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Post by Admin on Oct 27, 2016 6:51:53 GMT
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Post by snowstorm on Dec 1, 2016 10:24:24 GMT
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Post by Admin on Mar 24, 2017 18:02:47 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jul 10, 2017 12:16:20 GMT
"But one thing you must know: the one thing I have learned is that one must live this life.
This life is the way. The long sought after way to the unfathomable, which we call the divine."
Liber Novus. Jung
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Post by Admin on Jul 17, 2017 13:38:21 GMT
Outpatient Treatment of Psychosis: Psychodynamic Approaches to Evidence-Based Practice - Newly released by Karnac, London, England (2017): "Outpatient Treatment of Psychosis", David Downing, Psy.D. and Jon Mills, Psy.D., Ph.D. www.karnacbooks.com/This edited volume consists of nine original essays written by a diverse cross-section of respected Freudian and Jungian analysts, addressing the unique nature and challenges of treating psychotic persons in an outpatient private practice setting. "Outpatient Treatment of Psychosis" fills a longstanding void in the psychoanalytic/Jungian literature on the psychoses. "This book offers a practitioner's guide to evidence-based practice in working with psychotic patients in an outpatient setting by clinicians and scholars who are internationally recognized for their work in treating severe psychopathology. Topics cover conceptual, technical, and practical considerations in the parameters of working with adult and adolescent populations that exhibit thought disorder, delusions, hallucinations, borderline organizations, trauma, and schizoid phenomena. Different theoretical models are presented from psychoanalytic traditions that introduce the student and practitioner to eclectic ways of conceptualizing and treating these challenging clinical groups. Concrete approaches to establishing a proper treatment environment, working alliance, symptom management, managing countertransference, and facilitating a therapeutic framework are provided. Various psychodynamic techniques are demonstrated by master clinicians through the extensive use of clinical case material culled from outpatient settings that illustrate how psychoanalytic perspectives enrich our understanding of the psychotic spectrum and lead to therapeutic efficacy." - Quote from Amazon.
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Post by Admin on Jul 17, 2017 13:50:46 GMT
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Post by Admin on Nov 19, 2017 17:14:50 GMT
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Post by Admin on Nov 29, 2017 20:27:41 GMT
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Post by Admin on Nov 29, 2017 20:43:16 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jul 11, 2018 11:51:53 GMT
Carl Gustav Jung, Quantum Physics and the Spiritual Mind: A Mystical Vision of the Twenty-First Century www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4217602/Abstract "We describe similarities in the ontology of quantum physics and of Carl Gustav Jung’s psychology. In spite of the fact that physics and psychology are usually considered as unrelated, in the last century, both of these disciplines have led at the same time to revolutionary changes in the Western understanding of the cosmic order, discovering a non-empirical realm of the universe that doesn’t consist of material things but of forms. These forms are real, even though they are invisible, because they have the potential to appear in the empirical world and act in it. We present arguments that force us to believe, that the empirical world is an emanation out of a cosmic realm of potentiality, whose forms can appear as physical structures in the external world and as archetypal concepts in our mind. Accordingly, the evolution of life now appears no longer as a process of the adaptation of species to their environment, but as the adaptation of minds to increasingly complex forms that exist in the cosmic potentiality. The cosmic connection means that the human mind is a mystical mind. Keywords: Archetypes, Cosmic Consciousness, Mysticism, Non-empirical reality, Potentiality, Quantum physics, Spirituality, Unus Mundus, Virtual states"
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Post by snowstorm on Sept 3, 2018 9:32:54 GMT
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Post by Admin on Oct 7, 2018 13:17:25 GMT
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Post by Admin on Feb 28, 2019 13:20:24 GMT
"We should not pretend to understand the world only by the intellect; we apprehend it just as much by feeling." ~Carl Jung, Psychological Types
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Post by Admin on Nov 25, 2019 10:33:56 GMT
Prozac and the royal road to misery But the fact is that the approach to the numinous is the real therapy and in as much as you attain to the numinous experiences you are released from the curse of pathology. ~Carl Jung, Letters Vol. I, Page 377 "The French Lacanians report encountering an increasing number of analysands, in this this wasteland of meaning, amplified by the disruptive and relationally alienating technologies, such as the ironically named “social media”, gaming, virtual reality et al. and the ideological void post 9/11, suffering with “ordinary psychosis” This apocalyptic time or pseudo-apocalyptic, if you prefer, is also the subject and focus of the Marxist-Lacanian philosopher, Slavoj Žižek’s work. Žižek speaks of the four horsemen of the apocalypse: the worldwide ecological crisis; imbalances within the economic system; the biogenetic revolution; and exploding social divisions and ruptures. This apocalyptic theme is heavily constellated in the cinematic culture of the nineties and two thousands, a time which also featured a number of predictions of an apocalypse. The most perfect cinematic vehicle giving expression to this being, in the opinion of the author, the series The Leftovers. That, I would argue, is the prevailing unconscious zeitgeist. Those of us living today are indeed not only the literal but also the metaphorical leftovers." How, one might ask, has the psychotherapeutic discipline, tasked as the contemporary caretaker of the soul, answered this challenge? appliedjung.com/prozac-the-royal-road-to-misery/
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Post by Admin on Jan 24, 2020 19:53:24 GMT
"Individuation is a natural necessity inasmuch as its prevention by a levelling down to collective standards is injurious to the vital activity of the individual. Since individuality (q.v.) is a prior psychological and physiological datum, it also expresses itself in psychological ways. Any serious check to individuality, therefore, is an artificial stunting. It is obvious that a social group consisting of stunted individuals cannot be a healthy and viable institution; only a society that can preserve its internal cohesion and collective values, while at the same time granting the individual the greatest possible freedom, has any prospect of enduring vitality. As the individual is not just a single, separate being, but by his very existence presupposes a collective relationship, it follows that the process of individuation must lead to more intense and broader collective relationships and not to isolation."
~Carl Jung, CW 6: Psychological Types, Para 758
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