Jungian psychology
n.
psychological theories of Carl Jung emphasizing the understanding of the mind of a person by exploring the worlds of mythology and dreams and the world philosophy and religion
Analytical psychology
Analytical psychology (or Jungian psychology) refers to the school of
psychology originating from the ideas of Swiss psychiatrist
Carl Jung, and then advanced by his students and other thinkers who followed in his tradition. It is distinct from
Freudian psychoanalysis but also has a number of similarities. Its aim is the apprehension and integration of the deep forces and motivations underlying human behaviour by the practice of an accumulative
phenomenology around the significance of dreams, folklore and mythology.
Depth psychology and
archetypal psychology are related in that they both employ the model of the unconscious mind as the source of healing and development in the individual.
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Jungian psychology
Jungian psychology
Noun
1. the psychological theories of Carl Jung
(hypernym) psychotherapy, psychotherapeutics, mental hygiene
Jungian psychology (Analytical Psychology)
System of psychoanalysis founded by psychiatrist and reincarnationist Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961), of Zurich, Switzerland. Its theory posits a collective unconscious, synchronicity, and "life energy" ("libidinal energy," the "primal energy"). Jung held that studying the (alleged) "racial unconscious" could enhance understanding of the individual unconscious.