Theories of Personality 9th Edition
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 107 been in touch with feelings and intuitions that No. 1 personality did not perceive. Be ...
108 Part II Psychodynamic Theories him as a man of great intellect. These qualifications prompted Freud to select Jung as the fi ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 109 Although Jung and Wolff made no attempt to hide their relationship, the name Toni Wolf ...
110 Part II Psychodynamic Theories During this period he wrote down his dreams, drew pictures of them, told himself stories, and ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 111 Personal Unconscious The personal unconscious embraces all repressed, forgotten, or su ...
112 Part II Psychodynamic Theories but such innate potential requires an individual experience before it will become activated. ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 113 fantasy figures were actually archetypes, these experiences took on a completely new m ...
114 Part II Psychodynamic Theories to each of us. A physician is expected to adopt a characteristic “bedside manner,” a politici ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 115 power and lead tragic lives, constantly running into “bad luck” and reaping harvests o ...
116 Part II Psychodynamic Theories his feminine side is casting her spell; instead, he either ignores the irrationality of the f ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 117 also represents power and destruction, she is sometimes symbolized as a god- mother, t ...
118 Part II Psychodynamic Theories arrow in his only vulnerable spot—his heel. Similarly, Macbeth was a heroic fig- ure with a s ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 119 Although the self is almost never perfectly balanced, each person has in the collectiv ...
120 Part II Psychodynamic Theories self-realization is seldom if ever achieved, but as an ideal it exists within the col- lectiv ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 121 Dynamics of Personality In this section on the dynamics of personality, we look at Jun ...
122 Part II Psychodynamic Theories Jung (1961) believed that the regressive step is necessary to create a balanced personality a ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 123 Extraversion In contrast to introversion, extraversion is the attitude distinguished b ...
124 Part II Psychodynamic Theories and Adler reveal that the opposite appears to be true: Freud was personally some- what introv ...
Chapter 4 Jung: Analytical Psychology 125 these evaluations have no emotional content, but they are capable of becoming emotions ...
126 Part II Psychodynamic Theories raw material for thinking and feeling. Intuiting differs from sensing in that it is more crea ...
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