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Chapter 12: Freudian vs. Jungian Unconscious & Archetypes

Difference of Freudian Unconscious and Jungian Collective Unconscious

Difference of Freudian Unconscious and Jungian Collective Unconscious:

Archetypes

Archetypes: Basic elements of psyche acting as independent beings within a person, represented by symbols; also called dominants, images, mythological or primordial images.

Different personalities live within a person: Shadow, Child, Great Mother, Hero, Wise Old Man, Anima, Animus, Trickster, Self.

Shadow Archetype

Shadow Archetype: Displays bad qualities; "dark side" of ego; evil we are capable of stored here; amoral; similar to Freud's projection; bad qualities seen in others; symbols: snake, dragon, monsters, demons; guards entrance to collective unconscious.

Child Archetype

Child Archetype: Nurtures innocence, lightheartedness, desire for basic needs; balances seriousness of adult responsibilities; energy is infectious.

Great Mother Archetype

Great Mother Archetype: Represents mothering; can be nurturing or devouring; seen in Hindu Devis, Hazrat Maryam; fairy tales show nurturing (feeding mother) and devouring (witch/stepmother).

Hero Archetype

Hero Archetype: Main story character; represents ego; defeats evil (shadow); often optimistic and unaware of collective unconscious.

Wise Old Man Archetype

Wise Old Man Archetype: Guides hero; kind, wise, father-type; offers knowledge and guidance; example: Hazrat Khizar guiding Musa Alaihi Salaam [Surah Al-Kahf 18:60-82].

Anima Archetype

Anima Archetype: Female aspect in men; spontaneous, intuitive, spiritual, wisdom-based; often helps male hero in fairy tales; associated with deep emotionality and life force.

Animus Archetype

Animus Archetype: Masculine aspect in women; logical, rational, reality-oriented.

Trickster Archetype

Trickster Archetype: Negative but important; represented by clown/magician; hampers hero, tests hero, guides through challenges; uses trickery and deceit; found in folklore and fairy tales.

Self Archetype

Self Archetype: Emerges after passing trickster's tests; goal of life is to realize the Self; represents integration of all opposites (male/female, ego/shadow, good/bad, conscious/unconscious, individual/whole); no opposites means no energy or action.

Jung's Treatment

Jung's Treatment: Goal: help recognize self, not cure; relies on dream analysis; different interpretation of symbols than Freud; uses Active Imagination.

Active Imagination

Active Imagination: Consciously dialoguing with unconscious to produce contents lying just below conscious threshold; these contents can erupt spontaneously into consciousness.

Key Concepts in Unconscious and Archetypes

Freudian Unconscious
Pathological, sexuality-driven
Jungian Collective Unconscious
Healing, spiritual, two layers
Archetypes Overview
Independent psychic elements
Shadow
Dark side, evil qualities
Hero & Guides
Ego, wisdom, anima/animus
Self Realization
Integration of opposites

Summary of Important Points

Aspect Description
Freudian Unconscious Rejected contents, sexual drive, pathological
Jungian Collective Unconscious Personal + collective layers, spiritual, regulatory
Archetypes Shadow, Child, Great Mother, Hero, Wise Old Man, Anima, Animus, Trickster, Self
Shadow Bad qualities, amoral, guards collective unconscious
Hero & Guides Ego representation, wisdom, feminine/masculine aspects
Jung's Treatment Self-recognition via dreams and active imagination
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