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Keywords = C.G. Jung

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8 pages, 179 KB  
Entry
Jung’s Legacy in Depth Psychology
by Daniel Boscaljon
Encyclopedia 2025, 5(3), 120; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5030120 - 12 Aug 2025
Viewed by 7570
Definition
This entry provides a brief introduction to some of the main aspects of the work of C.G. Jung, followed by a description of how his work was developed by others during his lifetime and afterward. This entry provides an overview of the Jungian [...] Read more.
This entry provides a brief introduction to some of the main aspects of the work of C.G. Jung, followed by a description of how his work was developed by others during his lifetime and afterward. This entry provides an overview of the Jungian tradition in Depth Psychology. It begins with a discussion of how Jung’s ideas differed from those of Freud and opened a distinct tradition of analytic (Jungian) psychology. By identifying the other influential people who contributed to the amplification of Jung’s work, this article then details how these ideas expanded beyond the work of training analysts to become a more influential, impactful, and widespread phenomenon. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Encyclopedia of Social Sciences)
19 pages, 291 KB  
Article
Prolegomena to Agapeology: Reflections on Love as Panexperiential Phenomenon
by Lenart Škof
Religions 2025, 16(6), 733; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060733 - 6 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1691
Abstract
This paper is an attempt to reflect upon the hidden or mysterious logic of love as an ontological and panexperiential phenomenon. In our attempt, we are crossing the fields of philosophy, spirituality, and contemporary research in psi phenomena (also known as paranormal phenomena) [...] Read more.
This paper is an attempt to reflect upon the hidden or mysterious logic of love as an ontological and panexperiential phenomenon. In our attempt, we are crossing the fields of philosophy, spirituality, and contemporary research in psi phenomena (also known as paranormal phenomena) and investigating some historical conditions of margins and disputes between the disciplines based on David Ray Griffin’s work, Parapsychology, Philosophy, and Spirituality. In the main part of this paper, we present the aesthetic theory of force by Christoph Menke and follow his rich analyses on the hidden, obscure layers of the soul. Based on these analyses, we present our own thesis on agapeology as being related both to psi phenomena and aesthetic phenomena. Throughout the history of religion and Western science, magical and miraculous events were too often relegated to the domain of faith or superstition and dismissed almost entirely. In the final parts of this paper, we aim to show that using the approaches of synchronicity (C.G. Jung) and ontology of the ground (F.W.J., Schelling) and acknowledging the phenomena known as quantum entanglement (C. Keller), we can postulate an underlying nexus, providing us with an access to the agapeistic effects of what we idiosyncratically call the phenomenon of dark love. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Between Philosophy and Theology: Liminal and Contested Issues)
11 pages, 193 KB  
Opinion
In the Company of the Unknown: Cultivating Curiosity for Ecological Renewal
by Dragana Favre
Challenges 2025, 16(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/challe16020025 - 20 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1707
Abstract
This article argues that environmental education must move beyond knowledge transmission to become a transformative, psychological, and relational practice. Rooted in the One Health framework, which emphasizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and ecological well-being, this article positions curiosity as a central catalyst [...] Read more.
This article argues that environmental education must move beyond knowledge transmission to become a transformative, psychological, and relational practice. Rooted in the One Health framework, which emphasizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and ecological well-being, this article positions curiosity as a central catalyst for ecological and psychological integration. While this article specifically engages with the One Health framework, the same integrative principles apply equally to the closely related Planetary Health perspective, emphasizing interconnected human, ecological, and planetary well-being. Drawing from Jungian and post-Jungian psychology, ecopsychology, and educational theory, it redefines curiosity as a symbolic, ethical, and affective mode of engagement with the Other, both within the psyche and in the more-than-human world. Through boredom, dialogue, narrative, and embodied practices, curiosity creates space for inner movement, narrative reconfiguration, and a relational mode of knowing that can confront ecological crises with imagination, patience, and integrity. This article offers pedagogical strategies to cultivate this deeper form of curiosity as a foundation for lifelong ecological engagement. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Planetary Health Education and Communication)
11 pages, 197 KB  
Article
Seeing Jung’s Shadow in a New Light: Decolonizing the Undisciplined Depths
by Daniel Boscaljon
Religions 2024, 15(12), 1553; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15121553 - 20 Dec 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 10739
Abstract
This paper explores two paths that depth psychology, particularly the work of C. G. Jung, offers to the project of decolonizing knowledge. Jung was a complex intellectual pioneer who embodied and projected the limiting colonialist scientific presuppositions of his time also spent much [...] Read more.
