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BOLLINGEN SERIES XX

THE COLLECTED WORKS

OF

C. G. JUNG

VOLUME 3

EDITORS

t SIR HERBERT READ

MICHAEL FORDHAM, M.D., M.R.C.P.

GERHARD ADLER, PH.D.

WILLIAM Me GUIRE, executive editor


THE
PSYCHOGENESIS
OF MENTAL
DISEASE

C. G. JUNG

TRANSLATED BY R. F. C. HULL

B O L L I N G E N S E R I E S X X

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS


COPYRIGHT (C) i960 BY IiOLLINGEN FOUNDATION, NEW YORK, Ν. Y.
PUBLISHED BY PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS
PRINCETON, N. J.

Second printing, with corrections and


minor revisions, 1972

Third printing, 1976


First Princeton / Bollingen Paperback printing, 1982

THIS EDITION IS BEING PUBLISHED IN THE


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY PRINCE­
TON UNIVERSITY PRESS AND IN ENGLAND
BY ROUTLEDGE AND KEGAN PAUL, LTD. IN
THE AMERICAN EDITION, ALL THE VOL­
UMES COMPRISING THE COLLECTED WORKS
CONSTITUTE NUMBER XX IN BOLLINGEN
SERIES. THE PRESENT VOLUME IS NUMBER
3 OF THE COLLECTED WORKS AND WAS
THE TENTH TO APPEAR.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUE CARD NUMBER: 75-156

ISBN 0-691-09769-0
ISBN 0-691-01859-6 (pbk.)

MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


EDITORIAL NOTE

The importance of this volume of scientific papers for under­


standing Jung's researches as a whole can scarcely be overrated,
even though most of them are now mainly of historical interest
or represent the reflections of his later years on a subject that
never ceased to engage his active psychotherapeutic endeavours.
"The Psychology of Dementia Praecox" was the culmination
of Jung's early researches at the Burgholzli Hospital into the
nature of the psychoses. It was the publication which established
him once and for all as a psychiatric investigator of the first rank.
It was the volume which engaged Freud's interest and led to their
meeting. It was the research which contained the seeds of his
theoretical divergence from psychoanalysis.
Jung's work on the manifestations of schizophrenia was a
potent factor in the development of his theory of psychic energy
and of the archetypes. He believed that, in order to account for
the imagery, splitting processes, and defect in the sense of reality
observable in this disease, neither the sexual theory of libido,
which leads to the concept of narcissism, nor personal and genetic
study is adequate. In short, the theory of archetypes becomes
indispensable.
Jung was indeed one of the first to employ individual psycho­
therapy with schizophrenic patients. Not only this: there are
clear indications in this volume of how early in this century he
investigated the relationship between mental hospital adminis­
tration and the course of the supposed disease-process. His Swiss
forerunners, Forel and Bleuler, both men with intense psycho­
logical interests, also realized this, and the Burgholzli team did
much pioneering work in changing the hospital atmosphere.
Today this understanding is being gradually applied with the
good results that Jung anticipated.
It may be regretted that there is no more in this volume
about the psychotherapy of schizophrenia. Why is it that Jung
did not write more on this subject? The answer is given in one
of his later essays, "Recent Thoughts on Schizophrenia," where
ν
EDITORIAL NOTE

he states that in spite of all the developments over the years,


knowledge of this disorder is still so fragmentary that he could
organize his findings only in outline and in relation to individual
case-studies.
The volume is divided into four parts based on their chrono­
logical sequence, except that "On Psychological Understanding"
has been placed after "The Content of the Psychoses." Though
written as separate essays the two were later combined in this
way by the author in both Swiss and English publications of
these works.

EDITORIAL NOTE TO THE SECOND PRINTING


Because of the availability of Experimental Researches, Volume
2 in the Collected Works, the copious references herein to
Jung's papers on the word-association tests have been revised in
terms of that volume. Changes of terminology and other minor
revisions of text, bibliography, and index have been made.

Vl
TABLE OF CONTENTS

EDITORIAL NOTE

I
The Psychology of Dementia Praecox
Translated from Uber die Psychologie der Dementia praecox:
Ein Versuch (Halle a. S., 1907).

