SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Carl Jung
His theories: Dialogue between the conscious and unconscious aspects of the psyche enriches a person, Jung believed.  Without this dialogue, he believed the unconscious processes can weaken or even jeopardize the personality.  Jung came up with the idea of  Individuation .
Individuation  The term for personal development that involves establishing a connection between the  ego  and  self .  Ego    centre of consciousness Self    centre of total psyche (includes conscious and unconscious) According to Jung, there is constant interaction between the two. They are not separate but part of the same system.  Individuation is the process of developing wholeness by integrating all the various parts of the psyche.
Introversion and Extraversion Jung found that people can be characterized as either primarily inward-oriented or primarily outward-oriented.  Introvert  – more comfortable with the inner world of thoughts and feelings Extravert  – feels more at home with the world of objects and other people There is no pure introvert or extrovert, Jung claimed they are two processes that alternate. However, each individual tends to favor one or the other attitude.
Introversion and Extraversion cntd. Introverts see the world in terms of  how it affects them Extroverts are more concerned with  their impact upon the world There is also a balance between conscious and unconscious emphases on these qualities  If you take an extravert, you will find his/her unconscious has an introverted quality because all the extraverted qualities are played out in his consciousness and the introverted are left in the unconscious.  Introverts are more interested in their own thoughts and feelings; their inner world
Introversion and Extraversion cntd One danger for such people is that as they become immersed in their inner world, they may lose touch with the world around them.  Extroverts are actively involved in the world of people and things  They tend to be more social and aware of what is going on around them They need to guard against becoming dominated by external events and alienated from their inner selves  Ex). The workaholic business executive that has no understanding of feelings or relationships is a perfect example of unbalanced extraversion.
The functions:  Thinking, Feeling, Sensation, Intuition  There are 4 fundamental psychological functions according to Jung:  1). Thinking 2). Feeling 3). Sensation 4). Intuition  Generally, one of the functions is more conscious, developed or dominant.
Thinking Thinking and feeling are alternative ways of forming judgments and making decisions  Thinking    concerned with objective truth, judgment, and impersonal analysis.  Thinking asks “what does this mean?”  Thinking types are the greatest planners; they tend to stick to plans and abstract theories even when confronted by new evidence.
Feeling Feeling is focused on value  Includes judgements of good vs. bad and right vs. wrong  Feeling asks the question “what value does this have?”
Sensation and Intuition  Sensation and intuition are ways of gathering information, as distinct forms of making decisions.  Sensation refers to a focus on direct sense experience, perception of details, and concrete facts : what one can touch, see and smell. Sensing types tend to respond to the immediate situation and deal effectively and efficiently with all sorts of crises and emergencies. They generally work better with tools and materials than other types do.
Intuition  Intuition is a way of comprehending perceptions in terms of possibilities, past experiences, future goals and unconscious processes.  It asks the question, “What might happen, what is possible?”  Strongly intuitive people add meaning to their perceptions so rapidly that they often cannot separate their interpretations from their raw sensory data.  Intuitives integrate new information quickly, automatically relating past experiences and relevant information to immediate experience.  Because it often includes unconscious material, intuitive thinking appears to proceed by leaps and bounds.
Personal Unconscious Jung's theory of a  personal unconscious  is quite similar to Freuds idea of the unconscious. However, Jung considered the  personal unconscious  to be a "more or less superficial layer of the unconscious." Within the personal unconscious are what he called "feeling-toned complexes." He said that "they constitute the personal and private side of psychic life." 3  These are feelings and perceptions organized around significant persons or events in the person's life.
Collective Unconscious Jung believed that there was a deeper and more significant layer of the unconscious, which he called the  collective unconscious,  with what he identified as  archetypes Archetypes, he believed were innate, unconscious, and generally universal. Jung's  collective unconscious  has been described as a "storehouse of latent memory traces inherited from man's ancestral past, a past that includes not only the racial history of man as a separate species but his pre-human or animal ancestry as well.“
Collective Unconscious continued There are some experiences that show the effects of the collective unconscious more clearly than others: The experiences of love at first sight, of deja vu (the feeling that you've been here before), and the immediate recognition of certain symbols and the meanings of certain myths, could all be understood as the sudden union of our outer reality and the inner reality of the collective unconscious.  Examples – musicians, spiritual experiences of mystics
Archetypes The contents of the collective unconscious are called  archetypes . Jung also called them dominants, images, mythological or primordial images, and a few other names, but archetypes seems to have won out over these. An archetype is an unlearned tendency to experience things in a certain way.
The Shadow Sexual and life instincts are represented in this part of Jung’s systems  This is part of our prehuman, animal past when our main concerns were survival and reproduction, when we were not self conscious.  Dark side of ego and the evil we are capable of
Persona Persona Greek for 'mask'.  Jung uses the word for self-image with which we face the world.
Persona Continued The persona is based on your superior function in life (the function that will best serve one in meeting the world's demands).  When your persona is forced upon you, as when your parents push you into academic achievement, forcing you to build a thinking-based persona, whereas your natural (God-given) superior function was the feeling function or intuitive function, etc.
Anima/Animus The Animus or Anima is the idealistic image of man or a woman. Carl Jung’s dream psychology notes the Animus or Anima as the unconscious expression of one’s inner feminine or masculine personality.
Anima/Animus continued Anima – each man’s unconscious image or understanding of women. This includes parts of his personality that he rejects because they are unacceptable in society  The anima is the man’s female side and the door to his creativity. Animus – each woman’s understanding and image of men in her unconscious It includes aspects of her personality that are inconsistent with what we think of as femininity The animus is a woman’s male side and the key to the creativity of her unconscious mind
Alfred Adler
 
