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  1. Carl Gustav Jung •In Jung’s own theory of attitudes, his No. 1 personality was extraverted and in tune to the objective world, whereas his No. 2 personality was introverted and directed inward toward his subjective world. •After completing his medical degree from Basel University in 1900, Jung became a psychiatric assistant to Eugene ...

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    • Jung’S Model of The Psyche
    • Personal Unconscious
    • Collective Unconscious
    • Jungian Archetypes
    • Psychological Types
    • Individuation
    • Freud vs. Jung

    Like Freud (and Erikson) Jung regarded the psyche as made up of a number of separate but interacting systems. The three main ones were the ego, the personal unconscious, and the collective unconscious. According to Jung, the ego represents the conscious mind as it comprises the thoughts, memories, and emotions a person is aware of. The ego is large...

    The personal unconscious, a concept developed by Carl Jung, refers to all the information and experiences of an individual’s lifetime that have been forgotten or repressed but continue to influence their behavior and attitudes on an unconscious level. This aspect of the unconscious mind contains memories, perceptions, and thoughts that may not be c...

    The collective unconscious, a concept by Carl Jung, refers to shared, inherited unconscious knowledge and experiences across generations, expressed through universal symbols and archetypes common to all human cultures. The collective unconscious consists of pre-existent forms, or archetypes, which can surface in consciousness in the form of dreams,...

    Jungian archetypes are defined as images and themes that derive from the collective unconscious, as proposed by Carl Jung. Archetypes have universal meanings across cultures and may show up in dreams, literature, art, or religion. According to Jung (1921): Jung (1947) believes symbols from different cultures are often very similar because they have...

    Carl Jung’s psychological types theory suggests that people experience the world using four principal psychological functions – sensation, intuition, feeling, and thinking – and that one of these four functions is dominant for a person most of the time. Each of these cognitive functions can be expressed primarily in an introverted or extroverted fo...

    Jung proposed that the goal of a person’s psychological development is individuation – a process of becoming aware of oneself, integrating different aspects of personality, and realizing our inherent potential. It involves integrating the conscious and unconscious parts of our mind and reconciling our many inner contradictions. Individuation is a c...

    Carl Jung was an early supporter of Freud because of their shared interest in the unconscious. He was an active member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society (formerly known as the Wednesday Psychological Society). When the International Psychoanalytical Association was formed in 1910, Jung became president at the request of Freud. However, in 1912 w...

  2. Mar 17, 2021 · Psychological types. Overview: The book is rich in material drawn from literature, aesthetics, religion, and philosophy. The extended chapters that give general descriptions of the types and definitions of Jung's principal psychological concepts are key documents in analytical psychology.

  3. The two attitudes and the four functions combine to form eight personality types. Jung described a so-called cross of the functions, with the ego in the center being influenced by the pairs of functions (Jung, 1968). Considering whether the ego’s attitude is primarily introverted or extraverted, one could also propose a parallel pair of crosses.

  4. Feb 20, 2016 · C G Jung Collected works Vol 06 Psychological Types. Topics Carl Jung Collection opensource Language ... PDF download. download 1 ...

  5. Aug 19, 2020 · Personality types : Jung's model of typology : Sharp, Daryl, 1936- : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. by. Sharp, Daryl, 1936- Publication date. 1987. Topics. Typology (Psychology), Jungian psychology, Personnalité, Typologie (Psychologie), PSYCHOLOGY -- Movements -- Jungian. Publisher. Toronto, Canada : Inner City Books.

  6. Based on his research and clinical experience, Jung proposed a system of personality types based on attitude-types and function-types (more commonly referred to simply as attitudes and functions). Once again, the attitudes and functions are based on opposing ways of interacting with one’s environment.

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