Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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.
Comedy sketches. The 40th most subscribed YouTube channel. As of late 2020, he had taken a break from YouTube. Caitlin Hill: Australia S Facts Rapper Jaclyn Hill: United States Jaclynhill1 Known for her makeup tutorial videos Lewis Hilsenteger: Canada unboxtherapy Unboxing and technology YouTube channel produced by Lewis George Hilsenteger and ...
Emma Jung (born Emma Marie Rauschenbach, 30 March 1882 – 27 November 1955) was a Swiss Jungian analyst and author. She married Carl Jung, financing and helping him to become the prominent psychiatrist and founder of analytical psychology, and together they had five children.
Toni Anna Wolff (18 September 1888 – 21 March 1953) was a Swiss Jungian analyst and a close collaborator of Carl Jung. [1] During her analytic career Wolff published relatively little under her own name, but she helped Jung identify, define, and name some of his best-known concepts, including anima, animus, and persona, as well as the theory of the psychological types.
Sabina Spielrein as child (left), with her mother and sister. She was born in 1885 into a wealthy Jewish family in Rostov-on-Don, Russian Empire. Her mother Eva (born Khave) Lublinskaya was the daughter and granddaughter of rabbis from Yekaterinoslav. [8] Eva trained as a dentist, but did not practice.
In Zürich, at the age of 18, in 1933, when about to finish secondary school, von Franz met the psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung when, together with a classmate and nephew of Jung's assistant Toni Wolff, she and seven boys she had befriended were invited by Jung to his Bollingen Tower near Zürich. For von Franz, this was a powerful and "decisive ...
The grave of Karl Gustav Jung in Basel. Karl Gustav Jung was the son of a prosperous medical practitioner from Mainz, involved in the campaign against Napoleon, Franz Ignaz and his wife Sophie Maria Josepha née Ziegler. [1] By the time Jung was born, his family had moved to Mannheim where his father managed a field hospital.
Carl Jung standing in front of Burghölzli clinic, Zurich 1909. Jung's intuition that there was more to psyche than individual experience may have originated in his childhood. [12] He had dreams that seemed to come from a source outside himself, and one of his earliest memories was of a dream about an underground phallic god.