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Topic: Karl Jung


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In the News (Fri 11 Dec 09)

  
  Carl Jung - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jung considered this process of psychological growth and maturation (which is known as individuation) to be of critical importance to the human being, and ultimately to modern society.
Jung identified the anima as being the unconscious feminine component of men and the animus as the unconscious masculine component in women.
Jung was born in Kesswil, in the Swiss canton of Thurgau on July 26, 1875.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Karl_Jung   (5040 words)

  
 Myths-Dreams-Symbols
Jung went to Basel University in 1895 to study medicine, and student life, along with the early death of his father, proved to be emancipatory.
Jung was awarded his medical degree with distinction in 1900, and became assistant to Eugen Bleuler (the eminent Swiss psychiatrist who coined the term 'schizophrenia') in the Burghölzli Psychiatric Hospital in Zürich from 1900-09.
Jung made the significant step of defining the unconscious of a person as comprised of both a personal unconscious (proceeding from the experiences of the individual) and a collective unconscious (issuing from the inherited structure of the brain, and common to humanity).
www.mythsdreamssymbols.com /who.html   (1293 words)

  
 Temple of the Sacred Spiral - Session 11 - Jung and Paganism
Jung experienced his mother as dark and unpredictable "rooted in the deep, invisible ground", she knew the world of the uncanny and could be frightening and erratic.
Jung's psychiatric background and his experience at the Burgholzli, his intelligence and growing repute made him a valuable recruit to the psychoanalytic movement and in addition Jung had the advantage of not being a Jew, helping to overcome the prejudice that psychoanalysis was only a Jewish concern.
Jung acknowledged these chicken and egg relationships and suggested that the archetype might suitably be described as the instinct's perception of itself, or the self-portrait of the instinct, in exactly the same way as consciousness is an inward perception of the objective life processes.
victorian.fortunecity.com /palette/187/session11.html   (15713 words)

  
 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.
www.ship.edu /~cgboeree/jung.html   (7394 words)

  
 Carl Jung and the Kundalini
Jung's journeys to Africa and India enabled him to confirm his experiences of the unconscious as he saw the visible proof of its functioning in the pre European modes of his own era.
Jung realised that arousing the activity of Swadistana, the Kundalini itself had to be aroused, but he also realised that such happenings were spontaneous, and not produced through the dangerous practices of Tantrism where the exalted idea of shakti, the pure Kundalini, is degraded into the literalism of a sexual cult.
Jung never practised any form of organised meditation but saw the attention itself gathered into deeper levels of being by the motion of the unconscious self through Kundalini awakening.
www.sol.com.au /kor/12_02.htm   (895 words)

  
 Karl Kerényi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
One of the founders of modern studies in Greek mythology, Karl (Carl, Károly) Kerényi (January 19, 1897 - April 14, 1973) was born in Timişoara and then lived in Hungary.
He was a co-founder of the Jung Institute in Zurich.
He was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Uppsala and the gold medal of the Humboldt Society.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Karl_Kerenyi   (567 words)

  
 Aryan Christ
Jung said he first heard this story from strangers when he was a schoolboy, which must have only reinforced the possibility that it might be more than a frivolous family story.
To Jung, God was in the blood, and this was his rationale for seeking and finding solar myths in the symptoms of psychotic patients at the Burgholzli and in Miss Frank Miller, whom he regarded on the verge of psychosis even though he had never met her.
Jung's German spirituality was never more apparent: his references to the rootedness of one's spirituality, of the fact that one's spirituality must come from one's blood, and the appeal to stay within the boundaries of one's mystical landscape.
www.dhushara.com /book/jung/archr.htm   (4581 words)

  
 Jungian Dream Analysis - Carl Jung's Theory of Dreams
Carl Gustav Jung was born in 1875 in Switzerland.
Jung was especially interested in studying the archetypes related to mythology and old religions.
Jung preferred to stay with the dream symbols themselves and analyse each one in detail - a process of amplification.
www.here-be-dreams.com /psychology/jung.html   (529 words)

  
 synchronicity
Carl Jung (1875-1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist and colleague of Freud's who broke away from Freudian psychoanalysis over the issue of the unconscious mind as a reservoir of repressed sexual trauma that causes all neuroses.
According to psychiatrist and author, Anthony Storr, Jung went through a period of mental illness during which he thought he was a prophet with "special insight." Jung referred to his "creative illness" (between 1913-1917) as a voluntary confrontation with the unconscious.
A Biographical Sketch of Jung by Marc Fonda
skepdic.com /jung.html   (660 words)

