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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper that discusses some of Jung’s many concepts and ideas about the personality. Discussion includes conscious and unconscious minds, archetypes, extravert vs. introvert, functions, the Self, mandala, and strengths and limitations of the theory. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PG700521.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
on his own discoveries about the psyche. Edinger (2008) commented that Jung had developed the most comprehensive and the broadest view of the human psyche and that certainly does seem
to be true. Jungs theory is multilayered and extremely complex. It is filled with unfamiliar terms and words, like hierarchical archetypes, but it makes a lot of sense. He developed
his most important personality theories during a six-year period of self-reflection shortly after the First World War. In fact, the term analytical psychology means the analysis of the human mind,
psyche, unconscious mind, and conscious mind (Psychology Campus, 2012). Like Freud, Jung separated the psyche into three parts but they are different than Freuds. Jung identified the ego, which is
the conscious mind; the personal unconscious, which includes everything not in the conscious mind including memories; and the collective unconscious which is the reservoir of the experiences of this species
and is the knowledge all humans are born with (Boeree, 2006). Jung believed humans have four ways to deal with the world, which he called functions. They are sensing, thinking,
intuiting, and feeling. Sensing means we get information from our senses, which would involve perception of those impressions and that is not always accurate. Thinking is rational because we evaluate
information. Intuiting is like perception but it works outside the usual conscious process. Feeling is emotional and can be inaccurate but feelings value and promote human relationships (Boeree, 2006). Everyone
has all four functions but one is usually more developed. Jung believed that the personal unconscious mind is part of the unconscious mind and it stores each persons experiences and
memories that may not be consciously remembered (Psychology Campus, 2012). He thought the mind is organized into complexes which are clusters of emotional unconscious thoughts. For example, a person could
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