 
 
 
 

More Related Content

PPTX
Industrial Organizational Psychology . ppt
PPT
Jung theory of personality in Psychology
PPT
Carl jung
PDF
Psychodynamic approach
PPTX
Carl Jung Theory of Personality
PPTX
Cannon Bard Thoery of Emotion
PPT
Lecture 10 existential psychotherapy
PPT
Personality theory ppt ch04 adler individual psychology
Industrial Organizational Psychology . ppt
Jung theory of personality in Psychology
Carl jung
Psychodynamic approach
Carl Jung Theory of Personality
Cannon Bard Thoery of Emotion
Lecture 10 existential psychotherapy
Personality theory ppt ch04 adler individual psychology

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Alfred Adler Individual Psychology
PPTX
Humanistic Approach to Personality
PPTX
George Kelly - Personal Construct Theory- Princy Hannah
PPTX
Carl jung powerpoint
DOCX
Psychodynamic Model/Approach. By Theresa Lowry-Lehnen. Lecturer of Psychology
PPT
Adlerian psychotherapy
PPTX
77521535 rollo-may
PPT
PPTX
Phi phenomena
PPTX
Karen horney personality theory
PPTX
Rollo may
PPTX
Carl jung
PPTX
Sigmund Freud and The Psychoanalytic Therapy 101
PPT
Notes psychological disorders
PPTX
Analytical psychology Theories of Personality Carl Jung
PPTX
Alfred Adler’s
PPT
House Tree Person Test
DOCX
Rollo may
PPT
Humanist perspective
Alfred Adler Individual Psychology
Humanistic Approach to Personality
George Kelly - Personal Construct Theory- Princy Hannah
Carl jung powerpoint
Psychodynamic Model/Approach. By Theresa Lowry-Lehnen. Lecturer of Psychology
Adlerian psychotherapy
77521535 rollo-may
Phi phenomena
Karen horney personality theory
Rollo may
Carl jung
Sigmund Freud and The Psychoanalytic Therapy 101
Notes psychological disorders
Analytical psychology Theories of Personality Carl Jung
Alfred Adler’s
House Tree Person Test
Rollo may
Humanist perspective
Ad

Viewers also liked (9)

