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Collected Works of C.G. Jung.
Authors: --- --- --- ---
ISBN: 9780691097688 0691097682 0691018553 0691259321 1306408156 1400850908 9780691259321 9780691018553 9781400850907 Year: 2014 Publisher: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press,

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Abstract

At the turn of the last century C. G. Jung began his career as a psychiatrist. During the next decade three men whose names are famous in the annals of medical psychology influenced his professional development: Pierre Janet, under whom he studied at the Salpetriere Hospital in Paris; Eugen Bleuler, his chief at the Burgholzli Hospital in Zurich; and Sigmund Freud, with whom Jung began corresponding in 1906. It is Bleuler, and to a lesser extent Janet, whose influence bears on the studies in descriptive and experimental psychiatry composing Volume 1 of the Collected Works. This first volume of Jung's Collected Works contains papers that appeared between 1902 and 1905. It opens with Jung's dissertation for the medical degree: "On the Psychology and Pathology of So-called Occult Phenomena," a detailed analysis of the case of an hysterical adolescent girl who professed to be a medium. This study foreshadows much of his later work and is indispensable to all serious students of his psychiatric career. The volume also includes papers on cryptomnesia, hysterical parapraxes in reading, manic mood disorder, simulated insanity, and other topics.

Keywords

Psychoanalysis. --- Psychiatry --- Alcoholism. --- Amnesia. --- Analgesic. --- Analytical psychology. --- Anesthesia. --- Attempt. --- Auditory hallucination. --- Automatic writing. --- Autosuggestion. --- Bibliography. --- Calculation. --- Catatonia. --- Consciousness. --- Conversion disorder. --- Convulsion. --- Crime. --- Criticism. --- Cryptomnesia. --- Daydream. --- Delusion. --- Dementia praecox. --- Dementia. --- Depression (mood). --- Desperation (novel). --- Diagnosis. --- Dissociation (psychology). --- Distraction. --- Dizziness. --- Edition (book). --- Embarrassment. --- Epilepsy. --- Explanation. --- Fatigue (medical). --- Feeble-minded. --- Feeling. --- Fraud. --- Ganser syndrome. --- Ganser. --- Gerhard Adler. --- Good and evil. --- Hallucination. --- Headache. --- Hypnosis. --- Hysteria. --- Imprisonment. --- Inferiority complex. --- Intellectual disability. --- Irritability. --- Literature. --- Malingering. --- Mania. --- Medical diagnosis. --- Mental disorder. --- Mood disorder. --- Moral insanity. --- Murder. --- Neurosis. --- Observation. --- Overreaction. --- Paralysis. --- Pathological lying. --- Personality. --- Pessimism. --- Phenomenon. --- Physical examination. --- Plagiarism. --- Psychiatry. --- Psychology of the Unconscious. --- Psychology. --- Psychomotor agitation. --- Psychopathology. --- Psychopathy. --- Puberty. --- Publication. --- Recklessness (psychology). --- Relapse. --- Respondent. --- Result. --- Retrograde amnesia. --- Sensibility. --- Shame. --- Simulation. --- Sleepwalking. --- Solitary confinement. --- Stupor. --- Suggestibility. --- Suggestion. --- Suicide attempt. --- Suicide. --- Symbols of Transformation. --- Symptom. --- The Collected Works of C. G. Jung. --- The Other Hand. --- The Various. --- Theft. --- Theory. --- Thought. --- Thus Spoke Zarathustra. --- Word Association. --- Writing.


Book
How to do things with emotions : the morality of anger and shame across cultures
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ISBN: 9780691220970 0691220972 0691220980 0691220034 0691220999 Year: 2021 Publisher: Hoboken, New Jersey : Princeton University Press,

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"The world today seems full of anger. In the West, particularly in the US and UK, this anger can oftentimes feel aimless, a possible product of social media. Still, anger is normally considered a useful motivational source for positive social change. Channeling that anger into movements for civil rights, alleviation of socio-economic inequality, and the end of endless wars, has long been understood as a valuable tactic. Moreover, anger is believed to be handy in everyday life in order to protect, and stick up for, oneself. On the flip side, the world today celebrates diminishing amounts of shame. Political leaders and pundits shamelessly abandon commitments to integrity, truth and decency, and in general, shame is considered to be a primitive, ugly emotion, which causes eating disorders, PTSD, teenage pregnancy, suicide, and other highly undesirable circumstances. Having shame is, thus, regularly understood as both psychologically bad and morally bad. In How to Do Things with Emotions, philosopher Owen Flanagan argues this thinking is backwards, and that we need to tune down anger and tune up shame. By examining cross-cultural resources, Flanagan demonstrates how certain kinds of anger are destructive, while a 'mature' sense of shame can be used -as it is in many cultures- as a socializing emotion, that does not need to be attached to the self, but can be called upon to protect good values (kindness, truth) rather than bad ones (racism, sexism). Drawing from Stoic, Buddhist, and other cultural traditions, Flanagan explains that payback anger (i.e., revenge) and pain-passing anger (i.e., passing hurt one is feeling to someone else) are incorrigible, and also, how the Western view of shame rooted in traditions of psychoanalysis is entirely unwarranted. Continuing his method of doing ethics by bringing in cross-cultural philosophy, research from psychology, and in this case widening that to include cultural psychology and anthropology, Flanagan shows exactly how our culture shapes our emotions-through norms and traditions-and how proper cultivation of our emotions can yield important progress in our morality"--

Keywords

Anger. --- Conduct of life. --- Emotions. --- Shame. --- Anger --- Shame --- Emotions --- Conduct of life --- Ethics, Practical --- Morals --- Personal conduct --- Ethics --- Philosophical counseling --- Activism. --- Adjective. --- Annoyance. --- Anxiety. --- Aristotelianism. --- Attachment theory. --- Behavior. --- Bullying. --- C. H. Waddington. --- Causality. --- Coevolution. --- Consciousness. --- Controversy. --- Cortisol. --- Critique. --- Cross-cultural. --- Cruelty. --- Cultural diversity. --- Cultural psychology. --- Deed. --- Deference. --- Deliberation. --- Dialect. --- Disadvantage. --- Disgust. --- Display rules. --- Disposition. --- Emotional Intelligence. --- Emotional expression. --- Emotional intelligence. --- Emotional self-regulation. --- Emotional well-being. --- Ethicist. --- Ethnic group. --- Facial expression. --- Feeling. --- Folk psychology. --- Forgiveness. --- Grief. --- Hard problem of consciousness. --- Human behavior. --- Human science. --- Human. --- Humiliation. --- Idealism. --- Incitement. --- Individuation. --- Interaction. --- Interpersonal relationship. --- Intrapersonal communication. --- Introspection. --- James Mark Baldwin. --- Know-how. --- Language family. --- Linguistic relativity. --- Modus operandi. --- Moral psychology. --- Multiculturalism. --- Obstacle. --- Part of speech. --- Paternalism. --- Personality. --- Phenomenon. --- Phenotypic trait. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophy of mind. --- Pity. --- Prediction. --- Psychology. --- Punishment. --- Qualia. --- Racism. --- Reason. --- Recklessness (psychology). --- Religion. --- Remade. --- Resentment. --- Role model. --- Sadness. --- Semantics. --- Sexual dimorphism. --- Sexual orientation. --- Skepticism. --- Social theory. --- Social transformation. --- Sociocultural evolution. --- Subculture. --- The Concept of Anxiety. --- The Other Hand. --- The Philosopher. --- Theory. --- Thought. --- Trait theory. --- Utilitarianism. --- Vagueness. --- Vasopressin. --- Verb. --- Will to power.

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