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Tuesday, November 20, 2007

[vinnomot] Humanism and Psychology: Art. 17: Discovering the Unconscious

Reflections on: « Discovering the unconscious »
by Carl G Jung

A high regard for the unconscious part of psyche as one of the sources of our intelligence and mental life is by now an accepted fact. Today we know for certain that the unconscious contains contents which would mean an immeasurable share of our intelligence particularly if these contents could only be moved into the realm of conscious. Modern investigation of animal instinct has brought together a rich fund of empirical findings which show that if man acted with full contribution of our unconsciousness, he would possess a higher intelligence than he/she is at the present state of a very superficial and immature consciousness rather as an emotional being . It can, of course, be proved that animals possess some conscious knowledge even if superficial and ephemeral, but common-sense cannot doubt that their unconscious action-patterns are their major psychic functions. Man's unconscious (genetic repertoire) likewise contains all the patterns of life and behaviour inherited from his ancestors, so that every human child, prior to consciousness, is possessed of a potential system of adapted psychic functioning or reflexes. In the conscious life of the adult, as well, this unconscious, instinctive functioning is always present and active, whether it is present in our unconscious or unconscious level. In this activity all the functions of the conscious psyche are prepared for. The unconscious perceives, has purposes and intuitions, feels and thinks, facilitates and restricts in a subliminal way as does the conscious mind consciously. We find sufficient evidence for this in the field of psycho-pathology and the investigation of dream-processes. Only in one respect is there an essential difference between the conscious and the unconscious/subconscious functioning of the psyche. While consciousness is intensive and concentrated, it is transient and is directed upon the immediate present and the immediately focused small field of attention; as well that it has access only to material that represents one individual's experience stretching over a few decades, much of which would be, anyway, stored in the subconcious. A wider range of information or "memory" is acquired and consists mostly of words spoken or printed, things, procedures ad methods learnt in one way or another. However, the matters stand very differently with the unconscious. It is not concentrated and intensive, but shades off into obscurity; it is highly extensive and can juxtapose the most heterogeneous elements in the most paradoxical way. More than this, it contains, besides an indeterminable number of subliminal perceptions, an immense collection of accumulated inheritance — factors left by one generation of men after another, whose mere existence marked a step in the differentiation of the species. If it were permissible to personify the unconscious, we might call it a « collective human being »  combining the characteristics of both sexes, transcending youth and age, birth and death, and, from having at his command a human experience of one or two million years, almost immortal. If such a being existed, he would be exalted above all temporal change; the present would mean neither more nor less to him than any year in the one hundredth century before our era; he would be a dreamer of age-old dreams and, owing to his immeasurable experience, he would be an incomparable prognosticator. He would have lived countless times over the life of the individual, of the family, tribe and people, and he would possess the living sense of the rhythm of growth, flowering and decay in the historical context and perspective of all times and ages together, a Buddha after Enlightenment!

This being dreams, the collective unconscious, which may appear to us in dreams, had no consciousness of its own contents. The collective unconscious, however, seems not to be a person, but something like an unceasing stream or perhaps an ocean of images and figures which drift into conscious or subconscious, in our dreams or in the conscious-unrestrained states of mind.

It would be positively grotesque for us to call this immense system or collection of experience of the unconscious psyche an illusion or unreality, for our visible and tangible body image itself is just such a system present in our conscious. It still carries within it the discernible traces of primeval evolution, and it is certainly a whole that functions purposely, in its own way, of course — for otherwise we could not be psychologically alive. It would never occur to anyone to look upon comparative anatomy or physiology as nonsense. And so we cannot dismiss the collective unconscious as illusion, or refuse to recognise and study it as a valuable source of knowledge of our psyche.

The psyche appears to us to be essentially a reflection of external happenings — to be not only occasioned by them, but to have its origin in them. And it also seems to us that the unconscious can be understood only from without and from the side of such consciousness. It is well known that Freud has attempted an explanation from this side — an undertaking which could only succeed if the unconscious were actually something which came into being with the existence and consciousness of the individual. But the truth is that the unconscious is always there beforehand as a potential system of psychic functioning handed down by generations to generations. Consciousness is a late-born descendant of the unconscious psyche. It would certainly show perversity if we tried to explain the lives of our ancestors in terms of their late descendants; and it is just as wrong, in my opinion, to regard the unconscious as a derivative of consciousness. We are nearer the truth if we put it the other way round.

Carl Gustav Jung (1875 –1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist, influential thinker, and founder of analytical psychology. The above extract is taken from Jung's book, Modern Man in Search of a Soul
 
 
 


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