Materia Prima (http://www.materia-prima.net) is the website of the International Workshop of Analytical Psychology for Childhood and Adolescence, which was created by Jungian analysts from Europe and North and South America. Supported and financed by the IAAP, this website offers theoretical and clinical articles about Jungian therapeutic issues with children and adolescents, book [...]
Continue reading...Wednesday, October 18, 2006
From the Journal of Analytical Psychology, “In this paper I discuss the nature and role of dream and the dreaming process in Jungian clinical practice in the light of neuroscience. Insights from contemporary neuroscience support rather than contest Jung’s view that emotional truth, not censorship or disguise, underpins the dreaming process. I use clinical material [...]
Continue reading...Monday, September 25, 2006
Listen to Montreal analyst Jan Bauer explore the meaning and psychology of money in this lecture recorded Oct. 21, 2005 at The Jung Center of Houston. Original post by C.G. Jung Page
Continue reading...Sunday, August 27, 2006
In a significant revision of his earlier article The Objective Consciousness, Robert Heyward explores the fundamental foundations of consciousness and the primal duality of subject and object. Original post by C.G. Jung Page
Continue reading...Monday, August 21, 2006
Learn about the most recent efforts to bring Jung’s vast unpublished works to print, as the Philemon Foundation offers this first in an occasional series of updates on its vital work. Original post by C.G. Jung Page
Continue reading...Wednesday, August 9, 2006
Dolores Brien reviews Sophia Heller’s new work The Absence of Myth, in which the author aims to deconstruct theories that consider myth to be essential to our psychic and spiritual well-being. Original post by C.G. Jung Page
Continue reading...Thursday, May 4, 2006
“A collapse of the conscious attitude is no small matter. It always feels like the end of the world, as though everything had tumbled back into original chaos. One feels delivered up, disoriented, like a rudderless ship that is abandoned to the moods of the elements. So at least it seems. In reality, however, one [...]
Continue reading...Tuesday, May 2, 2006
The view on Jung’s concept of animus and anima from Pakistan. (more…)
Continue reading...Thursday, April 27, 2006
In Jung’s autobiography, Memories, Dreams and Reflections, he describes his encounter with the Native American chief, Mountain Lake, of the Taos pueblos in New Mexico in 1932:
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Thursday, October 19, 2006
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