  
 The New American - Apostle of Perversion - April 27, 1998   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Jung’s influence was in substantial measure a product of his association with the Rockefeller family, and he used it to advance the anti-biblical tenets of two of history’s most notorious occultic movements — the Bavarian Illuminati and the Theosophical Society.
Jung’s new religion drew upon a centuries-old occult tradition to replace biblical institutions with an ethic of radical libertinism, especially sexual emancipation.
Jung was an initiate into an anti-biblical esoteric movement, and he consciously styled his religious crusade on the work of the anti-Christian Roman Emperor Julian.
thenewamerican.com /tna/1998/vo14no09/vo14no09_jung.htm   (1634 words)

  
 Karl Jung | Biographies of Jung | Sonu Shamdasani
Gustav Jung was responsible for only a small portion of what most think of as his autobiography.
At one point, when Jung was visiting with Freud in 1909, there was a "loud noise" which Jung believed to be parapsychological --- "a catalytic exteriorisation phenonemena" is how he termed it in his pedantic Swiss-German phraseology.
Since Shamdasani claims, rather fervently, if not repetitively, that Jung was nothing if not a loyal and devoted husband and father, the title might be stretching it to make a dadaesque artistic injoke.
www.ralphmag.org /DJ/jung.html   (387 words)

  
 KARL JUNG
Karl Jung originated the concept of introvert and extrovert personality, and of the four psychological functions of sensation, intuition, thinking, and feeling.
In his major work, The Psychology of the Unconscious (1912), he proposed the existence of a collective unconscious, which he combined with a theory of archetypes for studying the history and psychology of religion.
Karl Jung developed a distinctive tradition within psychoanalysis, known as analytical psychology, that focused on the idea that all humans share in a collective unconscious mind that is exhibited in the classic forms - or archetypes- of different cultures and in the thoughts, experiences and behaviour of individuals.
sociologyindex.com /karl_jung.htm   (137 words)

  
 Apostle of Perversion, by William Norman Grigg
Unlike Karl Jung, however, Goethe — who like other idealists had been lured into the order by its pretense to humanitarianism — was never an ardent Illuminist and quickly became disenchanted with the order.
By supposedly communing with Philemon, Jung developed his most influential ideas about the "collective unconscious" —; through which all humans supposedly have access to shared spiritual concepts, figures, and symbols — and "archetypes," the common patterns that supposedly define humanity.
Jung's new religion drew upon a centuriesold occult tradition to replace biblical institutions with an ethic of radical libertinism, especially sexual emancipation.
reformed-theology.org /html/issue07/apostle.htm   (1503 words)

  
 MavicaNET - Yung, Karl Gustav   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Catálogo / Cultura / Ciencia / Ciencias humanitarias / Psicología / Psicología: Por autores / Yung, Karl Gustav
Jung proposed and developed the concepts of the extroverted and introverted personality, archetypes, and the collective unconscious.
Jung rejected Freudian accounts of infant sexuality as the source of the libido and emphasized a generalized will to live.
www.mavicanet.com /lite/spa/10727.html   (616 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Man and His Symbols: Books: Carl Gustav Jung   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Apparently, the managing director of Aldus books had seen Jung on the BBC and was so struck by his warmth and personableness that he tried to persuade Jung to apply those same qualities to a book written for the general masses, rather than for psychologists themselves.
Carl Gustav Jung (July 26, 1875 - June 6, 1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist and founder of analytical psychology.
Jung probably was aware that German National Socialists did not use the term "swastika" and used the word "Hakenkreuz." Jung probably used the German word in Jung's original composition, and the quote in English is probably a poor translation to the word "swastika."
www.amazon.com /His-Symbols-Carl-Gustav-Jung/dp/0440351839   (2420 words)

  
 Famous People (2) > The German Way
Born near Basel, Jung was at one time an important collaborator with Sigmund Freud, but he broke with Freud in 1912 in a disagreement over the causes of certain psychological disorders.
Jung also placed heavy emphasis on the psychological meaning of dreams.
The “inventor” of communism was born Karl Heinrich Marx in the German city of Trier (then in Rhenish Prussia) to a Jewish family whose members were all Lutherans.
www.german-way.com /famous2.html   (2100 words)

