scholarly journals Reconciliation and Forgiveness in the Perspective of Jung’s Analytic Psychology

2018 ◽  
Vol 54 (null) ◽  
pp. 79-104
Author(s):  
Youngdon Youn
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
pp. 002216782110052
Author(s):  
Susan Clements Negley

A personal and anecdotal account of postpartum depression with psychotic features can be understood as an extreme state addressed relationally using Carl Jung’s analytic psychology. The relationship between the analyst and the analysand is understood as the containing environment for the treatment. Rather than pathological, an understanding of this experience as natural and deeply psychological allows for personal growth and deepens the mother–child bond. A mother’s childhood wounds make their way into the field and through dreams are examined for their universal underpinnings. The natural healing mechanism within the psyche tended by the sensitive clinician becomes the force for change without the traditional interventions offered by a medical model.


Nature ◽  
1896 ◽  
Vol 55 (1415) ◽  
pp. 121-122
Author(s):  
W. E. JOHNSON
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-72
Author(s):  
Barbara Tomalak

In her volume of essays The Tender Narrator, Olga Tokarczuk devotes one of them to The Land of Metaxy, which she calls – following Plato – a place between the world of humans and the world of gods. The status of this place is peculiar: it mediates between the worlds, and yet does not belong to either. It is from that place that characters come to the writer. An attempt to explain the actual meaning of Metaxy and who its inhabitants are boils down to four possible interpretations. We can analyse Metaxy in accordance with contemporary quantum physics and cosmology (parallel worlds), from the perspective of religious models created by the civilization of the West, according to the astrology of astral planes, and finally as a domain of collective unconscious, in accordance with Carl Gustav Jung’s analytic psychology and Stanislav Grof’s transpersonal psychology.


1961 ◽  
Vol 79 (256) ◽  
pp. 201-216
Author(s):  
W. W. Meissner
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Maria van der Schaar

This article was commissioned as a supplement to theOxford Handbook of the History of Analytic Philosophy, edited by Michael Beaney. It focuses on the psychological origins of analytic philosophy. Analytic psychology influenced the emergence of a new method in philosophy and the crucial changes to the notions of judgement and intentionality at the end of the nineteenth century. In particular, G. F. Stout’s analytic psychology played an important role in the formation of Moore’s and Russell’s early analytic philosophy. Through Stout, the account of judgement and intentionality given by Brentano and Twardowski also had a significant influence on the development of early analytic philosophy.


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