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Analytical

Pscyhology
Carl Gustav Jung
(1865-1961)
What made this theory
Interesting
• Assumes Occult Phenomena Influence Lives
• Inherit Experiences from Ancestors in form of
Collective Unconscious
• Archetypes are highly developed aspects of this
• Aim at achieving balance between opposing
forces
Biography
• Born in Kesswil, Switzerland in 1875
• Oldest surviving child of an idealistic
protestant minister
• Mother’s family had a tradition of
mysticism
• Jung decided to become a physician
after dreaming of making scientific
discoveries
• After receiving his medical degree in
1900, he became psychiatric assistant
to Blueler
Biography
• Studied with Janet in Paris in 1902-03
• He read Freud’s writings and eventually
began corresponding with Freud in
1906
• Freud saw Jung as his successor
• Jung became disenchanted with
Freud’s theories and broke with the
International Psychoanalytic
Association in 1913
• Began his own approach to theory and
therapy called analytic psychology
Levels of Pscyhe
Levels of Pscyhe

Personal
Unconscious
Conscious

Ideas from the


Collective
Repressed,
Psychic Images experiences
unconscious forgotten or
sensed by the ego inherited from our subliminally
ancestors perceived
experiences
ARCHETYPES

SHADOW Anima Animus Persona

Great mother Wise old man Hero The self


Psychological Types

Attitudes Functions
o Introversion o Thinking
o Extroversion o Feeling
o Sensation
o Intuition
Self Realization
(Individuation)
• Requires assimilation of unconscious into self
• Process of integrating opposites into harmonious self
• Rarely achieved
Synchronicity the acausal principle, in which
events are determined by transpersonal forces
Applications of
Analytical
Pscyhology
Application of Analytical
Pscyhology
 Word Association Test
 Dream Analysis
 Active Imagination
 Psychotherapy (4 stages)
o Confession of a pathogenic secret
o Interpretation, explanation, and
elucidation
o Education as social beings
o Transformation
Contributions Limitations
• The therapist may guide the • Auditory Hallucinations
person in therapy into areas • Literary Style
that may be more sensitive or • Science
guarded, with the purpose of • Religion
promoting greater self-
awareness and understanding
of his or her persona
References
Feist, J., Feist, GJ, & Roberts, TA (2013). Theories of
personality (8th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
Schultz, D. P., & Schultz, S. E. (2017). Theories of
personality. Australia: Cengage Learning.
Schultz, D. & Schultz, S. (2011). A History of Modern
Psychology, 10th ed., Wadsworth, Cengage Learning
Thank You

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