythology, astrology, mysticism, religion, symbolism, alchemy, folktales and folklore, anthropology, general psychology, and other related subjects.
www.cgjungny.org /bookservice.html   (370 words)

  
 C. G. Jung | Carl Gustav Jung | Founder of Analytical Psychology | Questia.com Online Library
...Jung in Contexts is a unique collection of the most important essays on Carl Jung and analytical psychology over the past two decades.
Jung's theory of synchronicity radically challenges the entrenched assumptions of mainstream modern culture in the...
Jung, regarded scientifically, is the nearest...scientifically minded psychologists.
www.questia.com /CM.qst?D=se1&CRID=c_g_jung&KEY=c_g_jung   (688 words)

  
 Carl Jung and the Mandala
I knew that in finding the mandala as an expression of the self I had attained what was for me the ultimate.
And that is the self, the wholeness of the personality, which if all goes well is harmonious, but which cannot tolerate self-deceptions." C. Jung p.
v Indeed, Jung's discovery of the mandala provided the key to his entire system.
www.netreach.net /~nhojem/jung.htm   (907 words)

  
 Jung Circle
to Jung Circle, a temenos, or Sacred Sphere in which we celebrate the holistic vision of C.G.Jung; a place where anything can happen and where Mercurius reigns supreme.
What our age most needs is a rediscovery of the life, boundlessness, and sacredness of the psyche, and a renewed honour for the gods who inform it and speak to us through our dreams, our lives, our loved ones, gifts and wounds, and through the boundless realms of the imaginal.
Jung and the Imaginal Circle of "Erocentric" Vision
www.jungcircle.com   (209 words)

  
 Bochum macht jung: Home
Bochum macht jung, weil es sich dort gut leben lässt
Bochum macht jung, weil es die grauen Zellen auf Trab hält
Bochum macht jung, weil es auf die Gesundheit setzt.
www.bochum-macht-jung.de   (216 words)

  
 Fundación C
I lead you all, the freedom to arrange yourselves with the facts on your own special way, because I also take my self that freedom…”
For that very reason we invite you to search our institutional web site and we hope that from the same freedom that we have being invited we could meet and reach to a new synthesis.
We’ve got History to share and respect, but also, from this Present time, we’ve got Future, projection so as to protect the junguian legacy.
www.fundacion-jung.com.ar /ingles/default.htm   (259 words)

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