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Analytical Psychology: Jung Center
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The term Jung’s Analytical Psychology is used to differentiate this field from Adler’s Individual Psychology, and from Freud's Psychoanalysis. On the other hand, the activity of analysts on either of these approaches is called Deep Psychology on the grounds that all of them deal in their studies with the unconscious.
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The York Association for Analytical Psychology (NYAAP) is a professional society of certified Jungian analysts based in the greater New York metropolitan area, with additional members throughout the United States and Canada. Members of NYAAP offer Jungian analysis to the public, and disseminate and develop Jung’s ideas through public lectures and scholarship.
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The foundation text for Analytical Psychology in which Jung "offered a full-fledged new system of dynamic psychiatry" Ellenberger, p. 698. It is here that Jung first articulated his concepts of introversion/extroversion, of the four fundamental psychic functions (thinking/feeling and sensation/intuition), and of the resulting eight personality types.
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The Master of Analytical Psychology at UWS, offers a flexible learning program (designed for all levels of interest) in the application of pychoanalytic theory with particular reference to the works of C.G. Jung and post-Jungian scholars, to individual, societal and cultural issues.
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 ... 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.
Analytical psychology has come under scrutiny in a whirl of controversy over the character of its founder, Dr. C.G. Jung, including claims that Jung was a charlatan and a self-appointed demi-god. It is claimed that this cult is alive and well in Jungian psychology today, which continues to masquerade as a genuine professional discipline, whilst selling false dreams of spiritual redemption. In his recent book Cult Fictions (Routledge, March 1998), leading Jung scholar Sonu Shamdasani presents the history of the movement's founding, from Jung's establishment of the Psychological Club in Zurich in 1916 to the reformations of his approach by his followers. It assesses the evidence for the cultic allegations, which it demonstrates to be fallacious. Cult Fictions presents a sober, accurate, and revealing account of the history of the Jungian movement and an agenda for the evaluation of analytical psychology today.
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