Carl Jung Personality Theory

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Carl Jung, Personality Theories Carl Jung was a great, yet, controversial psychological theorist of the twentieth century. Originally, he worked side by side with his role model, Sigmund Freud. Subsequently, the two faced many theoretical clashes and parted to conduct their own research. Mainly, Carl Jung remains famous for his research and discoveries on the collective unconscious, that consists of archetypes absorbed through dreams, myths and symbols.
Carl Jung referred to a person's dormant personality of perceptions, thoughts, feelings and memories as the personal unconscious. Similar to Freud, he believed that many of an individual's thoughts and experiences are repressed and forgotten. However, very often those thoughts and emotions seek to expel from the memory bank and may thus present through …show more content…

Often, archetypes penetrate into the human mind without actual awareness as in dreams, myths or symbols; thus via those dreams the archetype becomes conscious. Subsequently, these archetypes assume a latent role in one's personality, and they become visible through repeated, similar experiences and through interactions with others. Ideally, the collective unconscious with its archetypes play a major role in the development of an individual's persona, one's true identity masked by their social identity. Moreover, it controls the shadows of our emotions that compel us to do wrong. Additionally, it balances the anima and the animus, the opposing sex sides of one's gender, so that the opposite psyches of one's gender do not completely dominate an individual. Another archetype, the self, plays an active role in unifying one's different aspects of personalities to express the best of it. In total, the archetypes, more than the ego, are responsible for an individual's social spot in

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