News
Journal Reference: Sally Bradshaw, Lance Storm. Archetypes, symbols and the apprehension of meaning. International Journal of Jungian Studies, 2012; 1 DOI: 10.1080/19409052.2012.685662 ...
We’ve all experienced waking abruptly in a sweat-soaked bed after a nightmare. Regardless of whether or not these dreams are logical, realistic, or just plain confusing, they often leave us sitting ...
In 1909, while traveling by steamship to give lectures at Clark University in the United States, Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung passed the time by sharing and interpreting each other’s dreams.
Carl Jung viewed dreams as a way to problem-solve through archetypal conflicts. Alfred Adler later expanded upon Jung’s theory, believing that dreams were a way of playing out inferiority complexes.
In today’s polarised era, his core concepts such as the integration of opposites and the quest for wholeness have deep ...
Carl Jung disputed Freud’s theory and argued that dreams serve a compensatory function – if we are too one-sided in our conscious outlook, the dream warns us of the inherent danger in our ...
The journal,16 years in the making, in which psychoanalyst Carl Jung documented his inner life was long hidden. After a painstaking translation and reproduction, it is finally available to the public.
TEHRAN – “Dream Analysis: Notes of the Seminar Given in 1928–1930” by Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung has been published in Persian by Afkare Now in Tehran. First published in English in 1984, the ...
image: These are some examples of Jungian dream images and their meanings. view more Credit: Dr Lance Storm, University of Adelaide, from multiple sources including Wikimedia Commons.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results