Symbols of Transformation
Wandlungen und Symbole der Libido (1912) — extensively revised 1952; the work that broke Jung from Freud
Tradition: Analytical psychology / depth psychology
The libido as not solely sexual but generally psychic energy — the archetypal substrate of myth, religion, and the collective unconscious
Jung's 1912 "Wandlungen und Symbole der Libido" is the book that broke his relationship with Freud. Where Freud held that libido was specifically sexual energy that found culture in symptoms, dreams, and sublimation, Jung argued that libido is general psychic energy that manifests in archetypal patterns shared across cultures — the hero's journey, the mother imago, the descent and rebirth motif. The book is structured around the fantasies of a young American woman ("Miss Frank Miller") whose dreams Jung treats as a portal into the collective-unconscious symbolism Freud could not (or would not) see. The 1952 revision (retitled "Symbols of Transformation") incorporates four decades of subsequent work on alchemy, gnosticism, the Self archetype, and the individuation process. It is the foundational text of Jungian analytical psychology and one of the principal twentieth-century sources for what would later be called perennialist religious studies.
Author
Editions cited
- Collected Works of C. G. Jung, vol. 5 (Princeton, 1956, trans. Hull)
- 1912 original: Psychology of the Unconscious (Hinkle trans., 1916)
School Embodiments
The collective unconscious as a substrate of psyche-bearing pattern shared across humanity has structural affinities with panpsychism's thesis that consciousness is widely distributed.
"The collective unconscious is identical in all human beings and constitutes the common psychic substrate of a transpersonal nature." (Symbols of Transformation, 1952 Foreword)
The 1952 revision incorporates Jung's decades-long study of alchemy and Hermetic texts as the principal Western tradition that took the archetypal-symbolic seriously before modernity displaced it.
"Alchemy is the historical bridge between the antique Gnostic-Hermetic tradition and the modern psychology of the unconscious." (Symbols of Transformation, paraphrased)
Jung's Self archetype — the unifying psychic center beneath the ego — has structural overlap with Vedantic atman-Brahman, an overlap Jung himself drew in his late writings.
"The Self is a unity, but a unity composed of opposites." (Symbols of Transformation)
Jung's mandala work and his commentary on the Tibetan Book of the Dead place his depth psychology in sustained dialogue with Tibetan Buddhist tantric symbolism.
"The mandala is the psychological expression of the totality of the self." (Commentary on The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation)
Jung's break with Freud was in part a break from strictly naturalistic psychology toward a mythopoeic-symbolic register that mainstream scientific psychology has never accepted.
"The libido is not simply sexual but a general psychic energy whose manifestations are the great archetypal patterns of human experience." (Symbols of Transformation)
Gnostic imagery and symbolism.
Internal Tensions
Jung's mythopoeic register placed him outside mainstream scientific psychology and made him the principal twentieth-century reference point for New Age, perennialist, and alternative-spiritual movements he would not have wholly endorsed. The empirical-statistical evidence for archetypes per se is thin; what survives is the clinical insight that symbolic-mythological thinking is constitutive of human meaning-making.
I. Time
Mythic cyclical time of archetypal recurrence; the hero's journey, the descent-and-rebirth.
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II. Space
Non-local through synchronistic phenomena; the imaginal as a real domain.
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III. Matter
Substantival but psyche-bearing; synchronicity links physical events to psychic states.
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IV. Observer
Plural psyches with shared collective-unconscious substrate; multiple time/space instances through archetypal imagination. Cosmic-ordering.
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V. Energy
Libido as general psychic energy, reversibly distributed across symbolic forms.
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VI. Information
Personal soul conserved through individuation; the archetypal substrate is eternally available.
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Personas that cite this work
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Symbols of Transformation resolves each dilemma
57 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 23 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 · 5 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
4 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas, all mainstream
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.