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Jung, Carl Gustav |
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Jung, Carl Gustav (1875–1961)Swiss psychiatrist. He collaborated with Sigmund Freud from 1907 until their disagreement in 1914 over the importance of sexuality in causing psychological problems. Jung studied myth, religion, and dream symbolism, saw the unconscious as a source of spiritual insight, and distinguished between introversion and extroversion. Jung devised the word-association test in the early 1900s as a technique for penetrating a subject's unconscious mind. He also developed his theory concerning emotional, partly repressed ideas which he termed ‘complexes’. In place of Freud's emphasis on infantile sexuality, Jung introduced the idea of a ‘collective unconscious’ which is made up of many archetypes or ‘congenital conditions of intuition’.
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| While there, he told me of the day he set off to visit psychological pioneer Carl Jung at Bolingen. There were Keith David and Richard Schiff remembering the dreams of Martin Luther King and Albert Einstein; Samantha Mathis and Talia Shire reliving the words of Amelia Earhart and Lucille Ball; James Denton, Christopher Gorham, Amanda Seyfried, Nita Whitaker, Don LaFontaine and Elizabeth Perkins breathing life into dream memories of Oprah Winfrey, Carl Jung, Christopher Reeve, Oscar Wilde, Stephen King and many, many others in the two-hour program. The identification of learning styles has its roots in the work of Carl Jung and his research into personality types, and also, the subsequent development of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, developed by Katherine Cook Briggs and daughter Isabell Briggs Meyers during World War II. |
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