Foreword, 3
1. Critical Survey of Theoretical Views on the Psychology
of Dementia Praecox, 5
2. The Feeling-toned Complex and Its General Effects on
the Psyche, 38
Acute Eifects of the Complex, 41. — Chronic Effects
of the Complex, 43
3. The Influence of the Feeling-toned Complex on the
Valency of Associations, 52
4. Dementia Praecox and Hysteria, 70
I. Disturbances of the Emotions, 70. — II. Abnormali­
ties of Character, 74. — III. Intellectual Disturbances,
78. — IV. Stereotypy, 92. — Summary, 97
5. Analysis of a Case of Paranoid Dementia as a Paradigm,
99
Clinical History, 99. — Simple Word Associations,
ιοί. — Continuous Associations, 111. (A. Wish-fulfil­
ment, 112; B. The Complex of Being Wronged, 125;
c. The Sexual Complex, 133; D. Summary, 144; E. Sup­
plement, 146) — Epilogue, 150

II
The Content of the Psychoses
Translated from Der Inhalt der Psychose (2nd edn., Leipzig
and Vienna, 1914).
CONTENTS

On Psychological Understanding 179


Translated from the Supplement to the foregoing.

III
A Criticism of Bleuler's Theory of Schizophrenic
Negativism 197
Translated from a critique in the Jahrbuch fiir psychoanaly-
tische und psychopathologische Forschungen (Vienna and
Leipzig), III (1911).
On the Importance of the Unconscious in
Psychopathology 203
Written in English and published in the British Medical Jour­
nal (London), II (1914).
On the Problem of Psychogenesis in Mental Disease 211
Written in English and published in the Proceedings of the
Royal Society of Medicine (London), XII (igig).
Mental Disease and the Psyche 226
Translated from "Heilbare Geisteskranke?", Berliner Tage-
blatt, 1928.
IV
On the Psychogenesis of Schizophrenia 233
Written in English and published in the Journal of Mental
Science (London), LXXXV (1939).
Recent Thoughts on Schizophrenia 250
Written in English and broadcast by the "Voice of America,"
December 1956.
Schizophrenia 256
Translated from "Die Schizophrenia," Schweizer Archiv fiir
Neurologie und Psychiatrie (Zurich), LXXXI (1958).
APPENDIX: Letter to the Second International Congress of
Psychiatry (Symposium on Chemical Concepts of Psychosis),
1957 27 2

BIBLIOGRAPHY 275

INDEX 287
viii
I
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF
DEMENTIA PRAECOX
[First published as ^er die Psychologie der Dementia praecox: Ein Versuch
(Halle a. S., 1907). Translated, and with an introduction, by Frederick W. Peterson
and A. A, Brill, under the present title, in the Nervous and Mental Disease Mono­
graph Series (no. 3; New York, 1909). Retranslated in the same series by A. A. Brill
alone, with a new introduction (New York and Washington, 1936). Now newly
translated from the original. The 1936 Brill translation has been consulted.—
EDITORS.]
FOREWORD

This work is the fruit of three years' experimental researches


and clinical observations. In view of the complexity and magni­
tude of the material, my work cannot and does not lay claim
either to finality of treatment or to absolute certainty of the
statements and conclusions. On the contrary, it combines all the
disadvantages of eclecticism, which to many a reader may seem
so striking that he will call my work a confession of faith rather
than a scientific treatise. Peu importe! The important thing is
that I should be able to show the reader how, through psycho­
logical investigation, I have been led to certain views which I
think will provoke new and fruitful questions concerning the
individual psychological basis of dementia praecox.
My views are not contrivances of a roving fancy, but thoughts
which matured in almost daily conversation with my respected
chief, Professor Bleuler. I owe special thanks to my friend
Dr. Riklin, of Rheinau, for adding considerably to the empiri­
cal material. Even a superficial glance at my work will show how
much I am indebted to the brilliant discoveries of Freud. As
Freud has not yet received the recognition and appreciation he
deserves, but is still opposed even in the most authoritative
circles, I hope I may be allowed to define my position towards
him. My attention was drawn to Freud by the first book of his
I happened to read, The Interpretation of Dreams, after which I
also studied his other writings. I can assure you that in the be­
ginning I naturally entertained all the objections that are cus­
tomarily made against Freud in the literature. But, I told myself,
Freud could be refuted only by one who has made repeated use
of the psychoanalytic method and who really investigates as
Freud does; that is, by one who has made a long and patient
study of everyday life, hysteria, and dreams from Freud's point
of view. He who does not or cannot do this should not pronounce
judgment on Freud, else he acts like those notorious men of
FOREWORD
science who disdained to look through Galileo's telescope. Fair­
ness to Freud, however, does not imply, as many fear, unquali­
fied submission to a dogma; one can very well maintain an inde­
pendent judgment. If I, for instance, acknowledge the complex
mechanisms of dreams and hysteria, this does not mean that I
attribute to the infantile sexual trauma the exclusive impor­
tance that Freud apparently does. Still less does it mean that
I place sexuality so predominantly in the foreground, or that I
grant it the psychological universality which Freud, it seems,
postulates in view of the admittedly enormous role which sexu­
ality plays in the psyche. As for Freud's therapy, it is at best but
one of several possible methods, and perhaps does not always
offer in practice what one expects from it in theory. Nevertheless,
all these things are the merest trifles compared with the psycho­
logical principles whose discovery is Freud's greatest merit; and
to them the critics pay far too little attention. He who wishes to
be fair to Freud should take to heart the words of Erasmus;
"Unumquemque move lapidem, omnia experire, nihil intenta-
tum relinque."*
As my work is largely based on experimental researches, I
trust the reader will bear with me if he finds a great many refer­
ences to the Diagnostische Assoziationsstudien , which appeared
under my editorship. 1

