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Carl Gustav Jung

27 bytes added, 19:49, 27 May 2019
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In the following years Jung experienced considerable [[isolation]] in his professional life, exacerbated through [[World War I]]. His ''Seven Sermons to the [[Dead]]'' (1917) reprinted in his autobiography ''[[Memories]], Dreams, Reflections'' (see Jung [[bibliography]]) can also be read as expression of the psychological conflicts which beset Jung around the age of forty after the break with [[Freud]].
Jung's primary disagreement with Freud stemmed from their differing concepts of the unconscious. Jung saw Freud's theory of the unconscious as incomplete and unnecessarily [[negative]]. According to Jung, Freud conceived the unconscious solely as a repository of [[repressed]] emotions and desires. Jung believed that the unconscious also had a creative capacity. The [[Collective Unconscious|collective unconscious ]] of archetypes and [[images]] which made up the [[human]] psyche was processed and renewed within the unconscious. In effect, Jung's unconscious, as opposed to Freud's, serves a very positive role: the engine of the collective unconscious essential to human [[society]] and [[culture]].
===Jung, Nazism and anti-Semitism===
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