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008 161024s9999 xx 000 0 und d
010 _a96-1870
020 _a0-8264-0905-9
040 _aZL
_cZL
050 0 0 _aBF175 .S662 1996
100 0 _aStein, Murray 1943-
245 0 _aPracticing wholeness; analytical psychology and Jungian thought
300 _a237p.;bibliog. refs.; bibliog.; index
336 _a text
_b txt
_2 rdacontent
337 _a unmediated
_b n
_2 rdamedia
338 _a volume
_b nc
_2 rdacarrier
500 _a'A Chiron publication.'
500 _aJelliffe, Smith Ely : Dr. Jelliffe invites Jung to lecture in Fordham's International Extension Course in Medicine (1912). Jung stays at Jelliffe's home, p47; p49-50.. Marriage : In an interview to the New York Times, Jung stated: ' American wives have thrown themselves into social activity because they are not happy with their husbands' - 1912, p47-48.. Archetype (Psychology) : 'Archetypal theory supplements but does not supplant instinct theory for Jung': - p50, p50-53; see also index.. Milton, John. 1608-1674 : Paradise Lost : The pattern of envy and sibling rivalry in myth and religion, p206-207.. Aggressiveness (Psychology) : Freud's view, p82-84; Jung's view, p83-84, see index.. Gnosticism and Psychology : Jung's interest in, p21-22, see index.. Mother Archetype : 'The great mother', see index.. Persona (Psychology) : Jung's definition of, p184-185, see index.
505 0 _aChapters:. Part One: Psychological wholeness in theory and practice. 1. The dream of wholeness. 2: Practicing wholeness with dreams and imagination. 3: Symbols as transformers of the psyche. 4: From Freud to Jung and beyond, turning points in modern psychological and religious attitudes. 5: Practicing wholeness in organizations. Part Two: Practicing wholeness clinically. 6: Nature and the analytic practice of wholeness. 7: Amor Fati: Analysis and the search for personal destiny. 8: Dreams in the creation of personal narrative. 9: The analyst's part: three types of countertransference. 10: The muddle in analysis (Communication). 11: In the grip of sleep (The analyst fights to withstand drowsiness). 12: On the state of the soul in the narcissistic personality. 13: Envy and sibling rivalry as blocks to wholeness
520 3 _a'Practicing wholeness is a daily activity with implications at cognitive, emotional, physical, and spiritual levels. Stein gives a general concept of wholeness, incorporating Jung's theory of instincts and archetypes.'
563 _aHardcover
650 _aWhole and Parts (Psychology)
_2FAST
650 _aPsychotherapy--Technique
_2FAST
650 _aJungian psychology
_2FAST
650 _aPsychotherapy--Methodology
_2FAST
650 _aJungian psychology
_2FAST
650 _aDream interpretation
_2FAST
650 _aImagination
_2FAST
650 _aSigns and Symbols
_2FAST
650 _aOrganizational Behavior
_2FAST
650 _aNature
_2FAST
650 _aFate and Fatalism
_2FAST
650 _aTransference and Countertransference
_2FAST
650 _aPsychoanalysts
_2FAST
650 _aAnalysands
_2FAST
650 _aPsychotherapist and patient
_2FAST
650 _aNarcissistic Personality
_2FAST
650 _aEnvy
_2FAST
650 _aSibling Rivalry
_2FAST
650 _aJelliffe, Smith Ely 1866-1945
_2FAST
650 _aMarriage
_2FAST
650 _aArchetype (Psychology)
_2FAST
650 _aMilton, John. 1608-1674 : Paradise Lost
_2FAST
650 _aActive Imagination
_2FAST
650 _aAggressiveness
_2FAST
650 _aAnima (Psychoanalysis)
_2FAST
650 _aAnimus (Psychoanalysis)
_2FAST
650 _aAnxiety
_2FAST
650 _aBorderline Personality Disorder
_2FAST
650 _aSymbolism of Breast
_2FAST
650 _aConsciousness
_2FAST
650 _aDepression, Mental
_2FAST
650 _aEgo (Psychology)
_2FAST
650 _aFantasy
_2FAST
650 _aFathers--Psychology
_2FAST
650 _aGnosticism--Psychology
_2FAST
650 _aMother Archetype
_2FAST
650 _aIndividuation (Psychology)
_2FAST
650 _aMeaning (Psychology)
_2FAST
650 _aPersona (Psychology)
_2FAST
650 _aPower (Philosophy)
_2FAST
650 _aProjection (Psychology)
_2FAST
650 _aMothers--Psychology
_2FAST
650 _aPsyche, Objective
_2FAST
650 _aSymbolism of Body
_2FAST
942 _cBOOKS
_kPa
_mSte
999 _c53227
_d53227
264 _aNew York
_bContinuum
_cc1996