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What Jung Really Said PDF

195 Pages·1995·5.91 MB·English
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W H A T J U N G R e a l l y S A I D 1 9 4 5 - 1 9 9 5 50 Y E A R S OF P U B L I S H I N G W H A T J U N G R e a l l y S A I D E . A . B E N N E T Introduction by A N T H O N Y S T O R R NEW YORK S C H O C K E N B O O K S SC H O C KEN BOOKS, NEW YORK Copyright © 1966, 1983 by E. A. Bennet Introduction copyright © 1983 by Anthony Storr All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Schocken Books Inc., New York. Distributed by Pantheon Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in Great Britain by MacDonald & Jane’s, London, in 1966, and in the United States by Schocken Books Inc. in 1967. Revised edition with a new introduction published in 1983 by Schocken Books Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bennet, E. A. (Edward Armstrong) What Jung really said. Includes index. 1. Psychoanalysis. 2. Jung, C. G. (Carl Gustav), 1875-1961. I. Title. BF173.B457 1983 150.19 54 83-42715 ISBN 0-8052-1046-6 Manufactured in the United States of America [‘95] 9 8 7 6 C O N T E N T S Introduction / i Collected Works / 8 Foreword / 9 Preface / 13 Acknowledgments / 14 1 STA G ES IN JU N G ’S CAREER Basel University / 21 Word Association Experiments / 25 Complex Formation / 27 Freud and Jung Meet / 33 2 PSYCH O LO GICAL TYPES Freud and Jung: An Interchange of Ideas / 37 The Parting of the Ways / 40 The Origin of Jung’s Typology / 45 Introverts and Extra verts / 50 The Four Functions in Consciousness / 54 / WHAT JU N G R E A L LY SAID VI 3 UNCONSCIOUS M EN TA L A C T IV IT Y The Psychogenesis of Mental Illness / 58 Unconscious Mental Activity / 62 The Personal Unconscious / 63 The Collective Unconscious / 65 Archetype and Instinct / 66 The Hypothesis of the Collective Unconscious and its Origin / 71 Jung’s Empirical Outlook / 76 4 DREAM S Two Dreams: Childhood and Old Age / 80 The Dream and the Dreamer / 82 Dream-analysis in Psychotherapy / 85 Types of Dream (a) Initial / 85 (b) Recurrent / 87 (c) Anticipatory / 89 Self-Regulation in Dreams / 91 Compensation: Mental and Physical / 94 Compensation in Analysis / 96 “ Big” Dreams / 98 Amplification / 99 5 OUR IN N ER W ORLD Dreams and Research / 103 Active Imagination / 106 Spontaneous Art / n o A Seminar by Jung / 112 Figures in the Unconscious: The Persona / 115 The Shadow / 117 The Anima / 119 The Animus / 128 Contents / vii 6 TH E W IDEN ING C IR C LE OF JU N G ’S TH O UGH T Hypnotism / 137 The Complex in Treatment / 139 The Psychology of the Unconscious / 142 The Current Problem / 144 Transference in the Doctor-patient delation / 148 Jung’s Interest in Alchemy / 155 7 PRESEN T AND FU TU RE Confrontation with the Unconscious / 162 The Undiscovered Self / 165 The Personality as a Whole: Conscious and Unconscious / 169 Individuation as a Process. The Self / 171 References / 175 Index / 181 I N T R O D U C T I O N ANTHONY STORR Carl Gustav Jung is one of those figufts in psychology of whom everyone has heard, but whose writings are less famil­ iar. If the bibliography and general index to Jung’s works are included, the Collected Works consist of no less than twenty large volumes. The general reader wishing to acquaint him­ self with Jung’s thought is likely to quail before such a large body of work, and to feel in need of guidance as to where to begin. What Jung Really Said provides an excellent intro­ duction to Jung’s main ideas in language which anyone can follow. The late E. A. Bennet was a personal friend of Jung’s, and often stayed with him and his family in Zurich. They exchanged ideas both in letters and in personal meetings over many years, so that what Dr. Bennet has to say has an authenticity unmatched by other accounts of Jung and his work. Jung was born in 1875 and died in 1961. Many of his ideas and some of the terms he introduced have become incorpo­ rated into psychology without recognition of their origin. Jung was the first to apply psychoanalytic ideas to the study of schizophrenia. He introduced the concepts of extraver­ sion and introversion, and the terms complex, archetype, individuation, and collective unconscious. Jung’s notion of the mind as a self-regulating system accords well with mod­ ern ideas in physiology and cybernetics. His insistence that man needed to search for meaning in his life anticipated the views of the existentialists. Yet Jung’s importance tends to be underestimated, and those who have not troubled to read his 1 2 / INTRODUCTION writings often dismiss him as a visionary mystic whose work is so out of line with experimental psychology that it can be safely ignored. In fact, as his early research demonstrates, Jung had a competent grasp of scientific method; but the bulk of his later work is concerned with areas in which scientific method cannot be applied. The meaning of life cannot be quantified, but this does not invalidate man’s search for meaning. Today, when psychological laboratories throughout the world are dominated by the experimental approach, Jung’s insistence that the subjective experience of the individual is vitally significant is a valuable counter­ balance. Jung believed that individual self-knowledge and self-development, together with the enhanced capacity for relationships with others which accompanies this develop­ ment, were the only factors strong enough to resist the collective dominance of the State. This is what he meant when he stated that the individual was the carrier of culture. The whole thrust of Jungian analysis is toward helping the individual to realize his potentialities, toward facilitating his becoming more authentically himself. Jung was not con­ cerned with statistical “normality” nor with adaptation to society’s expectations. Many of his analytic patients were conventionally successful people with considerable achieve­ ments already behind them, but who had found that such achievements brought little sense of fulfillment. Faced with patients of this kind, Jung proffered no ready solutions, but encouraged them to explore the inner world of dream and phantasy. By paying serious attention to what was going on within, the individual could be enabled to rediscover aspects of his own nature which had been neglected or overlaid, and thus find again the path of his own authentic development. Jung named this quest for personal authenticity the “process of individuation.” I have elsewhere described individuation as “a kind of

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With an Introduction by Anthony Storr. E.A. Bennet introduces us to the thought of Jung in the context of his life and his life's work. In this classic overview of Jung's sixty-year career, Bennet covers the "background and development of Jung's thinking, personality classifications, analysis of the
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.