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Book cover of Psychiatric Studies by Carl G. Jung

Psychiatric Studies

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Author:

Carl G. Jung

Number Of Reads:

9

Language:

English

Category:

Social sciences

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Pages:

0

Quality:

excellent

Views:

436

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Book Description

The writings collected in the first volume of the Works of C.G. Jung date back to the years 1900-05. These are the years of the Burghölzli, the hospital for mental illnesses directed by Bleuler, in which Jung carried out an intense psychiatric activity, based on the search for an understanding of the unbalanced personality from within.
These writings demonstrate how inaccurate is the reproach, sometimes leveled at Jung, of lack of fidelity to experimental data. Starting from his degree thesis on the Psychology and pathology of so-called occult phenomena, Jung proves to be "observer and therapist in a very original sense, firmly anchored to an empirical method welcoming any psychic event with total availability and respect and never prisoner of a more descriptive function ".
Among the essays collected here are: Psychology and pathology of the so-called occult phenomena (1902), Simulation of mental illness (1903) and The psychological diagnosis of the fact (1905).

Author portrait of Carl G. Jung

Carl G. Jung

Carl Gustav Jung, is a Swiss psychologist and founder of analytical psychology. Young says his intellectual life began with a dream he had at the age of three. He received a scholarship at the University of Basel to study medicine and his father died at the age of 20. Jung loved university life and devoured philosophical works, especially the works of Kant and Nietzsche, in addition to medical books and references, and he studied spirituality and supernatural phenomena. Young became a member of the Society for Public Speaking and Debating called the Zuqengia Club. Young was able to reveal something that was admired and appreciated by all: the human spirit. His ideas advocated the existence of two directions of the soul. One towards life affairs and the other towards the realm of spirituality. There, some things happened to Young and Young thought he should attend the necromancy. For two years, Young had been attending these sessions, with his cousin Helen Preswork being her psychic, and her late father, Samuel Preswork, being her mentor. And he stopped going to those sessions when Helen started to get caught up in these invocations and Young didn't know Helen was in love with him and everything she did to get his attention. Thus, Young had two personalities. The first character was immersed in life matters, and her feelings could explode in any emotional situation. As for the second character, she believes in superstitions and the world of the paranormal, as Jung felt that he was connected to the other world. He searches for the nature of that strange thing that enters the body at birth and leaves at death, and this led him to realize that his desired goal is psychiatry, which, starting in 1890, he began studying as a science and a profession at the same time. Jung began training in psychiatry in 1900, when he became an assistant at the Bergolslie Mental Hospital, a clinic attached to the University of Zurich and was under the direction of Dr. Eugene Blölru. Young's research continued under the supervision of this doctor until Jung developed in this field.

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