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Jung - STEVENS: Jung, A Very Short Introduction (Tim Pigott-Smith) (Naxos Audio Books: NA3298.12)
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Anthony Stevens argues that Jung's visionary powers and profound spirituality have helped many to find an alternative set of values to the arid materialism prevailing in Western society. This concise introduction explains clearly the basic concepts of Jungian psychology; the collective unconscious, complex, archetype, shadow, persona, anima, animus and the individuation of the Self. Anthony Stevens examines Jung's views on such disparate subjects as myth, religion, alchemy, 'synchronicity', and the psychology of gender differences. He devotes separate chapters to the stages of life, Jung's theory of psychological types, the interpretation of dreams and the practice of Jungian analysis. Jung's individual theories remain among the most fascinating of twentieth-century psychologists. This introduction will prove popular among a wide range of listeners?á- outside of the psychological fraternity.
| Disc: 1 |
| A Very Short Introduction - Jung | |
| 1 |
Jung - the Man and his Psychology |
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| 2 |
Background |
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| 3 |
An only child until his sister Gertrud was born |
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| 4 |
Jung's adult delight in solitude |
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Matters came to a head with Carl's confirmation |
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| 6 |
Student years |
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| 7 |
His dedication to scholarship |
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| 8 |
Years of apprenticeship |
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| 9 |
Friendship with Freud |
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| 10 |
As time passed Jung's differences with Freud becam |
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| 11 |
Publication of these views provoked a major rift w |
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| 12 |
Married life |
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Confrontation with the unconscious |
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| 14 |
By 'the reality of the psyche' |
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| 15 |
Creative illness |
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| 16 |
Individuation: the realisation of the self |
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One crucial event that occurred after his mid-life |
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| 18 |
Ageing and growth |
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| 19 |
At the age of 82 he wrote |
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| 20 |
Archetype and the collective unconscious |
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| 21 |
What Jung was proposing was no less than a fundame |
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| Disc: 2 |
| A Very Short Introduction - Jung | |
| 1 |
To a limited extent Jung's archetyes resemble Plat |
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The actualisation of archetypes |
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Archetypes versus cultural transmission |
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| 4 |
The psychoid archetypes and the unus mundus |
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| 5 |
Synchronicity |
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| 6 |
The stages of life |
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The Self |
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| 8 |
The Ego |
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The Persona |
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The Shadow |
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However, the acquisition of a moral complex impose |
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Sex and gender |
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As the parent/child relationship matures within th |
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Anima and animus |
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A self-regulating system |
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A programme for life |
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| 17 |
Archetypal expectations |
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| 18 |
Rites of passage |
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| 19 |
The dymanics of progress |
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| 20 |
Love and marriage |
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| 21 |
The stroke of noon |
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| 22 |
The individuation of the self |
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| 23 |
Psychological types |
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| 24 |
The four functions |
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| 25 |
The two attitudes |
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| 26 |
Eight psychological types |
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Use of typology |
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| 28 |
Dreams |
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| 29 |
After the break with Freud and his encounter with |
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Pure nature |
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| 31 |
Compensatory function |
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| 32 |
Symbolism |
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| Disc: 3 |
| A Very Short Introduction - Jung | |
| 1 |
Interpretation |
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Personal context |
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Cultural context |
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Archetypal context |
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Therapy |
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Illness |
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This was even more true in the case of neurosis |
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It is true that Jung's emphasis is invariably on t |
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The patient |
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Treatment |
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| 11 |
To what did he attribute the 'general neurosis of |
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Jung elucidated the analytic process in the light |
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With regard to the frequency of sessions |
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Active imagination requires a state of reverie |
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| 15 |
The therapist |
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Jung greatly extended the Freudian view of the tra |
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| 17 |
Jung's alleged anti-Semitism |
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| 18 |
The Jews who knew him best have all come staunchly |
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| 19 |
The summing-up |
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Jung's gift for transcending the confines of his o |
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When he eventually discovered in himself the secur |
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| 22 |
Analytical psychology can make no claim |
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