  
 CG Jung Page - Home   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
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.
In a review originally published in the Newsletter of the C.G. Jung Society of Montreal, Harvey L. Shepherd explores Dialectics and Analytical Psychology, a collection of papers from the groundbreaking conversation between Wolfgang Giegerich, David L. Miller, and Greg Mogenson at Pacifica Graduate Institute in June 2004.
www.cgjungpage.org   (866 words)

  
 homepage AK Marx   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
R. Schmidt and Karl-Heinz Jung, in “The Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis“ Vol 4 (L.A. Paquette, Ed.) John Wiley and Sons, Chichester, New York, Brisbane, Toronto, Singapore 1995, p.
Karl-Heinz Jung and Richard R. Schmidt, in “Lipid Synthesis and Manufacture“ (F. Gunstone, Ed.), Sheffield Academic Press, 1999, p.
R. Schmidt and K.-H. Jung, in “ Carbohydrates in Chemistry and Biology, Part I: Chemistry of Saccharides“, Vol 1 (B. Ernst, G.W. Hart, P. Sinaÿ, Eds.) Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2000, pp.
www.chemie.uni-konstanz.de /~agmarx/group/JUNG/CV_JUNG.htm   (552 words)

  
 Kerenyi,Karl Books - Signed, used, new, out-of-print
The compelling narrative is based throughout on original sources and complemented by illustrations from vase paintings and genealogical tables of celebrated...
The Sanctuary of Eleusis, near Athens, was the center of a religious cult that endured for nearly two thousand years and whose initiates came from all parts of the civilized world.
This is the work on the great god Hermes by Karl Kerényi, one of the greatest classicists of the twentieth century.
www.alibris.com /search/books/author/Kerenyi,Karl   (503 words)

  
 Using Karl Jung
What Jung is saying is that there are four major ways of taking in information and in relating to that information once it is in us.
If a teacher can take present topics so that all four types are "touched" then it is obvious that the teacher is doing a better job than she or he was doing when they were reaching only one type.
Jung suggests that we are better and quicker reached when our type is targeted.
www2.localaccess.com /marlowe/jung.htm   (541 words)

  
 Sabina, a CurtainUp review
Sabina not only feels betrayed by Jung's plan to publish her case history but argues that rather than his having chosen her as a patient she chose him.
Furthermore, her cure involved a love affair with Jung (what professionals describe as counter transference) and a friendship with Freud that postdated the two men's falling out (with Freud remaining true to his sexual theories while Jung forumulated his own theory of "analytical psychology" and the "collective unconscious").
For Freud the prevailing attitude towards Jews threatened to undermine the influence of the science he pioneered; for Jung, it led to accusations that haunted him all his life, especially since he had a misguided association with the Nazis; and for Sabina Spielrein, being Jewish brought death at the hands of the Nazis.
www.curtainup.com /sabina.html   (1399 words)

  
 Archetype Theory
Individual things in the realm of appearance are beautiful only insofar as they participate in, correlate with, or approach in structure these universal "Forms" of Beauty.
Karl Jung (1875-1961) took the concept of Plato's "Forms" further and presented his own Theory of Archetypes.
In Jungian Psychology an Archetype is "an unconscious idea, pattern of thought, image, etc., inherited from the ancestors of the race and universally present in individual psyches".
www.beautyanalysis.com /mba_archetypetheory_page.htm   (830 words)

  
 Allianz - Wolfgang Dambmann to become CEO of Dresdner Bank Lateinamerika   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Karl Ralf Jung will be successor of Dambmann as head of Corporate Banking of Dresdner Bank.
A proposal will be made to the Supervisory Board of Dresdner Bank Lateinamerika AG to appoint Wolfgang Dambmann, general manager of Dresdner Bank and the current head of Corporate Banking, as chairman of the Board of managing directors of Dresdner Bank Lateinamerika.
A proposal will be made to the Supervisory Board of Dresdner Bank at its September meeting to appoint Karl Ralf Jung as head of Corporate Banking at Dresdner Bank AG.
www.allianz.com /azcom/dp/cda/0,,64245-44,00.html   (512 words)

  
 Philosophical Dictionary: James-Justification
}, Jung developed a rich account of the unconscious, positing shared primordial "archetypes" as elements established innately in the collective unconscious of all human beings rather than as features of individual personality in
Such underlying mental contents, Jung claimed in The Association Method (1910), can be observed most easily through the free association of words.
Also see The Jung Index, JungWeb, Stephen Palmquist, ColE, BIO, and C.
www.philosophypages.com /dy/j.htm   (786 words)

  
 Jung's Page
I then proceeded to share a bit about Taoism, Carl Jung, and processwork all of which are key to understanding how Mindell approaches conflict resolution.
Jung prefaces his book by saying that it won't be very interesting because most everything that happened in his life happened INSIDE not outside.
Jung is talking about evolution as seen through the eyes of God, perhaps, or a commentary on God's mindas revealed through his immanations and emanations.
www.bemyastrologer.com /bloomwhereyouareplanted.html   (1323 words)

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