PPT
Influences on personality
PPT
Developmental psychology continued
PPTX
Psy 1170 project
PPT
Influences on personality
PPT
Original havighurst
PPTX
Understanding developmental stages
PPT
Influences on personality
PDF
Learning Analytics for Holistic Improvement ALASI 2014
PPT
Influences on personality
Influences on personality
Developmental psychology continued
Psy 1170 project
Influences on personality
Original havighurst
Understanding developmental stages
Influences on personality
Learning Analytics for Holistic Improvement ALASI 2014
Influences on personality
Ad

Similar to Carl jung (20)

PPTX
Analytical Psychology
PPT
Carl junge
PPTX
Psychology- theory of personality- Carl Jung. By Dr. Mehran Rostamzadeh.pptx
PPTX
PPTX
3 analytical psychology
PPTX
Theories_of_Personality.pptxrffhhhhhhhhh
PPTX
Lec 3 - Chapter 2 Carl Jung’s Theory of Personality.pptx
PDF
Neo Fruedians: psychodynamics introduction
DOCX
Counseling TheoriesChapter 3Carl JungJungian Analysi.docx
PPTX
Carl Gustav Jung
PPTX
Analytical Psychology - C. G. Jung
PDF
Jung's theory
PPTX
Personality
PPTX
Jung and individuation
PPTX
Carl Jung - Analytical Psychology -------
PPTX
Psychodynamic_Therapy_2_Carl_Gustave_Jun.pptx
PPTX
Jung-MIDTERM-LESSON-1 fasddkidzjihdwsd.pptx
PPT
PDF
Jung - Analytical Psychology.pptx.pdf
PPT
Theories of personality
Analytical Psychology
Carl junge
Psychology- theory of personality- Carl Jung. By Dr. Mehran Rostamzadeh.pptx
3 analytical psychology
Theories_of_Personality.pptxrffhhhhhhhhh
Lec 3 - Chapter 2 Carl Jung’s Theory of Personality.pptx
Neo Fruedians: psychodynamics introduction
Counseling TheoriesChapter 3Carl JungJungian Analysi.docx
Carl Gustav Jung
Analytical Psychology - C. G. Jung
Jung's theory
Personality
Jung and individuation
Carl Jung - Analytical Psychology -------
Psychodynamic_Therapy_2_Carl_Gustave_Jun.pptx
Jung-MIDTERM-LESSON-1 fasddkidzjihdwsd.pptx
Jung - Analytical Psychology.pptx.pdf
Theories of personality

