Abstract

Post-Jungians tend to identify Jung’s dream theory with the concept of compensation; they tend to believe that Jung’s radically open stand constitutes his dream theory in its entirety. However, Jung’s theory regarding dreams was a product of an evolving process throughout his whole intellectual and professional life. Unfortunately, the theory has not been understood in such a developmental light. Based on a historical and textual study of all dream articles found throughout The Collected Works of C.G. Jung, this paper maps a concise three-phase trajectory of Jung’s changing views on dreams and interpretation. The paper posits that Jung’s last essay, “Symbols and the Interpretation of Dreams” (1961), epitomizes his final stand, although such a stand is also reflected in a less explicit and less emphatic way during the latter period of the second phase. The paper also briefly addresses where Jung and Jungians have been enigmatic or negligent. For example, it has not been explicated fully why compensation as slight modifications and compensation as parallels to waking life situations are rare in Jung’s cases In addition, contemporary cognitive and neuroscientific approaches to the study of dreams, as represented by Harry Hunt, William Domhoff, and Allan Hobson, among others, are presented in connection with Jung. The juxtaposition of Jungian, cognitive, and neuroscientific approaches showcases how cognitive and scientific findings challenge, enrich, and in some ways confirm Jung’s dream theory and praxis.

Highlights

  • My study of Jung on dreams extracted all the articles that are in The Collected Works of C.G

  • I performed a comprehensive search of all essays explicitly citing the word “dream” in the title

  • Jung’s work spanning the third or last phase, as represented by “Symbols and the Interpretation of Dreams” [6], illustrates an open, fluid, and pragmatic attitude towards the compensation theory developed during the second phase

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Summary

Introduction

My study of Jung on dreams extracted all the articles that are in The Collected Works of C.G. Morton Prince, “Mechanism and Interpretation of Dreams”: A Critical Review (1911) Among these articles, the following three are presumably the most representative: “Association, Dream and Hysterical Symptom,” “On the Nature of Dreams,” and “Symbols and the Interpretation of Dreams.”. The following three are presumably the most representative: “Association, Dream and Hysterical Symptom,” “On the Nature of Dreams,” and “Symbols and the Interpretation of Dreams.” Each of these works epitomizes one of the three major developmental phases of Jung’s theory and practice of dream interpretation. Jung’s work spanning the third or last phase, as represented by “Symbols and the Interpretation of Dreams” [6], illustrates an open, fluid, and pragmatic attitude towards the compensation theory developed during the second phase. Jung concludes that compensation theory is just a proposed hypothesis, promising it might appear, which can be built upon and further scientifically explored

Solidarity with Freud
Jung’s Original Contribution—Dream as Compensation
Jung’s Final Stand on Dreams
Conclusions
Full Text
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