This paper explores two paths that depth psychology, particularly the work of C. G. Jung, offers to the project of decolonizing knowledge. Jung was a complex intellectual pioneer who embodied and projected the limiting colonialist scientific presuppositions of his time also spent much of his career attempting to become familiar with the undisciplined domain of the Unconscious that offered access to ways of thinking that erased disciplinary boundaries that would separate psychology, religion, and science. Offering a close reading of Jung’s early work demonstrates how colonizing forms of knowledge perpetuate themselves through a self-legitimating mythic structure. Acknowledging Jung’s later work, which explored psyche as both “material” and “spiritual”, illustrates the potential that depth psychology offers for an undisciplined approach to thinking and reality. The focus throughout will be on the Shadow, one of the core archetypes in Jungian psychology. The first section, which associates Jung’s colonial bias with his ideas about rational consciousness, is followed by a second section that provides a critique of Jung’s colonialism, highlighting the implicit violence that accompanies Jung’s story about rationality. The third section provides an overview of different ways that shadows can be used, building on other depth psychological modes of exploring the unconscious. The paper concludes with a description of how embracing Shadow invites the concept of an undisciplined playfulness back into a decolonized, experiential approach to knowledge. This presents an improved version of the Shadow based on a framework of participation, rather than polarization, which opens a mode of belonging that bridges rifts that colonialism created. This demonstrates how depth psychology opens a path toward decolonizing knowledge and moving toward a consciously undisciplined form of experiential understanding. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Undisciplining Religion and Science: Science, Religion and Nature)
12 pages, 237 KB  
Article
The Eden Complex: Transgression and Transformation in the Bible, Freud and Jung
by Sanford Drob
Religions 2024, 15(9), 1088; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15091088 - 6 Sep 2024
Viewed by 3490
Abstract
Freud chose the myth of Oedipus as the foundation for his understanding of human development, obedience to the law, and his theory of civilization, and he wrote that he saw no psychological value in analyzing the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the [...] Read more.
Freud chose the myth of Oedipus as the foundation for his understanding of human development, obedience to the law, and his theory of civilization, and he wrote that he saw no psychological value in analyzing the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden. Drawing on biblical interpretation, the Kabbalah, and the work of C. G. Jung, it is argued that Adam and Eve’s transgression serves as an archetype for an “Eden Complex” that provides a broad and useful paradigm for understanding the dynamics of individual development, parent–child conflict, morals and values, and both psychotherapeutic and societal change. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Eve’s Curse: Redemptive Readings of Genesis 3:16)
22 pages, 321 KB  
Article
Revivalism and Decoloniality: The Paradox of Modernization without Westernization in the Political Theology of Israr Ahmad
by Mohammad Adnan Rehman
Religions 2023, 14(9), 1108; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091108 - 27 Aug 2023
Viewed by 3504
Abstract
This article explores the contribution of modern Muslim revivalism to Muslims’ political decolonization, and the paradoxical role the West plays in that process. On the one hand, revivalism rejects the founding principles of liberal political theory, and on the other hand, it readily [...] Read more.
This article explores the contribution of modern Muslim revivalism to Muslims’ political decolonization, and the paradoxical role the West plays in that process. On the one hand, revivalism rejects the founding principles of liberal political theory, and on the other hand, it readily adopts the salient structures and mechanisms of the modern polity with a view to Islamize them, all the while insisting on the Muslims’ need to de-Westernize. Toward revealing the hitherto neglected dimensions of revivalism, my analysis adopts an unconventional route by subjecting revivalism to a semiotic analysis in conversation with the archetypal theories of Mircea Eliade and Carl G. Jung. The analysis unveils the universal psychological structures of revival, and their specific Muslim symbolization. I conclude (a) that depth psychology makes modern Muslim revival inevitable, which will only grow stronger and gain wider appeal while the Muslims continue to suffer decline; (b) that among the different forms of Muslim revival, revivalism ventures the farthest in decolonizing Muslim political imagination; (c) that the revivalist imagination makes their espoused caliphate imperative for the purpose of ritual participation in Islam’s sacred origins; and (d) that a critical reconstruction and evolution of revivalism holds out the promise of a greater contribution to Muslim decolonization. For my analysis, I largely turn to the Pakistani political theologian Israr Ahmad (d. 2010), whose ideas have been disseminated widely across the Muslim world, yet who has not received the requisite academic scrutiny. Moreover, intra-revivalist critique of revivalism has been a neglected aspect in the study of revival, and its careful scrutiny should become a topic of investigation in its own right. In that regard, Ahmad offers a most important critique of earlier revival efforts and their entanglement with certain aspects of coloniality. Full article
10 pages, 251 KB  
Article
“The Very Highest Level of Mythic Resonance.” Angela Carter and the Trope of Recognition
by Dominika Oramus
Humanities 2020, 9(3), 63; https://doi.org/10.3390/h9030063 - 16 Jul 2020
Viewed by 4612
Abstract
This essay aims at adding to the critical debate on Angela Carter and myths from a more technical perspective and discusses her keen interest in the “lo and behold” moment of recognition. I claim that for Carter myths “work” in literary texts by [...] Read more.
