Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Revised notes from lectures given at the C.G. Jung Institute, Küsnacht (June 21-22, 2005)
1
J. Glenn Friesen, “Jung, Ramana Maharshi and Eastern Meditation,” online at
[http://www.members.shaw.ca/cgjung/JungRamana.html].
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
2
Lecture 1
C.G. Jung and the Philosophy of Totality:
Individualism or Individuation?
Introduction
Does Joseph Campbell’s advice to “Follow your bliss” adequately reflect Jung’s idea of
individuation? Or is that an individualistic viewpoint? This lecture will examine Jung's idea of
individuation in relation to his view of the selfhood as a “totality” that embraces both the
conscious and the unconscious. Differing views of totality will result depending on whether this
totality is interpreted as wholly temporal or whether it is regarded as transcending time.
Comparisons will be made to how the idea was used in the Philosophy of Totality
[Ganzheitsphilosophie], as represented by various writers in the 1920’s, a time when Jung was
formulating his key ideas. These writers reacted against reductivist and atomistic viewpoints,
and put forward organic and holistic viewpoints.
I. Totality
2
C.G. Jung, The Psychology of Kundalini Yoga: Notes of the Seminar Given in 1932 by C.G.
Jung, ed. Sonu Shamdasani (Princeton, 1996), 61 [‘Kundalini’]
3
C .G. Jung, The Integration of Personality, tr. Stanley M. Dell (New York: Farrar & Rinehart,
1939), 13. This lecture was later revised and enlarged as “A Study in the Process of
Individuation,” Mandala Symbolism (Princeton, 1959). See Collected Works, Vol. 11.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
4
The Self has an a priori teleological character, striving to realize an aim, even
without the participation of consciousness4
Jung had a dream of totality. Ruth Bailey describes a dream that Jung had just before he died. In
the dream he saw a huge round block of stone sitting on a high plateau. At the foot of the stone
was engraved these words: “and this shall be a sign unto you of Wholeness [Ganzheit] and
Oneness.” Jung told her, “Now I know the truth but there is still a small piece not filled in, and
when I know that, I shall be dead.”5
So what does Jung mean by ‘totality?’ The answer that we give to that question will affect how
we conduct Jungian analysis. Because the goal of individuation is totality. Let’s look at the
philosophy of totality:
4
Jolande Jacobi: The Way of Individuation, tr. R.F.C. Hall (New York: Meridian, 1983,
originally published 1965), 50.
5
Miguel Serrano: C.G. Jung and Hermann Hesse: A Record of Two Friendships (New York,
Schocken, 1966), 104, letter from Ruth Bailey to Serrano June 16/61.
6
J. Glenn Friesen: “Dooyeweerd, Spann and the Philosophy of Totality,” Philosophia Reformata
70 (2005) 2-22, online at [http://www.members.shaw.ca/hermandooyeweerd/
Totality.html].
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
5
7
Othmar Spann: Kategorienlehre, 2nd ed. Ergänzungsbände zur Zammlung Herdflamme (Jena:
Gustav Fischer, 1939; first ed. Aug 1923), 11.
8
C.G. Jung: “The Meaning of Individuation,” The Integration of the Personality, tr. Stanley M.
Dell (New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1939), 13. Online at
[http://www.scribd.com/doc/2547949/JungIndividuation].
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
6
stehen, soll es ein unparteiischer Kampf sein, der beiden Seiten dieselben Rechte
einräumt, denn beides sind lebenswichtige Aspekte.9
(4) Elsewhere, Jung says that totality is not to be viewed as two parts:
Wir müssen uns aber wohl an den Gedanken gewöhnen, dass das Bewusstsein
kein Hier und das Unbewusste keine Dort ist. Die Psyche stellt vielmehr eine
bewusst-unbewusste Ganzheit dar.10
By that quote, he would reject a view that totality is a sum of the conscious and the unconscious.
(5) Jung distinguishes between a relative and an absolute totality. In 1937 he said:
Since we do not know everything, practically every experience, fact, or object
contains something unknown. Hence, if we speak of the totality of an experience,
the word “totality” can refer only to the conscious part of it. As we cannot
assume that our experience covers the totality of the object, it is clear that its
absolute totality must necessarily contain the part that has not been experienced.
