Carl Gustav Jung
The collective unconscious, the archetypes, individuation as the lifelong task — psychology re-opening doors that nineteenth-century materialism had closed
Jung trained as a psychiatrist at the Burghölzli in Zurich, became Freud's closest collaborator and presumed successor, and broke with him in 1913 over the libido theory and the broader question of whether the unconscious is reducible to repressed personal material. The split produced Jung's own school — analytical psychology — and the body of work that includes "Psychological Types" (1921), "Modern Man in Search of a Soul" (1933), "Psychology and Alchemy" (1944), "The Undiscovered Self" (1957), and "Memories, Dreams, Reflections" (1962, posthumous). The substantive theses: the unconscious contains a collective layer of inherited archetypes (the shadow, the anima/animus, the wise old man, the Self), the lifelong process of individuation is the integration of these into conscious personality, and the religious symbolism of all cultures is the archetypal language by which the psyche speaks.
Key works
- Psychology of the Unconscious (1912, recast as Symbols of Transformation)
- Psychological Types (1921)
- Modern Man in Search of a Soul (1933)
- The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (1934–1955)
- Psychology and Alchemy (1944)
- Aion (1951)
- Answer to Job (1952)
- The Undiscovered Self (1957)
- Memories, Dreams, Reflections (1962, posthumous)
- The Red Book (Liber Novus, 1914–1930, published 2009)
Declared Influences
Panpsychism 30%
Idealism 25%
Hermeticism 25%
Naturalism 20%
A structural rather than strict philosophical affinity: the doctrine of the collective unconscious as a shared psychic substrate, and the psychoid archetype as the bridge between the psychological and the physical, reach toward a position in which mind is more pervasive in nature than reductive materialism allows.
"The collective unconscious is not derived from personal experience and is not a personal acquisition but is inborn." (The Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious)
Jung's privileging of psyche over matter — "image is psyche" — places him closer to the Idealist tradition than to materialist Freudianism. Plotinus, the German Idealists, and the Gnostic traditions are all live references in the late work.
"Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves." (Memories, Dreams, Reflections)
Jung's sustained engagement with alchemy (Psychology and Alchemy, Mysterium Coniunctionis) and with Gnostic, Hermetic, and Kabbalistic texts is one of his most distinctive contributions and the source of his rich late-period symbolic vocabulary.
"Through pride we are ever deceiving ourselves. But deep down below the surface of the average conscience a still, small voice says to us, 'Something is out of tune.'" (Modern Man in Search of a Soul)
A working naturalism about the empirical study of the psyche — Jung always insisted on his work's status as natural-scientific psychology against the charge that he was doing crypto-theology — even where the substance pushed at the limits of naturalist categories.
"Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate." (Aion, ch. 2)
Internal Tensions
Jung's status as a natural scientist (the role he insisted on) and as a religious or quasi-religious thinker (the role much of his late writing in fact occupies) has been a permanent point of disagreement among his inheritors. The 1933–34 episode of his presidency of the General Medical Society for Psychotherapy under National Socialist coordination, and the related editorial decisions, are still the subject of contested historical analysis. The deeper philosophical question — whether the collective unconscious is a genuine empirical posit or a metaphorical re-description of cultural inheritance — has not been settled.
I. Time
Cyclical at the archetypal level (the eternal recurrence of mythic forms), linear within the individuation of a single life. Non-deterministic — the conscious ego's relation to the unconscious is the field of moral and spiritual choice.
Attributes
II. Space
Non-local in the doctrine of synchronicity — meaningful coincidences that point to a psychic-physical connection beyond local causation.
Attributes
III. Matter
Substantival in standard physics, non-locally connected through the psychoid level where archetype and instinct, mind and matter, meet.
Attributes
IV. Observer
A single embodied person whose deepest Self extends into the collective unconscious — hence Singular at the deepest level. Multiple time-instances through dream, vision, and active imagination. Active in the work of individuation. Cosmic-ordering metaphysical agency — the archetypes are structuring patterns, not personal deities.
Attributes
V. Energy
Psychic energy (libido in Jung's extended sense — not just sexual) is variable and reversible, redistributable across the psyche.
Attributes
VI. Information
Conserved at both scales. The collective unconscious is a durable informational substrate; individuation persists through and beyond bodily death in Jung's late writing, though the metaphysics is deliberately underdetermined.
Attributes
Classified works
Works in the atlas that Carl Gustav Jung authored or that draw on this persona's writings, with full attribute fingerprints of their own.
Computed school proximity
The persona's attribute fingerprint scored against all 202 schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated influences above.
Philosophical neighbors
Other personas whose attribute fingerprint sits closest to Carl Gustav Jung's — intellectual neighbors across traditions and eras.
How Carl Gustav Jung resolves each dilemma
57 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 36 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
3 mainstream positions
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.
32 mainstream positions
Information · 4 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
Pattern, memory, and what is preserved or lost.
Films Referencing This Persona (8)
Either directly referenced in the film, or reading the film through one of this persona's top schools.
Experiments Engaging This Persona's Schools
Surface via influence-schools that respond to the experiment. Each entry shows the school through which the connection runs.