Logo
    Search

    collective unconscious

    Explore "collective unconscious" with insightful episodes like "JUNG'S PARANORMAL ENCOUNTERS: Why did strange events follow him?", "Episode 083 - Ghostly Encounters" and "Conjoined Dreamers" from podcasts like ""This Jungian Life Podcast", "This Jungian Life Podcast" and "Stuff To Blow Your Mind"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    JUNG'S PARANORMAL ENCOUNTERS: Why did strange events follow him?

    JUNG'S PARANORMAL ENCOUNTERS: Why did strange events follow him?

    If we lean into strange experiences with gentle curiosity, we may discover a level of psyche that acts directly on objects.

    Many of us have uncanny coincidences like thinking of a friend at the exact moment they ring us on the phone, but what about physical things breaking apart for no reason or luminous apparitions at our bedside? We often explain them away to reduce our anxiety, but Jung found them fascinating. He maintained a scientific attitude while accepting strange phenomena he could not explain. Eventually, he created a psychology of radical acceptance that creates space for the unexpected, including each person's unique soul.

    Prepare to discover where Jung’s interest in the paranormal came from, what strange psychic events changed his relationship with Freud, how Jung used a séance to complete his university degree, which strange spiritual experiences changed Lisa and Joe’s beliefs, whether the collective unconscious plays a part in extra-sensory abilities and even more…

    HERE ARE THE FULL SHOW NOTES and a COPY OF THE DREAM: https://thisjungianlife.com/paranormal/

    Try new stuff:

    Learn to interpret dreams: https://thisjungianlife.com/join-dream-school/ 

    Support us on Patreon (keep us free of corporate influence): https://www.patreon.com/ThisJungianLife

    Share your dream with us: https://thisjungianlife.com/share-your-dream/

    Suggest a podcast topic: https://thisjungianlife.com/podcast-form-topics/ 

    Get some TJL merch: https://www.zazzle.com/store/thisjungianlife/products

    Talk to Us:

    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Q8IG87DsnQ

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thisjungianlifepodcast

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThisJungianLife

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThisJungianLife/

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thisjungianlife/

    Episode 083 - Ghostly Encounters

    Episode 083 - Ghostly Encounters

    People have reported experiences with ghosts from antiquity; Jung documented his encounters with mysterious sensed presences. How do we make meaning of such experiences? Are they visitations from external beings? Could they be related to unconscious reactions to toxic substances, auditory subtleties, or erratic electromagnetic fields? Neurological evidence links the stimulation of specific brain regions to feeling a ghostly presence. Stress, extreme hunger, physical hardship, loss, isolation, sleep deprivation, and mental illness also correlate to ghostly experiences, perhaps related to a lowered threshold of consciousness. Although there is no scientific proof of ghosts, age-old belief in soul survival extends credibility to the existence of ghosts. Jung offered no definitive answer to this question but felt that since the unconscious possesses subtle powers of perception it could project a visionary picture of a psychic situation. Ultimately, experiences of ghosts are, like dreams, psychic facts. 

     Dream

    "I'm at my aunt's house. I'm sleeping there, and my daughter is having a sleepover with her friend in a different room. When she wakes, she comes over for a good morning hug and a kiss. I think about how nice that is. I'm drawing something on a piece of paper - two treasure chests, and some other things. I'm very intent on showing her the two treasure chests. I draw lines around one to show it's glowing. I think she'll be interested in them." 

     References

    Seven Sermons to the Dead: Jung’s visionary material published in an appendix to his autobiography, Memories, Dreams, Reflections.

    Wolfgang Pauli: theoretical physicist and pioneer of quantum physics with whom Jung met and worked.

    Henri Corbin: a French philosopher, theologian, and professor of Islamic Studies; the mundus imaginalis refers to an imaginal level of reality that animates all life. 

    Conjoined Dreamers

    Conjoined Dreamers

    Is the dream world a solitary creation of the sleeping mind, or can we share these spaces of fear, wonder and desire with other dreamers? In this episode of Stuff to Blow Your Mind, Robert and Christian explore Carl Jung’s collective unconscious as well as the science of linked dreaming via computer interfaces.

    Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.