This essay aims at adding to the critical debate on Angela Carter and myths from a more technical perspective and discusses her keen interest in the “lo and behold” moment of recognition. I claim that for Carter myths “work” in literary texts by producing a sudden illumination. At that moment, an image reveals itself to be interposed from an older story that has, or used to have, some cultural importance. In order to describe this phenomenon, I am going to refer to Aristotle’s definition of recognition in his Poetics and essays of C.G. Jung, for whom myths are instances of revelation. To prove that Carter was very much interested in the technicalities of recognition, I analyse her non-fiction devoted to Edgar Allan Poe and Charlotte Brontë. Carter’s sample mythic reading of Jane Eyre (1847) and her plans to re-write the last chapter of this novel provide me with enough material to risk a hypothesis regarding how, in her opinion, myths might intertextually enrich the reading experience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Literature in the Humanities)
8 pages, 176 KB  
Article
Mind as Medium: Jung, McLuhan and the Archetype
by Adriana Braga
Philosophies 2016, 1(3), 220-227; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies1030220 - 4 Nov 2016
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 15367
Abstract
The Greek notion of archetype was adopted and popularized in the context of the analytical psychology of Carl Gustav Jung. Marshall McLuhan used the concept archetype as a formal perspective rather than the content of an alleged “collective unconscious”. In his book From [...] Read more.
The Greek notion of archetype was adopted and popularized in the context of the analytical psychology of Carl Gustav Jung. Marshall McLuhan used the concept archetype as a formal perspective rather than the content of an alleged “collective unconscious”. In his book From Cliché to Archetype, the idea of archetype is presented as the ground where individual action is the figure. This article, departing from the notion of archetype, explores some convergences between the thought of Carl Jung and Marshall McLuhan and some of its developments for Media Ecology studies. Full article
11 pages, 1260 KB  
Article
Advertising between Archetype and Brand Personality
by Clemens Bechter, Giorgio Farinelli, Rolf-Dieter Daniel and Michael Frey
Adm. Sci. 2016, 6(2), 5; https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci6020005 - 21 Jun 2016
Cited by 21 | Viewed by 24125
Abstract
The aim of the paper is the alignment of C.G. Jung’s (1954) archetypes and Aaker’s (1997) brand personality framework in the context of advertising. C.G. Jung’s theories had a tremendous impact on psychology. David Aaker and his daughter Jennifer are seen by many [...] Read more.
The aim of the paper is the alignment of C.G. Jung’s (1954) archetypes and Aaker’s (1997) brand personality framework in the context of advertising. C.G. Jung’s theories had a tremendous impact on psychology. David Aaker and his daughter Jennifer are seen by many as the branding gurus. Despite the fact that both frameworks refer to persons/personalities there is no publication linking the two frameworks. Our research tried to fill this gap by developing a joint framework combining Jung’s and Aaker’s attributes and apply it by analyzing two distinctively different TV commercials from Asian hotel chains. A total of 102 Executive MBA students had to watch both TV commercials and then conduct an Archetype (C.G. Jung) Indicator test and rate Brand Personality (Aaker) traits of the two commercials. Results show that there is common ground. This has implications for advertisers who may want to specify an archetype and related personality attributes for their promotional campaigns. Game changers in the hospitality sector may want to be seen as Outlaw whereas established hotel chains may position themselves as Lover with personality attributes such as welcoming, charming, and embraced. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Customer Relationship Management and Recent Developments)
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14 pages, 225 KB  
Article
Jung on the Nature and Interpretation of Dreams: A Developmental Delineation with Cognitive Neuroscientific Responses
by Caifang Zhu
Behav. Sci. 2013, 3(4), 662-675; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs3040662 - 22 Nov 2013
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 18974
Abstract
Post-Jungians tend to identify Jung’s dream theory with the concept of compensation; they tend to believe that Jung’s radically open stand constitutes his dream theory in its entirety. However, Jung’s theory regarding dreams was a product of an evolving process throughout his whole [...] Read more.
