PYSC181 Jungian Theory PDF
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These notes cover Jungian theory, focusing on the early development of Jung's ideas, different models of the psyche, and structural models, including the ego, persona, shadow, anima, and animus. It also explores the economic and dynamic models, along with different psychological types.
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Week of September 23 - Jungian Theory 1-3-1 Jung’s Early Development Jung’s Early Career Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) - Introverted, mental energy directed inwards - Interested in dynamics of his psyche - Led a solitary life in childhood onwards - Developed a hysterical illness to avoi...
Week of September 23 - Jungian Theory 1-3-1 Jung’s Early Development Jung’s Early Career Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) - Introverted, mental energy directed inwards - Interested in dynamics of his psyche - Led a solitary life in childhood onwards - Developed a hysterical illness to avoid going to school bc he hated it - But he saw it was doing harm to family so he took responsibility - Believed Paranormal activity is real and parapsychological events have an impact on us Zurich Med School - Studied under Egen Bleuler - Coined term schizophrenia - Mental processes can be unconscious, he believed - Developed word association technique - Integrate freud theory of repression and empirical psychology - State word and make association - First word to sex? Or mother? - Feeling toned complex - Set of emotionally charged ideas that exist in the unconscious and causes problems when ego is week - Independent and organized towards aim of conscious recognition - Proposive - 1907 - Freud met with Jung - Problems arose around two issues - Freud insisted on sexual hypothesis - Jung didn't buy into it - Parapsychological events - We can externalize internal energy - can impact world around us - Freud didn’t like that 1-3-2 Jung’s Topographic Model - Concerns location of mental phenomena - Conscious - All material not threatening to psyche - Personal Unconscious - All personal experiences inadequately symbolized - Infantile memories and dreams - Pre-verbal and repressed - Day to day, we do not have access - Collective unconscious - We all have our own unique personal histories - We all share common bio and psychological experiences - Innate pre-determined forms for behavior - Common dreams, symbols, myths, art - Archetypes - Archetypes - primordial images that are prototypes for experience - Transcend culture and history - universal, part of us all - Deep rooted and automatically activated - Makes up collective unconscious - Empty psychic forms that get filled in with experience Model of Psyche - Superficial is Ego and conscious - Personal Unconscious - feeling toned complexes - Collective Unconscious - self, archetypes 1-3-3 Jung’s Structural Model A Greek mask, or “Persona” Jung’s Structural Model - Begins with the ego - Representations and feelings about oneself - Gatekeeper and coordinator of consciousness - Varies in Type and Function - Some are introverted, some are extroverted - Predominate thinking, predominant feeling, predominant intuitive, sensing - Introversion and Extroversion - Four Functions - Thinking, Feeling, Intuition, Sensing - Also mediates the collective unconscious and self, and/or between external world and self - Persona - The mask we wear and show outwardly to others - Conforms to social attitudes and standards - Attempt to fit in - Protective function for psyche - Threat to stand out too much - Ex) Men - strength, independence - Women - warmth, nurturance - Mediates ego and external world - The vehicle by which our ego comes into contact with external word - The Shadow - Polar opposite of persona - All aspect of personality we do not share to others, and do not accept as part of yourself - Dark aspects - Existence of shadow blocks complete self-knowledge - Push aspects of yourself down deep into personal unconscious - Most potent when unrecognized or rigidly held - More repressed, more bubbling up to surface - Less embodied in life, the darker it is - If repressed, never gets corrected and bursts out - The Anima and Animus - Deeper than shadow - Harder to access - Manifests in midlife to make personality whole - Three components - Innate unconscious predisposition for imagining contrasexually - Images of femininity and masculinity culturally transmitted through mythology, art, fairy tails, religions, etc - Personal experiences with opposite Sex - Anima - The feminine qualities part of men that are cast into darkness - Personification of all feminine psychological tendencies in man - Archetypal feminine symbolism in man’s unconscious - Animus - The masculine qualities - Personification of all masc psych tendencies - Archetypal Masculine symbolism - The Self Archetype - The original totality of the psyche - Center of personality - Individuates all other archetypes - Teleological - movement toward organization and wholeness are the aims - Focussed on growth, differentiation, psychological unity - Energetic source of life - Goal of Therapy - Bring ego and self into contact and coherence - Make explicit the root between the two - Without, lack vitality, spirit, creativity 1-3-4 Jung’s Economic and Dynamic Models Jung’s Economic Model - Limited amount of psychic energy - The libido - Psychic energy in general - Contrast to Freud’s view (energy drawn from id - sexual aggressive) - All psychic energy invested in some object - Striving, willing, desiring - Value - Any object we channel psychic energy - When libido flows toward object - becomes valued - Canalization - Moving energy from libido to other energies - Relies on use of symbols - Symbols draw energy out from libido to some object - Inflation and Deflation - Inflation - Investment of psychic energy - Libido flows to object - Adolescents inflate ego - inflate persona - Deflation - Disinvestment - Removal of psychic energy from value - Shadow, animus - Psychological health - Dynamic equilibrium of energy transfer - Channel energy to various objects and archetypes - Balance among all components of psyche - Promotes realization of all aspects of personality - Achieved through inflation and deflation Jung’s Dynamic Model - The Libido - All motivated behavior fueled by libido energy - Two Principles of Psychodynamics - Principle of Equivalence - Energy is conserved, so libido withdrawn from one system will flow to another - Flow between values or archetypes - Only transfer, no loss - Principle of Entropy - Psychic energy seeks balance, if energy is available, it will flow to the system most needing energy - Stronger to weaker structures - What we value will eventually lose energy and flow to opposite - Self archetype makes sure energy flows through all systems 1-3-5 Psychological Types Jung’s Psychological Types (1921) - Personalities are different because they assimilate experiences differently - Attitudes - Stable individual differences - No inherent value - Two: - Introversion - Psychic energy directed to internal values - Libido towards subjective world - Extraversion - External values - Events in the world - Dominant vs auxiliary functions - Judging (rational) functions - Thinking - Analyze situations before judgment - What is true, what is false - Feeling - Base judgements on how they feel - Good or bad - Perceiving (irrational) functions - Sensing - What is occurring in world using five senses - Non-evaluative - don’t make judgements on thoughts and feelings - Intuitive - Possibilities beyond the senses - The underlying cause of events - Myers-Briggs based on ^^ Jung’s Eight Psychological Types - Extravert Thinking - Objective; repress feelings, cold and distant - Extravert Feelers - Sensitive to emotions of social situations, repressed thinking - Extravert Sensing - Captivated by sensory experiences, not introspective, sensual and outgoing - Extravert Intuitive - Jump from one new idea to another; decide on a hunch, without deliberate thought - creative visionaries - Introvert Thinking - Rational; preoccupied with abstractions; impractical, cold and inflexible - Introvert Feeling - Self-absorbed; occupied with intense emotional experiences, uncommunicative, childlish - Introvert Sensing - Strongly affected by sensory experiences in a subjective way; passive, may be artistic - Introvert Intuitive - Inner dominated; consumed with own subjective world 1-3-6 Individuation and analytic Theory Individuation - Process by which we develop our personality - Life begins individuated, we move towards balance - Individuation occurs as differentiation and integration - Break new experiences up into component parts to make sense of - Then integrated into self and aspects of individual - Filling archetypes with experiences - ^^ - Self realization and teleology - The thrust of living, move towards self realization - Individuation is natural process of psyche - Telic - promotes wholeness and balance - The Transcendent Function - Natural process of ego development - Devalued archetypes send symbols and call energy to aspects of personality that are out of balance - Symptoms - What neuroses do to call us toward individuation and self realization - towards wholeness - Psyche makes itself sick - Should not be ignored, should be assimilated - Society - Helps our drive to individuation - Constructed to not allow all aspects of our personality - Why we suffer - overvalue and undervalue certain aspects Analytic Psychotherapy - Stages of Therapy - Confession - Patient talks about repressed problems - tells the story of their neuroses - Curative element - experience catharsis - Elucidation - Patient discovers meaning behind confessions - Analyst interprets transferences and dreams - Education - Therapist teaches patient about own psyche - Encouraged to try new forms of coping - Transformation - Patient moves beyond normality to wholeness - Individuation occurs properly