Zurich, July 1906 C. G. JUNG


* ["Move every stone, try everything, leave nothing unattempted."—Erasmus,
Adagia, I.IV.xxx; trans, here by Margaret Mann Phillips. Cf. The FreudjJung
Letters, p. xviii. The Letters contain numerous references to "The Psychology
of Dementia Praecox"; see the index, Jung, C. G., under the title.]
1 [In a vols., 1906 and 1909. Trans, by M. D. Eder as Studies in Word-Association

('9'8): JUNF?S contributions appear in Vol. 2 of the present edition.—EDITORS.]


ι. CRITICAL SURVEY OF THEORETICAL VIEWS
ON THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DEMENTIA PRAECOX

1
The literature which treats of the psychological disturbances
in dementia praecox is very fragmentary, and although parts of
it are quite extensive it nowhere shows any clear co-ordination.
The statements of the older authors have only a limited value,
because they refer now to this, now to that form of illness, which
can be classified only very indefinitely as dementia praecox.
Hence one cannot attribute any general validity to them. The
first and somewhat more general view concerning the nature of
the psychological disturbance in catatonia, so far as I know, was
that of Tschisch (1886),1 who thought that the essential thing was
an incapacity for attention. A similar view, somewhat differ­
ently formulated, was expressed by Freusberg, 2 who stated that
the automatic actions of the catatonic are associated with a weak­
ening of consciousness, which has lost its control over the psychic
processes. The motor disturbance is only a symptomatic expres­
sion of the degree of psychic tension.
2 For Freusberg, therefore, the motor catatonic symptoms
are dependent on corresponding psychological symptoms. The
"weakening of consciousness" resembles the quite modern view
of Pierre Janet. That there is a disturbance of attention is also
confirmed by Kraepelin, 3 Aschaffenburg, 4 Ziehen, and others.
In 1894 we encounter for the first time an experimental psycho­
logical work on the subject of catatonia: Sommer's "On the
Theory of 'Inhibition' of Mental Processes." 5 The author makes
the following statements which are of general significance:
1 Cited from Arndt, "Ober die Geschichte der Katatonie" (1902).
2 "Cber motorische Symptome bei einfachen Psychosen" (1886).
3 Psychiatrie: Ein Lehrbuch fur Studierende und Ante (orig. 1883).
4 "Die Katatoniefrage" (1898). [For works by Ziehen, see Bibliography.-EDrroRS.]
5 "Zur Lehre von der 'Hemmung' geistiger Vorgange" (1894).
THE PSYCHOGENESIS OF MENTAL DISEASE

1. The process of ideation is slowed down.


2 . The patient is so fascinated by pictures shown to him
that he can tear himself away from them only with difficulty.
3 The frequent b l o c k i n g s (prolongations of reaction time) are
explained by Sommer as visual fixation. 6 The state of distracti-
bility in normal persons occasionally shows similar phenomena;
e.g., "amazement" and "staring into space." With this com­
parison of the catatonic state to normal distractibility Sommer
affirms much the same thing as Tschisch and Freusberg, namely
that there is a reduction of attention. Another phenomenon
closely related to visual fixation, according to Sommer j is cata­
lepsy; he considers it "in all cases a phenomenon of entirely
psychic origin." This view of Sommer's conflicts sharply with
that of Roller, with whom Clemens Neisser is in entire agree­
ment.
4 Says Roller: "The ideas and sensations that reach perception
in the insane person and force themselves into the field of con­
sciousness arise from the morbid state of the subordinate centres,
and when active apperception, or attention, comes into play it
is fixated by these pathological perceptions." 7
5 In this connection Neisser remarks: "Wherever we look in
insanity we find something different, something strange; proc­
esses that cannot be explained on the analogy of normal psychic
life. The logical mechanism in insanity is set in motion not by
apperceptive or associative conscious activity but by pathological
stimuli lying below the threshold of consciousness." 8 Neisser
thus agrees with Roller's view, but it seems to me that this view
is not quite free from objections. First, it is based on an anatom­
ical conception of psychic processes—a conception that cannot
be cautioned against too strongly. What significance "subordi­
nate centres" have in the formation of psychic elements (ideas,
sensations, etc.) we do not know at all. An explanation of this
kind is merely a matter of words.
6 Second, the RolIer-Neisser view seems to presuppose that out-

