EMP 823    P. Bradley   3 credits
Jung, Intuition, and the Personal Quest for Wholeness II


Description

This course explores Jung’s theory of a personal quest for wholeness through applications to learning, problem solving, and communicating. The central therapeutic concept of Jung's analytical psychology is the concept of the need for balance to gain psychic/intuitive health. Therefore, when an individual is troubled, he or she will engage archetypal intuition, as opposed to merely personal, experience to right an imbalance in the individual psyche. This is the concept of compensation versus wholeness. The attributes of archetypal, personal unconscious, the visionary and the collective unconscious contribute to a personal quest for wholeness. To achieve psychic/intuitive health, or wholeness, the aim is individuation, becoming a whole, individual person. This process is different for each person (and most never achieve it or even attempt it), but Jung believed it especially involved coming to terms with the following archetypes: the shadow, the anima or animus, and the Self. Archetypes come from the collective unconscious and by definition can be positive and negative. In theory their numbers are limitless.

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