The same holds true, as I have mentioned, of every experience and also of the
psyche, whose absolute totality covers a greater area than consciousness. In other
words, the psyche is no exception to the general rule that the universe can be
established only so far as our psychic organism permits. (“Psychology and
Religion,” CW 11, 52)
[Da wir nicht alles wissen, enthält praktisch jede Erfahrung, jede Tatsache oder
jedes Objekt etwas Unbekanntes. Wenn wir also von der Totalität einer Erfahrung
sprechen, kann sich das Wort 'Totalität' nur auf den bewussten Teil der Erfahrung
beziehen. Da wir nicht annehmen können, dass unsere Erfahrung die Totalität des
Objekts umfasse, ist es klar, dass dessen absolute Totalität notwendigerweise den
Teil enthalten muss, der nicht erfahren wurde. Dasselbe gilt von jeder Erfahrung
und auch von der Psyche, deren absolute Totalität auf alle Fälle einen wesentlich
grösseren Umfang hat als das Bewusstsein.
Mit andern Worten, die Psyche macht keine Ausnahmen von der allgemeinen
Regel, dass das Wesen des Universums nur insoweit festgestellt werden kam, als
unser psychischer Organismus es erlaubt.]
(6) And it is clear that this totality is more than just unconscious and conscious. For it includes
the relation with nature.
The symbol of the Self expresses the totality of the psyche in all its aspects,
including the relationship between man and the whole of nature.11
9
The Integration of the Personality, tr. Stanley M. Dell (New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1939),
13. This is a German translation from the English text, found at
[http://www.muellerscience.com/PSYCHOLOGIE/Allgemeine/Wissenschaft/CGJungs_Sicht_de
r_Psychologie.htm].
10
C. G. Jung, “Von den Wurzeln des Bewusstseins,” Studien über den Archetypus (Zurich:
Racher, 1954), 557; originally published 1946.
11
C.G. Jung: Man and his Symbols (New York: Anchor Books, 1964), 240.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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2. Non-reductive
The philosophy of totality opposed atomistic rationalism—the breaking up of reality into parts
that are then assumed to mechanically interact with each other. Atomism is seeing our temporal
reality as individualistic, made of atomistic building blocks, put together like a machine.
Jung opposed a reductive view of the psyche.
(1) Jung opposed Freud’s view of libido as merely sexual attraction. For Jung, libido is psychic
energy in general, and the psyche is a totality.
The psyche does not come to an end where some physiological assumption or
other stops. In other words, in each individual case that we observe scientifically,
we have to consider the manifestations of the psyche in their totality (CW, volume
9, para 113.)
(2) For Jung, the psychic is not merely subjective. Jung says that the psyche has an “objective
reality.” Self is not just a subjective image, but ‘objective psyche’, a being with reality of its
own that directs us. Jung says that the Hindu purusha [or primal Person] is a symbol that
expresses these impersonal forces that are other than ourselves:
If you function in your self you are not yourself--that is what you feel. You have
to do it as if you were a stranger; you will buy as if you did not buy, you will sell
as if you did not sell. Or, as St. Paul expresses it, "But it is not I that lives, it is
Christ that liveth in me," meaning that his life had become an objective life, not
his own life but the life of a greater one, the purusha. (Kundalini, 40)
and
Wholeness is an objective factor that confronts the subject independently of
him.12
(3) Jung was against any one-sidedness of consciousness, which directs itself to certain things
and necessarily ignores others. opposes “one-sided over-development and over-valuation of a
single psychic function.” This is a one-sidedness inherent in rational consciousness. Eventually
the repressed images surface in other ways. Illumination on the contrary has a total character:
The splitting up into single units, its one-sided and fragmentary character, is of
the essence of consciousness. The reaction coming from the disposition always
has a total character, as it reflects a nature which has not been divided up by any
discriminating consciousness. Hence its overpowering effect. It is the
unexpected, all-embracing, completely illuminating answer. (“Foreword to Zen
Buddhism,” CW 11, para. 900).
12
C. G. Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, Bollingen Series XX.
Collected Works, IX, Part II, trans. R. F. C. Hull, 2d ed. (Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University
Press, 1968), 31; CW 9, para. 59.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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3. Causation
The philosophy of totality rejects mechanical causation in relation to humans.
Jung rejected an atomistic view of causation when we are talking about our relation to totality.
