Abstract

At the core of Jung's psychology is the process he calls individuation. It is a process in which the ego consciousness of the individual is progressively pervaded by the truth and power of the self. As Jung describes it, the process of individuation, to the extent that it is realized in any life, carries with it both a sense of personal wholeness, understood as the unification of the many and often conflicting components of one's personal being, and a broadened empathy for all of life beyond one's personal being. Thus understood, the process of individuation grounds the individual in his or her deepest personal truth while relating the individual to ever widening spheres of empathy with all that is.

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