although freud was carl jung’s mentor he is more sympathetic towards religion than freud jung was...
TRANSCRIPT
Carl Gustav Jung and the Collective
Unconscious
Although Freud was Carl Jung’s mentor he is more sympathetic towards religion than Freud
Jung was born in 1875 and grew up in the vicarage of a Swiss Reformed Church
His father was a pastor
After constantly hearing the term ‘taken by Jesus’ in his youth he became afraid of Jesus and the term Jesuit
A Bit of Background on Jung
Jung was the founder of analytical psychology
Jung was Freud’s friend and collaborator for many years. The first conversation that the two had together is reported to have lasted for over 13hours
Freud often analysed Jung and his dreams
Although Jung was influenced by Freud, this did not prevent him from pursuing his own ideas
These ultimately led him to reject many of Freud’s conclusions, especially those concerning religion
Although he accepted that religion was a psychological phenomenon, he objected to Freud’s conclusions that:◦ Religion is a neurotic illness caused by sexual trauma◦ Religion is a dangerous entity, to be exposed and overthrown
Jung replaced Freud’s conclusions with the following observations:
Jung Vs. Freud
o Religion is a natural process that stems from archetypes within the unconscious mind
o It performs the function of harmonising the psyche
o As such it is a beneficial phenomenono The removal of religion would lead to
psychological problems
Which of these assessments of religion do you think is best?
Who’s Better?
Jung’s work with patients suffering from schizophrenia led him to reject Freud’s view that neuroses were caused by a repressed sexuality – although schizophrenia was a neurosis it had no obvious sexual component
He was also unconvinced by Freud’s view that the suckling of a baby was a sexual act
From these observations he concluded that religion, as another neurosis, in no way depended on sexual trauma
Rejection of Freud
Jung noted how people who were dreaming, or suffering from psychic disorders, were often preoccupied with similar ideas and images
For example, Miss Miller had a dream in which her desire for God was compared with a moth’s desire for light
Jung noted how this parallel between God and light can be found in countless religious traditions
Two examples are the Aztec preoccupation with the Sun and the Christian view of Jesus as ‘Light of the World’
God and Light
To account for the similarities in mental images Jung suggested a further division of the unconscious mind into the personal unconscious and the collective unconscious
In pairs or small groups indentify any similarities in the types of thing you have dreamt about e.g. many people have dreamt that they are being chased by something.
If there are any common features, how would you account for them?
The Unconscious
Task
The Collective Unconscious
Jung distinguished between the Collective Unconscious and the Personal Unconscious
He said that the Personal Unconscious is a personal reservoir of experience and is unique to each individual
The Collective Unconscious collects and organises those personal experiences in a similar way with each member of a particular species
The Collective Unconscious is the oldest part of the mind
It contains the blueprints for a whole range of ideas and images
This means each one of us is born with the tendency to conceive similar kinds of primordial images
The Collective Unconscious
Can you think of any examples of shared ideas that seem to be innate within us?
Do you think we have a collective unconscious or just a personal one?
What Do You Think?
Jung believed that the God concept is one of these primordial images
The Collective Unconscious means, therefore, that many of ideas about God will be shared with others
Jung gave the technical name archetype to the part of the psyche that creates these images
The Collective Unconscious and God
Jung stated in his book ‘Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious’:
My thesis then, is as follows: in addition to our immediate consciousness, which is of a thoroughly personal nature and which we believe to be the only empirical psyche (even if we tack on the personal unconscious as an appendix), there exists a second psychic system of a collective, universal, and impersonal nature which is identical in all individuals. This collective unconscious does not develop individually but is inherited. It consists of pre-existent forms, the archetypes, which can only become conscious secondarily and which give definite form to certain psychic contents