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  2. Jungian archetypes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jungian_archetypes

    Carl Jung rejected the tabula rasa theory of human psychological development, which suggests that people are born as a "blank slate" and their experiences shape their thoughts, behaviors, and feelings. Instead, Jung believed that there are universal experiences that are inherent to the human experience, such as belonging, love, death, and fear. [1]

  3. Dream Analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_Analysis

    Dream Analysis: Notes of the Seminar Given in 1928–1930 is a book by Swiss psychiatrist, Carl Gustav Jung. It was first published in English in 1984. [1] In 1991, it was translated and published in the German language. [2] Its overall premise is to provide further clarification upon Jung's dream analysis methods.

  4. Dreams in analytical psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreams_in_analytical...

    Carl Gustav Jung proposed a dual reading of the dream in terms of object and subject, while representing the dream as a dramatic process with phases that shed light on its meaning, always individual but also reducible to cultural and universal issues.

  5. Analytical psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analytical_psychology

    An 1890 etching of Burghölzli hospital where Carl Jung began his career. Jung began his career as a psychiatrist in Zürich, Switzerland.Already employed at the Burghölzli hospital in 1901, in his academic dissertation for the medical faculty of the University of Zurich he took the risk of using his experiments on somnambulism and the visions of his mediumistic cousin, Helly Preiswerk.

  6. Why love languages could be holding you back (and what to ...

    www.aol.com/why-love-languages-could-holding...

    When people are set on love languages, or attachment styles, or even hobbies and interests, it can create a closed-downness – but we need to have a spirit of curiosity and openness and wonder ...

  7. Dream dictionary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_dictionary

    The dream dictionary includes interpretations of dreams, giving each symbol in a dream a specific meaning. The argument of what dreams represent has greatly changed over time. With this changing, so have the interpretation of dreams. Dream dictionaries have changed in content since they were first published. The ancient Greeks and Romans saw ...

  8. Dream interpretation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_interpretation

    Jung argued that Freud's procedure of collecting associations to a dream would bring insights into the dreamer's mental complex—a person's associations to anything will reveal the mental complexes, as Jung had shown experimentally [30] —but not necessarily closer to the meaning of the dream. [31] Jung was convinced that the scope of dream ...

  9. Carl Jung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Jung

    Carl Gustav Jung [b] was born 26 July 1875 in Kesswil, in the Swiss canton of Thurgau, as the first surviving son of Paul Achilles Jung (1842–1896) and Emilie Preiswerk (1848–1923). [14] His birth was preceded by two stillbirths and that of a son named Paul, born in 1873, who survived only a few days.