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20 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
analytical psychology
Jung's theory of personality
Jung's childhood
family of clergy, spiritualists; fat and unattractive mother, neurotic parents; father passive, weak, shy and powerless; solitary childhood
Comparison to Freud
worked with Janet, successor of Charcot; younger than Freud; both had neurotic breakdowns; unlike Freud, emphasized middle age
libido
To Jung, a broader and more generalized form of psychic energy; used 2 ways: general life energy and psychic energy which fueled personality
psyche
Jung's term for personality
opposition principle
Jung's idea that conflict between opposing processes or tendencies is necessary to generate psychic energy
equivalence principle
the continuing redistribution of energy within the personality; if the energy expanded on certain conditions or activities weakens or disappears, that energy is transferred elsewhere in the personality
entropy principle
a tendency toward balance or equilibrium within the personality; the ideal is an equal distribution of psychic energy over all structures of the personality
ego
To Jung, the conscious aspect of personality - perceiving, thinking, feeling, and remembering
extraversion
an attitude of the psyche characterized by an orientation toward the external world and other people
introversion
an attitude of the psyche characterized by an orientation toward one's own thoughts and feelings; non-conforming
sensing psychological function
reproduces an experience through the senses
intuiting psychological function
intuition or a hunch rather than actual sensory experiences
thinking psychological function
conscious judgment of whether an experience is true or false
feeling psychological function
evaluate in terms of like/dislike, pleasant/unpleasant
psychological types
To Jung, eight personality types based on interactions of the attitudes (introversion and extraversion) and the functions (thinking, feeling, sensing, and intuiting)
personal unconscious
the reservoir of material that was once conscious but has been forgotten or suppressed
complex
To Jung, a core of pattern of emotions, memories, perceptions, and wishes in the personal unconscious organized around a common theme, such power or status
collective unconscious
the deepest level of the psyche containing the accumulation of inherited experiences of human and pre-human species
archetypes
images of universal experiences contained in the collective unconscious