Carl Gustav Jung and the Ghosts 59 A Haunted House In summer 1920, Carl Gustav Jung was invited to England. His host and col-league – he refers to him as…
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Ego: " Jung's theory of archetypes led him to hypothesise that the influences which a mother exerts on her children do not necessarily derive from the mother herself as a person…
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Overview. Jung described the animus as the unconscious masculine side of a woman, and the anima as the unconscious feminine side of a man, each transcending the personal psyche. Jung's theory…
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Jung’s mother Emilie was employed by Samuel to shoo away the dead who distracted him while he was working on his sermons. She herself developed mediumistic powers in her late…
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This ‘split’ that Jung had seen in his mother would later appear in himself. At around the age of 12, he literally became two people. There was his ordinary boyhood…
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He started sleeping in a different room after that, and was not disturbed again. His friend and colleague, who had found him the house, made fun of him for being…
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Jung, Carl Gustav (1875–1961) Swiss ... As a child, Jung’s mother, Emilie, was ordered by her father, a minister, to sit behind him while he wrote his sermons so that…
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The mother is simply veiled by the Holy Ghost (Sophia), which is the connecting link between Father and Son. ~ CarlJung, Letters Vol. 1, Pages 90-93 Christ is the Anthropos…
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ABSTRACT: CarlJung saw the Holy Ghost as the crowning figure in God's revelation of Him self. For Jung, the Holy Ghost is that mysterious force which unites opposites and…
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Jung and the Assumption In this blue light I can take you there, snow having made me a world of bone Seen through to.1 Psychologist C.G. Jung called Pius XIFs…
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In his book "137: Jung, Pauli, and the Pursuit of a Scientific Obsession," Arthur I. Miller gives an example of synchronicity; one of his patients "told Jung that when her…
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CarlJung found great interest in the occult, seance & parapsychology after experiencing many paranormal activities when in his teenage years in switzerland,...
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CarlJung describes the Mother Archetype as one that is “often associated with things and places standing for fertility and fruitfulness: the cornucopia, a ploughed field, a garden. It can…
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Terms in C. G. Jung’s analytical psychology: two primary anthropomorphic archetypes of the unconscious mind
The anima and animus are a syzygy of dualistic, Jungian archetypes among the array of other animistic parts within the Self in Jungian psychology, described in analytical psychology and archetypal psychology, under the umbrella of transpersonal psychology.[1] The Jungian parts of the Self are a priori part of the infinite set of archetypes within the…