For Jung, the psyche is a totality of conscious and unconscious elements that seeks to realize
itself. In Aristotle’s terminology, this goal-oriented causation is that of final causes. Liliane
Frey-Rhone says that this stands in sharp contrast to Freud's early view of the psyche as
primarily the effect of prior causes.
(1) Jung’s opposition to the idea of mechanical causation resulted in his idea of synchronicity–an
acausal orderedness beyond space and time. Indeed, apart from the idea of totality, we cannot
understand what Jung means by ‘synchronicity.’
(2) The relation between soul and body is synchronistic. It is not based on mechanical causation.
If that is so, then we must ask ourselves whether the relation of soul and body can
be considered from this angle, that is to say whether the co-ordination of psychic
and physical processes in a living organism can be understood as a synchronistic
phenomenon rather than as a causal relation. (CW 8, par. 505).
(3) Synchronicity refers to causeless events. We must regard them as creative acts, as the
continuous creation of a pattern that exists from all eternity, repeats itself sporadically, and is not
derivable from any known antecedents.
Continuous creation is to be thought of not only as a series of successive acts of
creation, but also as the eternal present of the one [it] creative act, in the sense that
God "was always the Father and always generated the Son" (Origen, De
principiis, I, 2,3), or that he is the "eternal Creator of minds" (Augustine,
Confessions, XI,31, tr. F.J. Sheed, p. 232). God is [not?] contained in his own
creation, "nor does he stand in need of his own works, as if he place in them
where he might abide; but endures in his own eternity, where he abides and
creates whatever pleases him, both in heaven and earth (Augustine, on Ps. 113:14
in Expositions on the Book of Psalms). What happens successively in time is
simultaneous in the mind of God: “An immutable order binds mutable things into
a pattern, and in this order things which are not simultaneous in time exist
simultaneously outside time” (Prosper of Aquitaine, Sententiae ex Augustino
delibatae, XLI [Migne, P.L., LI, col. 433]). "Temporal time arise from the created
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
9
rather than the created from time" (CCLXXX [Migne, col. 468]). "There was no
time before time, but time was created together with the world" (Anon., De
triplici habitaculo, VI [Migne, P.L., XL col. 995] (CW 8, 518 fn 17).
Synchronicity does not refer to a sequence of events, but rather to their coincidence in the totality
of the moment. Jung contrasts this with the western ideas of causality, which is a differentiated
or one-sided awareness:
Our unconscious has, fundamentally, a tendency toward wholeness, as I believe I
have been able to prove. One would be quite justified in saying the same thing
about the eastern psyche, but with this difference: that in the East it is
consciousness that is characterized by an apperception of totality, while the West
has developed differentiated and therefore necessarily one-sided attention or
awareness. With it goes the western concept of causality, a principle of cognition
irreconcilably opposed to the principle of synchronicity which forms the basis and
the source of eastern “incomprehensibility,” and explains as well the
“strangeness” of the unconscious with which we in the West are confronted. The
understanding of synchronicity is the key which unlocks the door to the eastern
apperception of totality that we find so mysterious … (“Foreword to Abegg:
Ostasien Denkt Anders,” CW 18, para. 1485).
(4) What happens successively in time is simultaneous in the mind of God.
(5) This is also how Jung interprets the I Ching.
And he must climb up into the tree of faith, which grows from above downwards,
for its roots are in the Godhead. (Foreword to “Introduction to Zen Buddhism,”
CW 11, para. 890).
Jung quotes the humanist Andrea Alciati (d. 1550, who) says
It pleased the Physicists to see man as a tree standing upside down, for what in the
one is the root, trunk, and leaves, in the other is the head and the rest of the body
with the arms and feet. (“The Philosophical Tree,” Alchemical Studies, CW 13,
para 412).
And Jung cites the Bhagavad Gita
There is a fig tree
In ancient story,
The giant Ashvattha,
The everlasting,
Rooted in heaven,
Its branches earthward;
Each of its leaves
Is a song of the Vedas,
And he who knows it
Knows all the Vedas.
Zellen aus, die von übergreifenden Gesetzen organisch Zusammenhänge aus zur
Reaktion gebracht werden.
