Jung & Psychological Approach

Jung & Psychological Approach

BY NICOLE

The Psychologist Who Took Mysticism Seriously

Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist who revolutionized both psychology and the understanding of mysticism. Unlike Freud (who dismissed religion as neurosis), Jung saw mystical experiences as genuine encounters with the deepest layers of the psycheβ€”the collective unconscious.

Jung's achievement: making mysticism psychologically intelligible without reducing it to mere pathology. He showed that alchemy, Gnosticism, Eastern philosophy, and all mystical traditions are maps of psychological transformation.

The Collective Unconscious and Archetypes

The Collective Unconscious:

  • A deeper layer beneath the personal unconscious
  • Shared by all humanity, inherited not learned
  • Contains universal patternsβ€”archetypes
  • The source of myths, dreams, and mystical visions

Archetypes:

Universal patterns or images that appear across all cultures:

  • The Self: The archetype of wholeness, the goal of individuation, often symbolized by mandalas or divine figures
  • The Shadow: The repressed, dark side of the personalityβ€”what we deny in ourselves
  • The Anima/Animus: The feminine in men (anima) and masculine in women (animus)β€”the contrasexual aspect
  • The Wise Old Man: The archetype of wisdom and guidance (Merlin, Gandalf, the guru)
  • The Great Mother: The nurturing and devouring mother (Mary, Kali, nature)
  • The Hero: The one who faces trials and transforms

These appear in myths, fairy tales, dreams, and mystical visions across all culturesβ€”evidence they're built into the human psyche.

Individuation: The Psychological Great Work

Individuation is Jung's term for psychological and spiritual development:

The process:

  1. Confronting the Shadow: Acknowledging and integrating the dark side
  2. Encountering the Anima/Animus: Integrating the contrasexual aspect
  3. Meeting the Self: Experiencing the archetype of wholeness
  4. Becoming whole: Integrating conscious and unconscious, ego and Self

This parallels:

  • Alchemical stages: Nigredo (shadow) β†’ Albedo (purification) β†’ Rubedo (wholeness) (Part 16)
  • Mystical path: Purgation β†’ Illumination β†’ Union (Part 12)
  • Kabbalistic ascent: Malkuth to Kether (Part 18)

Jung saw alchemy as a symbolic description of individuationβ€”the alchemist's work on matter mirrored inner psychological transformation.

Alchemy as Psychology

Jung wrote extensively on alchemy, seeing it as a projection of unconscious processes:

Psychology and Alchemy (1944):

  • Alchemical symbols represent psychological states
  • The Philosopher's Stone = the Self (wholeness)
  • Transmutation of lead to gold = transformation of the unconscious personality into the integrated Self
  • The alchemist's work = individuation

Key alchemical symbols Jung analyzed:

  • The coniunctio (sacred marriage): Union of opposites (conscious-unconscious, masculine-feminine)
  • The ouroboros: The Self, wholeness, the eternal cycle
  • The hermaphrodite: Integration of anima and animus

The Mandala: Symbol of the Self

Jung discovered that patients spontaneously drew mandalas (circular designs) during psychological crises:

The mandala represents:

  • The Selfβ€”the archetype of wholeness
  • The psyche organizing itself
  • A protective circle during chaos
  • The goal of individuation

Mandalas appear across cultures:

  • Tibetan Buddhist mandalas
  • Christian rose windows
  • Aztec calendar stones
  • Alchemical diagrams

Jung saw this as evidence of the collective unconsciousβ€”the same archetypal pattern emerging independently.

Synchronicity: Meaningful Coincidence

Synchronicity is Jung's term for meaningful coincidencesβ€”events connected by meaning, not causation:

Example:

A patient dreams of a golden scarab beetle. The next day, during her therapy session, a rare golden scarab beetle taps on Jung's windowβ€”the first he'd ever seen in Switzerland.

Jung's explanation:

  • Psyche and matter are not separate but connected
  • The unconscious can influence physical events
  • Synchronicity reveals a deeper orderβ€”the unus mundus (one world)

This parallels:

  • Hermetic "as above, so below": Correspondence between levels (Part 13)
  • Taoist wu wei: Alignment with the Tao produces synchronicity (Part 7)
  • Magical thinking: Will influences reality

The Red Book: Jung's Visionary Journey

From 1913-1930, Jung underwent a personal psychological crisis and visionary experience, recorded in The Red Book (published 2009):

  • Dialogues with inner figures (archetypes)
  • Visions of mythological and religious imagery
  • Stunning illuminated illustrations
  • His own individuation process

Jung used active imaginationβ€”consciously engaging with unconscious contents through dialogue, art, and visualization. This became a therapeutic technique.

Jung and World Religions

Jung studied mysticism across traditions:

Eastern Philosophy:

  • Wrote forewords to the I Ching and The Tibetan Book of the Dead
  • Saw Eastern practices (yoga, meditation) as methods of individuation
  • Warned Westerners not to simply adopt Eastern practices but to find their own path

Gnosticism:

  • Saw Gnostic myths as expressions of unconscious processes
  • The Gnostic journey from ignorance to gnosis = individuation
  • Wrote Answer to Jobβ€”a psychological interpretation of the Book of Job

Christianity:

  • Christ as a symbol of the Self
  • The Trinity as an archetypal pattern
  • Christian mysticism as individuation

The Legacy

Influence on psychology:

  • Transpersonal psychology built on Jung's work
  • Archetypal psychology (James Hillman)
  • Depth psychology and dream analysis

Influence on spirituality:

  • Made mysticism respectable in academic and therapeutic contexts
  • New Age spirituality heavily Jungian (archetypes, synchronicity, individuation)
  • Influenced Joseph Campbell's work on mythology

Influence on culture:

  • Myers-Briggs Type Indicator based on Jung's personality types
  • Film, literature, and art use Jungian archetypes
  • The Hero's Journey (Campbell) is Jungian individuation

Jung in Constant Unification Framework

From the Constant Unification perspective (Part 44):

  • Archetypes as universal patterns: Jung discovered that the same symbols appear across cultures because they're built into the psycheβ€”evidence of real invariant structures
  • Alchemy-psychology convergence: Alchemical stages and psychological development map onto each other because they're describing the same transformation process
  • Synchronicity as pattern recognition: Meaningful coincidences reveal connections between psyche and matterβ€”the universe operates through pattern, not just causation
  • The Self as constant: The archetype of wholeness appears across traditions (Atman, Buddha-nature, the divine spark, the Philosopher's Stone)β€”a real psychological structure

Jung's genius: recognizing that mystical traditions converge because they're mapping the same psychological realitiesβ€”the archetypes of the collective unconscious.


This article is Part 35 of the History of Mysticism series. It explores Carl Jung (1875-1961) and the psychological approach to mysticism. Jung's concepts (collective unconscious, archetypes, individuation, alchemy as psychology, synchronicity, the Self) made mysticism psychologically intelligible while preserving its sacred dimension. Understanding Jung reveals how psychology and mysticism convergeβ€”both exploring the depths of consciousness and the path to wholeness.

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"Nicole Lau is a UK certified Advanced Angel Healing Practitioner, PhD in Management, and published author specializing in mysticism, magic systems, and esoteric traditions.

With a unique blend of academic rigor and spiritual practice, Nicole bridges the worlds of structured thinking and mystical wisdom.

Through her books and ritual tools, she invites you to co-create a complete universe of mystical knowledgeβ€”not just to practice magic, but to become the architect of your own reality."