Theories of Personality Jung: Analytical Psychology

Similar documents
Jung. Word Association Test - standard list of 100 words - person responds to each with first word that comes to mind

Chapter 2 Carl Gustav Jung and Analytic Psychology

THE GUILD OF ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS

Studied medicine became a psychiatrist in 1903 Long time admirer of Freud Famous Meeting Met in Vienna in 1907 Freud cancelled his appointment and

A History Of Knowledge

Holy Archetypal Symbols, Batman!

Psychological Disorders Psych 335. Outline/Overview. Psychodynamic model. Chapter 3 Contemporary Frameworks. Biological Model

Theories of Personality Rogers: Person-Centered Theory

Chapter 2: Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and the Genesis of Psychotherapy

Theories of Personality Freud: Psychoanalysis

Theories of Personality Allport: Psychology of the Individual

Jungian Psychology as a Tool for the Counselor

Personality. An individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting. Each dwarf has a distinct personality.

id = the part of the mind connected to desire ego = the part of the mind connected to logic superego = the part of the mind connected to morality

Dikran J. Martin Psychology 111

Collective Unconscious What is inherited and common to all members of a species o Human mind developed thought forms over the years Archetypes

CHAPTER 11: THERAPY. Overview of therapies. Goals Therapist characteristics Client characteristics Agents of change Psychotherapy Research

Psychoanalytic Theory. Psychodynamic Theories of Health and Illness. Freud s Theories. Charcot Treating Hysteria

a. There was a significant need for better psychiatric care in his community.

Theories of Personality May: Existential Psychology

HISTORY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS

#70 Carl Jung: What are the Archetypes?

Personality Psychology

Some Jungian terms explained by Helen Morgan and Chris MacKenna. Self:

Theories of Personality Bandura: Social Cognitive Theory

Define: Essentially the study of individual difference Predicated on this position The unique organization of characteristics that is typical of an in

Discovering the work of

A Presentation on MBTI

Personality Theory. Personality Theory. Personality Theory

Psych 120. General Psychology. Personality. What is personality? 7/21/2010

PSY111 Notes. For Session 3, Carrington Melbourne. C. Melbourne PSY111 Session 3,

Insight - Oriented Approaches

Goal: To identify the extent to which inner psychological factors might be important in the development of different forms of psychopathology

SAMPLE DON T MAKE A FREUDIAN SLIP

Goal: To identify the extent to which inner psychological factors might be important in the development of different forms of psychopathology

General Psych Personality 1

MBTI. Populations & Use. Theoretical Background 7/19/2012

Theories of Personality and Beyond!

What is Personality?

Name the Psychologist D-Fence Definitions. Trait Theory. What Perspective? Freud

Neo-Freudians. Alfred Adler

Theories of Personality

1/29/2015 THIS IS. Name the. Trait Theory. What Perspective? Psychologist D-Fence Definitions Freud

You will need the following materials today: o Your Survival Guide (turn to page 116) o Your R.J. o Your copy of Their Eyes Were Watching God

What is Personality? Personality. an individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting

Chapter 14 Personality

Neo-Freudians. Alfred Adler

Psychological Approaches to Counseling. Mr. Lema, Isaac Clinical Psychologist (MSc.) 25 th November 2015

Chapter 11. Personality

6. Athletes often attribute their losses to bad officiating. This best illustrates A) an Electra complex. B) learned helplessness. C) the spotlight ef

Chapter 1 WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGY

History and Approaches CHAPTER

!!!!!!!!!!!! Carl Jung: What is the Individuation Process?

Highlights of what you may have learned from General Psychology 202?

Math-to-Industry Boot Camp June 21, EMPLOYEE STRATEGIES

Chapter 7: Minding the Work

Sigmund Freud ( )

Personality SSPVB2: The student will evaluate assessment tools and theories in personality.

individual differences strong situation interactional psychology locus of control personality general self-efficacy trait theory self-esteem

Theories of Personality

Jones-Smith Theories of Counseling and Psychotherapy Instructor Resource Chapter 2 Test

Personality. Chapter 13

Adventure In Archetype: Depth Psychology And The Humanities (Essays In Archetype Book 1) By Mark Greene READ ONLINE

CHAPTER 3. Background THE PSYCHOANALYTICAL THEORY OF SIGMUND FREUD. part 1. The View of the Person. The View of the Person

Applications and Evaluation of Freud s Theory

PSYCHOLOGY - MR. DUEZ Unit 1 - Part 3 - PERSONALITY - LEARNING TARGETS

Personality: What is it? Personality: Part 1. Psychodynamic Approach. Freud s Model of Personality. Freud s Model of Personality

Citation for published version (APA): Skov, V. (2013). Art Therapy. Prevention Against the Development of Depression.

POLANYI AND PSYCHOANALYSIS

We judge others by their actions, but we judge ourselves by our motives. W.H. Auden

ACCPH Psychoanalytical and Psychodynamic Therapies

Module 55: Freud s Psychoanalytic Perspective: Exploring the Unconscious

Hold on to your. There is a ton of information coming at ya!! Don t miss class this. Ouch.

Myers Psychology for AP, 2e

Jung s View on Personality & PTSD and Applied Drama Therapy Techniques for PTSD Veterans in Vietnam War. Panchal Abeysinghe

Psychology, Fifth Edition, James S. Nairne Chapter 1. Chapter 1 An Introduction to Psychology

Analyst International. A Postgraduate Training Program of the C. G. Jung-Institute Zurich

Lectures I & II : Stimuli and Responses, Environment and Behavior: Where is the Mind? Overview of the Development of Mind and Consciousness.