6 Von Leupoldt, who recently worked on this symptom, calls it "the symptom of
naming and touching," Cf. "Zur Symptomatologie der Katatonie" (1906).
7 "l)ber motorische Storungen beim einfachen Irresein" (1885), cited from Neisser,
Vber die Katatonie (1887), p. 61.
8 Ernst Meyer opposed this view, which was then held also by Kraepelin. Cf. Meyer,
Beitrag zur Kenntnis der acut entstandenen Psychosen (1899).
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DEMENTIA PRAECOX

side consciousness the psyche ceases to exist. From the psychology


of the French school and from our experiences with hypnotism
it is evident that this is not so.
7 Third, if I have understood him correctly, by "pathological
stimuli lying below the threshold of consciousness" Neisser must
mean cell-processes in the cortex. This hypothesis goes too far.
All psychic processes are correlates of cell-processes, according to
both the materialistic view and that of psychophysical parallel­
ism. So it is nothing out of the ordinary if the psychic processes
in catatonia are correlates of a physical series. We know that the
normal psychic series develops under the constant influence of
countless psychological constellations of which we are as a rule
unconscious. Why should this fundamental psychological law
suddenly cease to apply in catatonia? Is it because the ideational
content of the catatonic is foreign to his consciousness? But is it
not the same in our dreams? Yet no one will assert that dreams
originate so to speak directly from the cells without psycho­
logical constellations. Anyone who has analysed dreams accord­
ing to Freud's method knows what an enormous influence these
constellations have. The appearance of strange ideas in con­
sciousness which have no demonstrable connection with previous
conscious contents is not unheard of either in normal psy­
chology or in hysteria. The "pathological ideas" of catatonics
have plenty of analogies in normal as well as in hysterical per­
sons. What we lack is not so much comparative factual material
as the key to the psychology of catatonic automatism. For the
rest, it always seems to me rather risky to assume something
absolutely new and strange in science.
8 In dementia praecox, where as a matter of fact countless
normal associations still exist, we must expect that until we get
to know the very delicate processes which are really specific of
the disease the laws of the normal psyche will long continue to
play their part. To the great detriment of psychopathology,
where the only thing we are beginning to agree about is the
ambiguity of our applied concepts, our knowledge of the normal
psyche is unfortunately still on a very primitive level.
9 We are indebted to Sommer 9 for further stimulating studies
on the associations of catatonics. In certain cases the associations

9 Lehrbuch der psychopathologischen Untersuchungsmethoden (1899).


THE PSYCHOGENESIS OF MENTAL DISEASE

proceed in a normal way but are suddenly interrupted by an


apparently quite disconnected, strangely "mannered" combina­
tion of ideas, as the following example will show: 10

dark green
white brown
black "good day, William"
red brown

These "erratic" associations were also observed by Diem,11


who conceived of them as sudden "whims." Sommer justly con­
siders them an important criterion for catatonia. The "patho­
logical inspirations" described by Breukink,12 following Ziehen,
were observed by these authors in insane patients and were
found exclusively in dementia praecox, especially in its paranoid
forms, where "inspirations" of every kind play a well-known
role. Bonhoeffer's "pathological ideas" probably refer to a simi­
lar phenomenon.13 The question Taised by Sommer's discovery
has naturally not been settled; but, until we are better informed,
the phenomena observed by different authors and designated
with almost the same names must for the present be grouped
under one heading. Although it would seem from clinical ex­
perience that "pathological ideas" occur only in dementia prae­
cox (we naturally discount the falsifications of memory which
often appear suddenly in organic dementia and in Korsakow's
syndrome), I would like to point out that in hysteria, especially
in cases that never reach the clinic, "pathological ideas" play a
large part. The most interesting examples are reported by
Flournoy.14 I have observed similar sudden irruptions of altered
psychological activity in a very clear case of hysteria,15 and
recently I was able to confirm it again in a similar case. Finally,

10 Ibid., p. 362. Recently Fuhrmann cited some association tests in "acute juvenile
dementia," which were without characteristic results. Cf. "Ober akute juvenile
Verblodung" (1905).
11 "Die einfach demente Form der Dementia praecox" (1903).

32 "Ober eknoische Zustande" (1903).

13 "Ober den pathologischen Einfall" (1904).


l i F r o m India to the Planet Mars (1900); "Nouvelles observations sur un cas de

somnambulisme avec glossolalie" (1901).


16 "On the Psychology and Pathology of So-called Occult Phenomena" (orig. 1902;
in Collected Works, Vol. 1.).
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