Easy

Chapter 11: Defense Mechanisms, Freudian Methods & Jungian Psychology

Defense Mechanisms and Violence

Defense Mechanisms and Violence:

Freudian Methods

Freudian Methods:

Jungian Psychology

Jung disagreed with Freud's emphasis on sexual desires; believed spirituality, mysticism, religion exist independently.

Attitude types: Extraversion and Introversion.

Four Ego Functions (Jung)

Four Ego Functions (Jung):

Combinations of Ego Functions

Combinations of Ego Functions:

Violence and Jungian Types

Violence and Jungian Types:

Collective Unconscious

Collective Unconscious:

Key Concepts in Defense Mechanisms and Psychology

Defense Mechanisms
Unconscious strategies linking to violence
Freudian Methods
Hypnosis and dream analysis for insight
Jungian Attitudes
Introversion vs. Extraversion
Ego Functions
Thinking, Feeling, Sensation, Intuition
Personality Combinations
Traits and behavioral patterns
Collective Unconscious
Shared human archetypes and symbols

Summary of Important Points

Aspect Description
Defense Mechanisms Denial, repression, projection, etc., linked to violent behaviors
Freudian Methods Free association and dream interpretation for uncovering unconscious
Jungian Attitudes Extraversion (social) vs. Introversion (solitary)
Ego Functions Thinking, Feeling, Sensation, Intuition with intro/extro variants
Violence in Types Extreme attitudes or sensation/feeling dominance increase risk
Collective Unconscious Species-wide reservoir influencing dreams and myths
Easy