Post-Jungians tend to identify Jung’s dream theory with the concept of compensation; they tend to believe that Jung’s radically open stand constitutes his dream theory in its entirety. However, Jung’s theory regarding dreams was a product of an evolving process throughout his whole intellectual and professional life. Unfortunately, the theory has not been understood in such a developmental light. Based on a historical and textual study of all dream articles found throughout The Collected Works of C.G. Jung, this paper maps a concise three-phase trajectory of Jung’s changing views on dreams and interpretation. The paper posits that Jung’s last essay, “Symbols and the Interpretation of Dreams” (1961), epitomizes his final stand, although such a stand is also reflected in a less explicit and less emphatic way during the latter period of the second phase. The paper also briefly addresses where Jung and Jungians have been enigmatic or negligent. For example, it has not been explicated fully why compensation as slight modifications and compensation as parallels to waking life situations are rare in Jung’s cases In addition, contemporary cognitive and neuroscientific approaches to the study of dreams, as represented by Harry Hunt, William Domhoff, and Allan Hobson, among others, are presented in connection with Jung. The juxtaposition of Jungian, cognitive, and neuroscientific approaches showcases how cognitive and scientific findings challenge, enrich, and in some ways confirm Jung’s dream theory and praxis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Analytical Psychology: Theory and Practice)
15 pages, 211 KB  
Article
Normality in Analytical Psychology
by Steve Myers
Behav. Sci. 2013, 3(4), 647-661; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs3040647 - 21 Nov 2013
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 12820
Abstract
Although C.G. Jung’s interest in normality wavered throughout his career, it was one of the areas he identified in later life as worthy of further research. He began his career using a definition of normality which would have been the target of Foucault’s [...] Read more.
Although C.G. Jung’s interest in normality wavered throughout his career, it was one of the areas he identified in later life as worthy of further research. He began his career using a definition of normality which would have been the target of Foucault’s criticism, had Foucault chosen to review Jung’s work. However, Jung then evolved his thinking to a standpoint that was more aligned to Foucault’s own. Thereafter, the post Jungian concept of normality has remained relatively undeveloped by comparison with psychoanalysis and mainstream psychology. Jung’s disjecta membra on the subject suggest that, in contemporary analytical psychology, too much focus is placed on the process of individuation to the neglect of applications that consider collective processes. Also, there is potential for useful research and development into the nature of conflict between individuals and societies, and how normal people typically develop in relation to the spectrum between individuation and collectivity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Analytical Psychology: Theory and Practice)
50 KB  
Book Review
Analytische Psychologie heute. Der aktuelle Stand der Forschung zur Psychologie C.G. Jungs
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(7), 295-296; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02306 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Ein gutes und interessantes Buch! Auch wenn die Fragestellung [...] Full article
59 KB  
Book Review
Book review: C.G. Jung, Zerrissen zwischen Mythos und Wirklichkeit
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(2), 87-88; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02251 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Alles hat seine guten Seiten – es genügt, dass man die Probleme vernünftig angeht [...] Full article
4 pages, 248 KB  
Commentary
Correlative Structural Biology: How to Investigate the Fine Details of Viral Structure
by Elizabeth R. Wright
Viruses 2010, 2(1), 107-110; https://doi.org/10.3390/v2010107 - 11 Jan 2010
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 9524
Abstract
Commentary on Byeon, I.J.; Meng, X.; Jung, J.; Zhao, G.; Yang, R.; Ahn, J.; Shi, J.; Concel, J.; Aiken, C.; Zhang, P.; Gronenborn, A.M. Structural convergence between Cryo-EM and NMR reveals intersubunit interactions critical for HIV-1 capsid function. Cell 2009, 139, 780-790. Full article
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125 KB  
Communication
G. Mattanza, I. Meier, M. Schlegel: Seele und Forschung. Ein Brückenschlag in der Psychotherapie
by C. Bassetti
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2007, 158(5), 253; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2007.01868 - 1 Jan 2007
Abstract
Der Schwerpunkt dieses Buches liegt im Brückenschlag zwischen der analytischen Psychotherapie nach C.G. Jung und der Psychotherapieforschung [...] Full article
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