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3 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
1) For Carl Jung, transference involves:
a) a lack of individuation and self-realization
b) projection of the personal and collective unconscious
c) a distortion that the therapist will identify as fantasy
d) a symbolic manifestation of the anima/animus complex
b) Like Freud, Jung considered tranference to be an unconsious process in which feelings the client originally directed toward others are now projected onto the therapist. For Jung, the uncounsious consists of both personal and collective aspects.
A gestalt therapist would interpret a client's transference as:
a) a sign of progress
b) a manifestation of resistance
c) the client's fantasy
d) introjection
c) Gestalt therapists work in the here and now and would view a client's transference as a misperception of reality.
Mahler traces adult psychopathology to problems related to:
a)separation-individuation
b)congruence between self and experience
c) the parataxic mode
d) parallel process
a) Mahler, an object relations therist, considers the early relationship between the infant and parent to be critical in personality development and traces psychopathology in adulthood to problems with the early separation-individuation process.