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  2. Active imagination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_imagination

    The theosophy of post-Renaissance Europe embraced imaginal cognition. From Jakob Böhme to Swedenborg, active imagination played a large role in theosophical works.In this tradition, the active imagination serves as an "organ of the soul, thanks to which humanity can establish a cognitive and visionary relationship with an intermediate world".

  3. Fantasy-prone personality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasy-prone_personality

    People who, at a young age, were involved in creative fantasy activities like piano, ballet, and drawing are more likely to obtain a fantasy prone personality. [ citation needed ] Acting is also a way for children to identify as different people and characters which can make the child prone to fantasy-like dreams as they grow up. [ 10 ]

  4. Openness to experience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Openness_to_experience

    Openness to experience is one of the domains which are used to describe human personality in the Five Factor Model. [1] [2] Openness involves six facets, or dimensions: active imagination (fantasy), aesthetic sensitivity, attentiveness to inner feelings, preference for variety (adventurousness), intellectual curiosity, and challenging authority (psychological liberalism). [3]

  5. Marie-Louise von Franz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Louise_von_Franz

    Active imagination is a certain way of meditating imaginatively, by which one may deliberately enter into contact with the unconscious and make a conscious connection with psychic phenomena. [ 12 ] A third field of interest and research was synchronicity , psyche and matter, and numbers.

  6. Black Books (Jung) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Books_(Jung)

    The "Black Books" are not personal diaries, but the records of the unique self-experimentation which Jung called his ‘confrontation with the unconscious’. He did not record day to day happenings or outer events, but his active imaginations and depictions of his mental states together with his reflections on these.

  7. Participation mystique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Participation_mystique

    A volume of scholarly essays on the concept of participation mystique recently appeared under the title Shared Realities, edited by Mark Winborn. [1] The authors included in this volume are mostly Jungian and psychoanalytic practitioners, discussing experiential, clinical and theoretical perspectives on the notion of participation mystique.

  8. Hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnosis

    Nonstate theorists rejected the idea of hypnotic trance and interpret the effects of hypnotism as due to a combination of multiple task-specific factors derived from normal cognitive, behavioural, and social psychology, such as social role-perception and favorable motivation , active imagination and positive cognitive set , response expectancy ...

  9. Analytical psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analytical_psychology

    Moreover, people who strongly identify with their gender role (e.g. a man who acts aggressively and never cries) have not actively recognized or engaged their anima or animus. Jung attributes human rational thought to be the male nature, while the irrational aspect is considered to be natural female (rational being defined as involving judgment ...