Study Unit 3 Flashcards
Jung’s view of the person
- Dialectical:
- believed that people experience, both consciously and unconsciously, opposing forces, a drive and a draw, that determined a person’s behaviour
- this in turn propelled the psyche to evolve from a natural state to a complex one, ultimately determining a person’s behaviour - Holistic
- placed emphasis on the ultimate goal of the personality development to be reaching a certain ‘wholeness’ that then represents a person attaining the self
- focused on the context of the individual, rather than only the structure and processes of the psyche
4 human dimensions: Jung
- Physiological: includes all biological processes, such as the need to eat, sleep and copulate. He was opposed to the view of explaining psychological processes in terms of physiology, and rather studied it separately
- Social: the individual’s interactions with others and the relationships that form as a result
- Psychic: conscious processes that one is aware of, and serves the function to help us make sense of our reality and thereby adapt to it
- Spiritual: all the irrational aspects of the individual, that elevates the psyche to a spiritual plane superior to that of the physiological and social dimension
Collective unconscious
An inherited potential or “blueprint” , which has been transmitted from previous generations, and which forms the inherited foundation of the individual psyche
Archetypes
The main content of the collective unconscious, they are innate primordial psychic predispositions which influence a person to perceive an experience a certain way
Archetype: The anima and animus
- all humans posses the psychological traits of the opposite sex
- animus for women (rationality and logic)
- anima for men (feelings and emotionalism)
- they function from within the unconscious, and posses the qualities that are lacking from the persona
- main function: to assist an individual to interact with someone of the opposite sex, and thereby form relationships
Archetype: Persona
- the way in which people present themselves to society (public-self)
- how they believe others see them, and how they wish to be seen
- wears different ‘masks’, depending on the social context and the role they have to fulfil (parent, sibling, friend, etc.)
- although it doesn’t form part of reality, it is perceived as such
Archetype: The shadow
- contains all of a person’s primitive and instinctual desires that is normally unacceptable in the eyes of society, and therefore get repressed
- if a person expresses these urges inappropriately or repress it too deeply, it can lead to self destructive behaviour and feelings
Archetype: the self
- motivates the individual to balance various facets of the psyche in a harmonious way
- once the conflict between the conscious and unconscious is resolved, the self actualises
- it forms the centre of the personality
- present at birth, but only surfaces later in life through the process of self individuation
The conscious (Jung)
- the ego, which refers to a person’s experience of life and its cognitive processed such as sensation, perception, feelings, and memory
- Internal function: give the person awareness and identity
- External function: to make sense of one’s physical and social world in order to take part in it
The personal unconscious (Jung)
- where all the individual’s memories are stored
- memories can be recalled by drawing them from the personal unconscious into the consciousness
- individual complexes: when an archetype is paired with a personal experience that is loaded with emotion
- remain in the unconscious, in an autonomous state, influencing behaviour unnoticed
Dynamics of the personality: Basic assumptions (Jung)
- referred to the human being as an energy system, abiding to the principles of equality and entropy, as is seen in thermodynamics
- people posses psychic energy, which is used by the personality
- psychic energy is sourced from within the body, much like physiological energy, but can also be derived externally through experiences
Dynamics of personality: principles of thermodynamics (Jung)
The principle of equality: we have a constant reserve of psychic energy, which neither increases or decreases. Energy that is ‘used’ by one of the systems of the psyche, simply gets redirected to a different one
The principle of entropy: the psyche maintains its balance by transferring psychic energy from stronger components to weaker ones. The psyche strives to create a situation in which all the subsystems have an equal amount of psychic energy at their disposal so that a system of total balance can existence
Dynamics of the personality: Harnessing psychic energy (Jung)
Progression:
takes place when the ego successfully adapts to the demands of the environment and the needs of the unconscious, so that the flow of energy reconciles these opposing forces
Regression:
an adaption to the inner world that occurs whenever the flow of energy is blocked, preventing compromise between two opposing systems
Sublimation:
the displacement of energy from an instinctive or less differentiated process to a more differentiated process, usually of a cultural and spiritual nature. For example, a woman decides, as a result of frustrated love, to enter the nursing profession or becoming a social worker, thereby displacing her love and transforming it into loving care
Repression:
takes place when conscious impulses threaten the ego and the persona, and are repressed into the unconscious
Dynamics of the personality: Interaction between subsystems of the psyche (Jung) COS
Opposition:
the subsystems of the psyche are polar opposites that creates a state of tension that is essential for life. Without tension there would be no energy and therefore no psyche or even life
Compensation:
emphasised characteristics in the conscious is compensated for by emphasising the opposite characteristic in the unconscious (shadow). For example, dominant masculinity on the conscious level is compensated for by the anima on the unconscious level
Synthesis:
Synthesis, that suggests a union between the opposing systems can be formed only through the transcendent function in the development of the self.
Dynamics of the personality: Functions of the personality (Jung)
Internal functions:
Sensation: refers to the way in which the psyche experiences external impulses through the senses
Intuition: unconscious perception on a subliminal level
Rational level:
Thinking: a logical and structuring function directed towards the objective explanation and understanding of the world
Feeling: is an evaluative function by which information is judged as good or bad, right or wrong, positive or negative. Forms the basis of subjective feelings