Five Benefits of Learning Your MBTI Type: By Melissa Stahl, Professional Development Consultant, Eton Institute

What is Personality? How do you define personality? CLASS OBJECTIVES 12/4/2009. Chapter 12 Personality and its assessment. What is personality?

Myers Psychology for AP*

PERSONALITY THEORIES FREUDIAN PSYCHODYNAMICS

Name: Period: Chapter 13 Reading Guide Personality Introduction & The Psychoanalytic Perspective (pg ) 1. Personality:

Coexistence and Confluence of Intellectual Traditions: the Works of Sudhir Kakar

Why this, why now? Teams and Preference. Preference 10/29/2015

Theories of Personality

Psychodynamic Approaches. What We Will Cover in This Section. Themes. Introduction. Freud. Jung.

Place a checkmark next to each item that you believe is mostly true about the way you think.

ch1 1. What is the relationship between theory and each of the following terms: (a) philosophy, (b) speculation, (c) hypothesis, and (d) taxonomy?

Contributions from Carl Jung ( ) Winfred Bion ( )

Chapter 1. The Evolution of Psychology

International Journal of Economics and Society June 2015, Issue 2 ARCHETYPES AND ARCHETYPAL PERSONS OF CULTURE

Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Ed) Chapter 12. Modified from: James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University. Worth Publishers

Myers Psychology for AP*

Personality Personality Personality Psychoanalysis Freud s Theory of Personality

Hold on to your. There is a ton of information coming at ya!! Don t miss class this. Ouch.

Piaget A Cognitive Approach

Kathleen Stassen Berger. Part I. Chapter Two. Theories of Development. Grand Theories Emergent Theories Useful Application of Theories

Introduction to CD2: September 6. Minodora Grigorescu Mothercraft College

Unit 1: Chapters 1 and 2. How do we study the mind? Are today s approaches to psychology adequate?

Transcription:

Theories of Personality Jung: Analytical Psychology Chapter 4 Feist, J., & Feist, R. J., & Roberts, T. A. (2013). Theories of personality (8th ed.). NY:McGraw-Hill.

Outline Overview of Analytical Psychology Biography of Jung Levels of the Psyche Dynamics of Personality Psychological Types Development of Personality Jung s Method of Investigation Related Research Critique of Jung Concept of Humanity

Overview 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 of Jung 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 a psychiatric assistant to Bleuler Studied with Janet in Paris in 1902-03

Biography (cont d) 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 analytical psychology Jung s theories became popular outside of psychology (e.g., religion, anthropology, and pop culture) Died in Zurich in 1961

A group photo taken in 1909 with Sigmund Freud on the left, Stanley Hall in the middle and Carl Jung on the right.

Levels of Psyche Conscious Psychic images sensed by the ego Personal Unconscious Repressed, forgotten, or subliminally perceived experiences, complexes Collective Unconscious Ideas from the experiences inherited from our ancestors Archetypes Archaic images derived from the collective unconscious

Island Metaphore Kolektif Bilinçdışı Bilinç Kişisel bilinçdışı

Archetypes Archetypes include: Persona (our masks in the society) Shadow (The dark side of the self) Anima (feminine side of male psyche) Animus (masculine side of female psyche) The Self (unity and stabilization in personality) Great Mother Wise Old Man Hero

Dynamics of Personality Causality and Teleology Behavior is shaped by both Progression and Regression Progression Forward flow of psychic energy Necessary for adaptation to outside world Regression Backward flow of psychic energy Necessary for adaptation to inner world

Psychological Types Attitudes Predisposition to act in a characteristic direction Introversion The turning inward of psychic energy with an orientation toward the subjective Extraversion The turning outward of psychic energy so that a person is oriented toward the objective and away from the subjective

Psychological Types (cont d) Functions Thinking (Düşünce) Logical intellectual activity that produces a chain of ideas Feeling (Duygu) Evaluating an idea or event Sensation (Duyum) Receives physical stimuli and transmits them to perceptual consciousness Intuition (Sezgi) Perception beyond the workings of consciousness

Development of Personality Stages of Development Childhood Anarchic Island of consciousness but not connected Monarchic Ego development, verbal ability, beginning of logical thinking Ego is perceived as an object Dualistic Island of consciousness becomes a continous land Ego as perceiver

Development of Personality Youth The period from puberty until middle life Major difficulty to overcome is conservative principle or the tendency to cling to childhood Middle Life Begins at approximately age 35 or 40 Period of anxiety and potential Old Age Diminution of consciousness Death is the goal of life

Development of Personality Self-Realization (Individuation) Requires assimilation of unconsciousness into total self Process of integrating opposites into a harmonious self Rarely achieved

Jung s Method of Investigation Word Association Test Dream Analysis Active Imagination Psychotherapy (Four Stages) Confession of a pathogenic secret Interpretation, explanation, and elucidation Education as social beings Transformation

Related Research Personality Type and Interest in Teaching Willing, Guest, & Morford (2001) Master-in-training students likely to be high in intuition and feeling Personality Type and Investing Money Filbeck, Hatfield, & Horvath (2005) MBTI a good predictor of risk tolerance among types Interest in and Attrition from Engineering Thomas et al. (2000) Extraversion predicted dropout from engineering courses

Critique of Jung Jung s Theory Is: Moderate on Generating Research and Organizing Observations Low on Practicality, Internal Consistency, and Parsimony Very Low on Falsifiability

Concept of Humanity He was not Deterministic nor Purposeful, Optimistic nor Pessimistic People are both Causal and Teleological People Motivated by both Conscious and Unconscious Thoughts Biology over Social Similarity over Individual Differences