Carl jung

  • 2. His theories: Dialogue between the conscious and unconscious aspects of the psyche enriches a person, Jung believed. Without this dialogue, he believed the unconscious processes can weaken or even jeopardize the personality. Jung came up with the idea of Individuation .
  • 3. Individuation The term for personal development that involves establishing a connection between the ego and self . Ego  centre of consciousness Self  centre of total psyche (includes conscious and unconscious) According to Jung, there is constant interaction between the two. They are not separate but part of the same system. Individuation is the process of developing wholeness by integrating all the various parts of the psyche.
  • 4. Introversion and Extraversion Jung found that people can be characterized as either primarily inward-oriented or primarily outward-oriented. Introvert – more comfortable with the inner world of thoughts and feelings Extravert – feels more at home with the world of objects and other people There is no pure introvert or extrovert, Jung claimed they are two processes that alternate. However, each individual tends to favor one or the other attitude.
  • 5. Introversion and Extraversion cntd. Introverts see the world in terms of how it affects them Extroverts are more concerned with their impact upon the world There is also a balance between conscious and unconscious emphases on these qualities If you take an extravert, you will find his/her unconscious has an introverted quality because all the extraverted qualities are played out in his consciousness and the introverted are left in the unconscious. Introverts are more interested in their own thoughts and feelings; their inner world
  • 6. Introversion and Extraversion cntd One danger for such people is that as they become immersed in their inner world, they may lose touch with the world around them. Extroverts are actively involved in the world of people and things They tend to be more social and aware of what is going on around them They need to guard against becoming dominated by external events and alienated from their inner selves Ex). The workaholic business executive that has no understanding of feelings or relationships is a perfect example of unbalanced extraversion.
  • 7. The functions: Thinking, Feeling, Sensation, Intuition There are 4 fundamental psychological functions according to Jung: 1). Thinking 2). Feeling 3). Sensation 4). Intuition Generally, one of the functions is more conscious, developed or dominant.
  • 8. Thinking Thinking and feeling are alternative ways of forming judgments and making decisions Thinking  concerned with objective truth, judgment, and impersonal analysis. Thinking asks “what does this mean?” Thinking types are the greatest planners; they tend to stick to plans and abstract theories even when confronted by new evidence.
  • 9. Feeling Feeling is focused on value Includes judgements of good vs. bad and right vs. wrong Feeling asks the question “what value does this have?”
  • 10. Sensation and Intuition Sensation and intuition are ways of gathering information, as distinct forms of making decisions. Sensation refers to a focus on direct sense experience, perception of details, and concrete facts : what one can touch, see and smell. Sensing types tend to respond to the immediate situation and deal effectively and efficiently with all sorts of crises and emergencies. They generally work better with tools and materials than other types do.
  • 11. Intuition Intuition is a way of comprehending perceptions in terms of possibilities, past experiences, future goals and unconscious processes. It asks the question, “What might happen, what is possible?” Strongly intuitive people add meaning to their perceptions so rapidly that they often cannot separate their interpretations from their raw sensory data. Intuitives integrate new information quickly, automatically relating past experiences and relevant information to immediate experience. Because it often includes unconscious material, intuitive thinking appears to proceed by leaps and bounds.
  • 12. Personal Unconscious Jung's theory of a personal unconscious is quite similar to Freuds idea of the unconscious. However, Jung considered the personal unconscious to be a "more or less superficial layer of the unconscious." Within the personal unconscious are what he called "feeling-toned complexes." He said that "they constitute the personal and private side of psychic life." 3 These are feelings and perceptions organized around significant persons or events in the person's life.
  • 13. Collective Unconscious Jung believed that there was a deeper and more significant layer of the unconscious, which he called the collective unconscious, with what he identified as archetypes Archetypes, he believed were innate, unconscious, and generally universal. Jung's collective unconscious has been described as a "storehouse of latent memory traces inherited from man's ancestral past, a past that includes not only the racial history of man as a separate species but his pre-human or animal ancestry as well.“
  • 14. Collective Unconscious continued There are some experiences that show the effects of the collective unconscious more clearly than others: The experiences of love at first sight, of deja vu (the feeling that you've been here before), and the immediate recognition of certain symbols and the meanings of certain myths, could all be understood as the sudden union of our outer reality and the inner reality of the collective unconscious. Examples – musicians, spiritual experiences of mystics
  • 15. Archetypes The contents of the collective unconscious are called archetypes . Jung also called them dominants, images, mythological or primordial images, and a few other names, but archetypes seems to have won out over these. An archetype is an unlearned tendency to experience things in a certain way.
  • 16. The Shadow Sexual and life instincts are represented in this part of Jung’s systems This is part of our prehuman, animal past when our main concerns were survival and reproduction, when we were not self conscious. Dark side of ego and the evil we are capable of
  • 17. Persona Persona Greek for 'mask'. Jung uses the word for self-image with which we face the world.
  • 18. Persona Continued The persona is based on your superior function in life (the function that will best serve one in meeting the world's demands). When your persona is forced upon you, as when your parents push you into academic achievement, forcing you to build a thinking-based persona, whereas your natural (God-given) superior function was the feeling function or intuitive function, etc.
  • 19. Anima/Animus The Animus or Anima is the idealistic image of man or a woman. Carl Jung’s dream psychology notes the Animus or Anima as the unconscious expression of one’s inner feminine or masculine personality.
  • 20. Anima/Animus continued Anima – each man’s unconscious image or understanding of women. This includes parts of his personality that he rejects because they are unacceptable in society The anima is the man’s female side and the door to his creativity. Animus – each woman’s understanding and image of men in her unconscious It includes aspects of her personality that are inconsistent with what we think of as femininity The animus is a woman’s male side and the key to the creativity of her unconscious mind
  • 22.  
  • 23.  
  • 24.  
  • 25.  
  • 26.