Awakening and Insight: Zen Buddhism and Psychotherapy

(Martin Jones) #1

collective unconscious 47, 52, 55, 71, 107;
and the Consciousness-only School 227;
liberation from 112, 128;
see also archetypes
‘comparative model’ of dialogue 45
compassion 74, 76, 121
complexes 69, 201, 206;
see also specific complexes
confusion 189
consciousness 48, 113;
center of 49, 51, 52;
collective 47;
development 108;
dissociation from the unconscious 124;
ego-consciousness 49, 50, 54, 54, 124,
136, 143;
emptying 140;
evolution 56;
higher 53, 55;
I-consciousness 108;
‘lower’ 142;
need for an Eastern definition 55;
original 240;
of the self 108, 187;
and the unconscious 108, 124, 176;
see also collective unconscious;
‘eight consciousnesses’;
unconscious
Consciousness-only School 217;
basic tenets 219;
eight consciousnesses and four wisdoms
223;
founders 217;
and Jungian psychology 217, 227;
non-self 226;
perceptual patterns 221;
six kinds of practice 225;
theory of five stages 224;
vexing passions 221, 222, 223
construction/reconstruction 97
containment 82, 85
conversion, mutual 46
core complexes 206;
see also complexes
core mindfulness skills 192;
‘how’ skills 193;
‘what’ skills 193
correlativity 230


cosmos 21
counseling, Buddhist 241
counter-transference 71, 84, 161, 252, 254
creativity 234, 241
Creatura 123
cultural crises 19
cultural location, of Buddhism 169, 173,
174, 177, 180
culture shock 169

death:
-sive-life 189;
composure unto 39;
fear of 111;
and the I-centered consciousness 187,
194;
of the therapist (dreamed) 137
‘deep concentration’ 249
defense mechanisms 100
deficiency-compensation theorists 86
deintegration 214
delusions 237, 241
‘dependent co-arising’ 33
depth psychology:
alleviation of human suffering 68;
and Buddhism 11, 173, 227, 238;
see also analytical psychology;
Jungian psychology
desire 30, 31
development 85
developmental theory 201, 210, 214
dharma 170, 172
dharma seals 219
‘Dharmic World of Mutual Interpenetration
of Phenomena and Phenomena’ 141
‘Dharmic World of Phenomena’ 140
‘Dharmic World of Principle’ 140
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) 8,
182, 186, 191
dialogue:
Buddhist-Christian and Jung 42, 43, 53;
comparative model of 45;
ethical model of 45, 46;
heuristic model of 47, 59;
Jung-Hisamatsu 3, 28, 30, 32, 33, 34, 38,
40, 43, 103, 127, 227;
Zen Buddhist-psychological 26

SUBJECT INDEX 265
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