Die eine Richtung beschäftigt sich mit der Bildung der Persönlichkeit. Während
in Europa die Persönlichkeit häufig individualistisch geschieden wird von ihrer
Umgebung und während andererseits von Herbart bis in die neueste Zeit immer
wieder versucht wird, die einzelnen Elemente der Psyche als Atome nach
Belieben umzuschichten und kausal zu beeinflussen, so geht der chinesische
Bildungsgedanke hier andere Wege. Nicht äußere Ziele und Zwecke sind es, die
als Antrieb für die Kraftentfaltung der Persönlichkeit dienen sollen, sondern die
Ziele wachsen organisch aus dem eigenen Innern hervor. Ebenso ist auch nicht
die individualistisch isolierte Persönlichkeit der Gegenst and der Bildungsarbeit,
sondern die Persönlichkeit wird geschaut in ihrem Zusammenhang mit der
Gesellschaft nach oben hin ebenso wie mit den noch ursprünglicheren
organischen Einheiten, aus denen sie sich aufbaut wie der Körper aus Blut und
Zellen. 13
And Wilhelm speaks of “überindividuelle, organische Kräfte.”
(3) Jung speaks in terms of the organic relation of head and body:
Since the unconscious is not just something that lies there, like a psychic caput
mortuum [severed head, skull], but is something that coexists and experiences
inner transformations which are inherently related to general events, introverted
intuition, through its perception of inner processes, gives certain data which may
possess supreme importance for the comprehension of general occurrences: it can
even foresee new possibilities in more or less clear outline, as well as the event
which later actually transpires. Its prophetic prevision is to be explained from its
relation to the archetypes which represent the law-determined course of all
experienceable things. (Psychological Types, CW 6, para. 660).
In the Commentary on the Golden Flower (CW 13), Jung speaks of the head as the unity of
consciousness (para 47). There is an illustration of a sage sunk in contemplation, with figures
splitting off from this central head.14
(4) Organic image of the heart as the center
Jung cites Ruysbroeck as saying that being turned inwards means that “a man is turned within,
into his own heart.” (“Zen Buddhism,” CW 11, para. 890.) And in Kundalini, Jung emphasizes
that individuation starts in the heart cakra (Kundalini, 45).
(5) There is an emphasis on Anthropos, or Adam Kadmon as original wholeness. He is the
original or primordial man, an archetypal image of wholeness in alchemy, religion and Gnostic
philosophy.
13
Richard Wilhelm: Licht aus dem Osten. Excerpts online at http://www.philos-
website.de/index_g.htm?autoren/wilhelm_richard_g.htm~main2
14
See also The Visions of Zozimos, Alchemical Studies p. 72, CW 13, para. 95. Zozimos names
his philosophers “sons of the Golden Head.”
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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There is in the unconscious an already existing wholeness, the "homo totus" of the
Western and the Chên-yên (true man) of Chinese alchemy, the round primordial
being who represents the greater man within, the Anthropos, who is akin to God.
(“The Personification of the Opposites," CW 14, par. 152).
This process is, in effect, the spontaneous realization of the whole man. The more
he is merely 'I', the more he splits himself off from the collective man, of whom
he is also a part, and may even find himself in opposition to him. But since
everything living strives for wholeness, the inevitable one-sidedness of our
conscious life is continually being corrected and compensated by the universal
human being in us, whose goal is the ultimate integration of conscious and
unconscious, or better, the assimilation of the ego to a wider personality.15
15
E.A. Bennet: What Jung Really Said (London: Macdonald, 1966), 292.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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para 77 He quotes St. Paul: “Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.” A pneumatic body that is put on
like a garment. St. Paul: “For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on
Christ.”
…a vast ladder stretching from the circumference towards the centre of a system,
which was at once my own system, the solar system, the universal system, the
three systems being at once diverse and identical.
He says when he focused the convergent rays of consciousness into a unity. “a glory of
unspeakable whiteness and brightness” “the unindividuate individuate, God as the Lord…”
(4) And in letter to The Listener after his famous BBC interview, Jung said:
Since I know of my collision with a superior will in my own psychical system, I
know of God, and if I should venture the illegitimate hypostasis of my image, I
would say, of a God beyond good and evil, just as much dwelling in myself as
everywhere else: Deus est circulus cuius centrum est ubique, cuis circumferentia
vero nusquam. [God is a circle whose center is everywhere, but whose
circumference is nowhere]
Yours, etc.,
Carl Gustav Jung16
The quotation is from a 12th century treatise, Liber XXIV Philosophorum. It is attributed to
Hermes Trismegistus (an Egyptian sage supposedly before the time of Moses). The quotation is
also cited by Giordano Bruno, Nicholas of Cusa, and by Pascal and as we shall see tomorrow, by
Baader.
