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Jung

Jung. The Quest for Integration. The Quest for Integration. Jung believed we needed to go through personality integration Personality integration is embracing the things that are hidden or blocking our growth and turning those weaknesses into strengths.

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Jung

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  1. Jung The Quest for Integration

  2. The Quest for Integration • Jung believed we needed to go through personality integration • Personality integration is embracing the things that are hidden or blocking our growth and turning those weaknesses into strengths

  3. He believed that a human being is inwardly whole, but that most of us have lost touch with important parts of our selves • Through listening to the messages of our dreams (and of our creative imagination) we can reach the lost or neglected parts of our selves and reintegrate them

  4. Individuation • According to Jung, this integration is the goal of life • He called it individuation: the process by which individuals integrate the conscious and unconscious parts of their personality, through the acceptance of the various archetypes into the conscious mind

  5. Jung’s libido • In order to explain the process of individuation we need to understand Jung’s concept of the libido • Jung viewed the libido as the source of psychic energy. • If its flow was interrupted neurosis would result • The rejection of the sexual basis of the libido constitutes Jung’s greatest split from Freud

  6. What do you think? • What is your opinion on Jung’s concept of the libido? • Is it better than Freud’s?

  7. individuation • To maintain health all the features of the personality need to be integrated • There needs to be a balance between the conscious mind and the unconscious • There also needs to be a balance among the different archetypes • It is the failure to maintain this balance this balance that is the main cause of mental disorder and neurotic disorder • For example, someone who has an excess of mental energy concentrated on the unconscious will appear disconnected from their surroundings, since they will be chiefly aware of the images generated by the unconscious

  8. How we develop • Jung argued that whereas the first part of a person’s life involves a coming to terms with the outer environment and its challenges – through work, friendships and relationships – the emphasis on the second part, from middle age onwards, is to come to terms with one’s own personality • Faced with declining opportunities, energies and possibly health, the individual must find new purpose and meaning in life through components. Although ultimately beneficial, it can be difficult, because it involves accepting parts of one’s personality which one may prefer to leave undiscovered

  9. Individuation and religion • First, individuation as an innate process is one which is governed by the archetype known as the self. More precisely, the self is the innate disposition to become whole. According to Jung’s understanding of religious experience, any process or attitude that is governed by archetypes must be termed religious – on this basis individuation must be a religious process • Second, Jung argued that the self aids the process of individuation by generating images of wholeness. An example of this is the religious images of God. Jung claimed that the images created by the God-archetype are one and the same as the images created by the self-archetype. It makes sense therefore to say that it is through religious images that the personality achieves its goal of integration

  10. As a result of this, Jung said that the religious images are used by the mind to individuate the personality • The value of religion now becomes clear for if one rejects religion, one is at the same time rejecting a substantial part of the individuation mechanism • Those who reject religion are less likely to individuate successfully and therefore more likely to experience neurosis as a result of the remaining psychological tension • For this reason Jung concluded that religion is a valuable entity

  11. What Do you think? • What is your opinion of this theory?

  12. Critique of jung • Although Jung’s theories are less sensational than those of Freud, they have nonetheless been criticised, and not merely by supporters of Freud. • The criticism has centred upon four main areas: • Jung’s methodology • The theory of archetypes • Jung’s concept of religious experience • The role of religion within individuation

  13. Criticisms of Jung’s methodology • Jung has been criticised for his view that we can never know whether God exists • This view rests upon his assumption that nothing csn be known of any entity outside the psychic world. For example, we can never know wheteher a religious experience is real or merely created by the mind • This assumption has been questioned – scientists, for example, base their conclusions on empirical evidence, without worrying that their data are just figaments of their imagination. It can be argued that a religious experience should be treated in the same way, and that if there is empirical evidence to support it we should accept it as genuine

  14. How damaging do you think this criticism is to Jung’s theory?

  15. Criticisms of Jung’s Theory of Archetypes • It is argued that this theory is simply not required to explain the ‘evidence’ – namely, the common tendency to construct uniform images • For example, Geza Roheim states that since all humans share broadly the same experiences, it is hardly surprising that we develop myths along similar lines • It has also been pointed out that many religious myths, such as the Mesopotamian legends, respond to the social concerns of a particular community, makes it hard to accept that they come from an impulse that is common to the whole of mankind • On these grounds it is argued that Jung is not justified in postulating an archetypal ‘instinct for God’ from the evidence that people believe in God

  16. A further point which rendered Jung’s concept of the archetypes less acceptable is the fact that many people do not believe in God • Jung’s answer to this criticism was that atheism itself is a form of religion • However, again we see Jung’s reluctance to allow empirical evidence to count against his theory; faced with the simple fact that many people are not religious, he twists this to his advantage. By manipulating any unfavourable evidence in his favour, he effectively makes his theory unfalsifiable. It becomes a necessary truth, but without justification.

  17. What are your opinions on this criticism?

  18. Jung’s concept of religious experience • Jung’s theory of religious experience is often criticised • Martin Buber is not convinced that an experience which stems from the mind, and as such is in no way external to the subject, can properly be termed religious • In particular, Jung’s argument that any archetypal image may be described as religious has come under fire • The problem is that if a vision of being trapped in armour is as reliigous as a vision of God, Jung failed to explain why this type of experience is so distinctive in the mind of the subject

  19. What effect does this criticism have on Jung’s theory?

  20. Criticism of individuation • for the same reason as religious experience, the definition of individuation as a religious process may be questioned • If it is governed by the Self-archetype, then it may be argued that it has nothing to do with God • The image of Christ, for example, is only significant for Jung inasmuch as it is a symbol of wholeness which can help balance our minds. • Religious believers, however, would argue that Christ is more than just a symbol for something else, but rather is important in his own right, as a historical person and the Son of God. • Again then, there is an extra dimension in religious practice which Jung fails to explain

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