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