(5) Mandala Symbolism
For Jung, mandalas are an expression of the self.
Mandalas symbolize the wholeness or totality of the personality:
... Only gradually did I discover what the mandala really is: ‘Formation,
Transformation, Eternal Mind's eternal re-creation’ (Faust, II). And that is the
self, the wholeness of the personality, which if all goes well is harmonious, but
which cannot tolerate self-deceptions.17
Mandalas symbolize the central point to which everything is related:
…a circular image of this kind compensates the disorder and confusion of the
psychic state – namely, through the construction of a central point to which
everything is related, or by a concentric arrangement of the disordered
multiplicity and of contradictory and irreconcilable elements. (Mandala
Symbolism, CW 11, para 714).
16
C.G. Jung: Letters, ed. G. Adler & A. Jaffe, (Princeton, 1953), 173-74.
17
C. G. Jung. Mandala Symbolism, tr. R. F. C. Hull, (Princeton University Press, NJ, 1973, trans.
from "Über Mandalasymbolik," Gestaltungen des Unbewussten (Zurich, 1950), from the
editorial preface, citing Memories, Dreams, Reflections. Included in CW 11.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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and
[mandalas] ... are all based on the squaring of a circle. Their basic motif is the
premonition of a centre of personality, a kind of central point within the psyche,
to which everything is related, by which everything is arranged, and which is
itself a source of energy. The energy of the central point is manifested in the
almost irresistible compulsion and urge to become what one is, just as every
organism is driven to assume the form that is characteristic of its nature, no matter
what the circumstances. This centre is not felt or thought of as the ego but, if one
may so express it, as the self. Although the centre is represented by an innermost
point, it is surrounded by a periphery containing everything that belongs to the
self -- the paired opposites that make up the total personality. This totality
comprises consciousness first of all, then the personal unconscious, and finally an
indefinitely large segment of the collective unconscious whose archetypes are
common to all mankind. (Mandala Symbolism, CW 11, para 634).
and
The goal of contemplating the processes depicted in the mandala is that the yogi
shall become inwardly aware of the deity. Through contemplation, he recognizes
himself as God again, and thus returns from the illusion of individual existence
into the universal totality of the divine state. (Mandala Symbolism, CW 11, para
633).
and
This centre is not felt or thought of as the ego, but, if one may so express it, as the
self. Although the centre is represented by an innermost point, it is surrounded by
a periphery containing everything that belongs to the self—the paired opposites
that make up the total personality. This totality comprises consciousness first of
all, then the personal unconscious, and finally an indefinitely large segment of the
collective unconscious whose archetypes are common to all mankind.
[some of these archetypes] are included in the personality: shadow, anima and
animus. (Mandala Symbolism, CW 11, para 634).
18
C.G. Jung: Psychology and Alchemy, Collected Works, Volume 12, par. 44; Two Essays on
Analytical Psychology , Collected Works 7, par. 274.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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19
C.G. Jung: Two Essays on Analytical Psychology CW 7, par. 274. In Memories, Dreams,
Reflections, Jung says that he had to give up the idea that the ego is superordinate to the self.
(Editorial preface, Mandala Symbolism) In fact, the Self is superordinate to the ego.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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The Self is thus the “supreme psychic authority and subordinates the ego to it.”20 In
individuation, we achieve a new centre of gravity of the total personality. “It is then no longer in
the ego, which is merely the centre of consciousness, but in the hypothetical point between
conscious and unconscious. This new centre might be called the self.” (Commentary on Golden
Flower,” CW 13, para. 67).
20
C.G. Jung: Seminar on Nietzsche's Zarathustra, ed. James L. Jarrett (Princeton, 1998), p. 413-
14.
21
C. G. Jung: Letters, v.2, p.265.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
17
Jolande Jacobi says that the most important task of individuation is to raise these God-images:
It is one of the foremost tasks of the individuation process to raise the God-
images, that is their radiations and effects, to consciousness and thus establish a
constant dynamic contact between the ego and the Self.22
(3) But Jung emphasizes that his statements about the Self refer only to the manifestation of the
God-image and of the God-concept in the human psyche. In other words, they are statements of
the image of god, but not of God Himself. But the God-image allows a correspondence or
relationship with God:
At all events, the soul must contain in itself the faculty of relationship to God, i.e.,
a correspondence, otherwise a connection could never come about. This
correspondence is, in psychological terms, the archetype of the God-image.
