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Analytical psychology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Analytical psychology (or Jungian psychology ) is the school of psychology originating from the ideas of Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, and then advanced by his students and other thinkers who follo...
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Carl Jung - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Analytical Psychology is the name given to the psychological-therapeutic system founded and developed by the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961). Carl Jung was the son of a pastor in the Swiss Reformed Church, and many of his relatives were ministers too.
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Jung's statement of his position on epistemology ... yet regarded from the standpoint of psychology, it is an unexampled revolution in man's outlook upon the world. Other-worldliness is converted into matter-of-factness; empirical boundaries are set to man's discussion of every problem, to his choice of purposes,
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Carl Gustav Jung ... "The self is our life's goal, for it is the completest expression of that'fateful--combination.~we call individuality."(Two Essays on Analytical Psychology, (CW 7, p. 238)
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Subsequently, as he reflected on life after death, Jung recalled the meditating Hindu from his near-death experience and read it as a parable of the archetypal Higher Self, the God-image within. Carl Jung, who founded analytical psychology, centered on the archetypes of the collective unconscious.
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Jung departed from Freud on a number of points, particularly Freud's sex theory. In addition, Jung had been developing his own theory and methodology, known as analytical psychology.
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