(Psychology and Alchemy, CW 12, para 11).
22
Jolande Jacobi: The Way of Individuation, tr. R.F.C. Hall (New York: Meridian, 1983,
originally published 1965), 53.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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F. Totality is Supratemporal
Many philosophers of Totality say that the center is outside of time, supratemporal. And that
was certainly Jung’s view.
(1) Feeling of Timelessness
…the forms or patterns of the unconscious belong to no time in particular;
seemingly eternal; convey a peculiar feeling of timelessness when consciously
realized. (“Tibetan Book of Liberation,” CW 11, par. 782).
Jung refers to timelessness as a quality inherent in the experience of the collective unconscious.
(CW 11, para. 814-15). The application of the “yoga of self-liberation” is said to reintegrate all
forgotten knowledge of the past with consciousness, to integrate archaic material in the
unconscious.
Every mother contains her daughter in herself and every daughter her mother and
that every woman extends backwards into her mother and forwards into her
daughter. This participation and intermingling give rise to that peculiar
uncertainty as regards time: a woman lives earlier as a mother, later as a daughter.
The conscious experience of these ties produces the feeling that her life is spread
out over generations--the first step towards the immediate experience and
conviction of being outside time, which brings with it a feeling of immortality.
(CW 9, I, par. 316).
Our Self has the quality of eternity or relative timelessness: [symbolism of the mandala] eternity
is a quality predicated by the unconscious, and not a hypostasis.
…leaves us under some doubt whether the psychic phenomenon expressing itself
in the mandala is under the laws of space and time. And this points to something
so entirely different from the empirical ego that the gap between them is difficult
to bridge; i.e., the other centre of personality lies on a different plane from the
ego, since, unlike this, it has the quality of “eternity” or relative timelessness.
(CW 12, par. 135).
The image of the Self reaches beyond time and space:
The self as an archetype represents a numinous wholeness, which can be
expressed only by symbols (e.g., mandala, tree, etc.). As a collective image it
reaches beyond the individual in time and space and is therefore not subjected to
the corruptibility of the body; the realization of the self is nearly always
connected with the feeling of timelessness, "eternity," or immortality. (Cf. the
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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G. Supraindividual Selfhood
As God-Image, the Self is supratemporal and suprapersonal. Our ego is temporal and personal.
We may diagram this as follows:
[diagram online]
It is confusing that Jung refers to our selfhood as ‘psyche.’ We normally think of psyche as
individual. But Jung refers to a reality that is supra-individual, a return to a unity that is more
than individual:
(1) “The Self is the Pleroma [Fullness] from which we came and to which we return (Kundalini,
28). And Jung says, “it is not I who create myself, rather I happen to myself.” (“Transformation
Symbolism in the Mass,” CW 11, para. 391).
(2) The individuation process subordinates the many to the One:
… the individuation process, clearly alluded to in this passage, subordinates the
many to the One. But That One is God, And That Which Corresponds To Him In
Us Is The Imago Dei, The God-Image. But The God Image, As We Saw From
Jakob Boehme, Expresses Itself In The Mandala. (Mandala Symbolism, CW 11,
para 626).
Jung refers to a dream where all the animals are eaten by the one animal. He says that this dream
describes and unconscious individuation process (Mandala Symbolism, CW 11, para 624). This
view of the supra individual seems to be that of being swallowed into one. But he says that then
23
See J.W. Dunne: An experiment with Time (London: Faber, 1927). It is interesting that
Dunne’s book was inspiration for J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. See Verlyn Flieger: A
Question of Time: J.R.R. Tolkien’s Road to Faërie, (Kent State University Press, 1997).
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
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comes the enantiodromia: the dragon changes into pneuma, which stands for divine quaternity.
Thereupon follows the apocatastasis, the resurrection of the dead.
Self-reflection gathers together the many into the one.
Self-reflection or–what comes to the same thing–the urge to individuation gathers
together what is scattered and multifarious, and exalts it to the original form of the
One, the Primordial Man. In this way our existence as separate beings, our
former ego nature, is abolished, the circle of consciousness is widened, and
because the paradoxes have been made conscious the sources of conflict are dried
up. This approximation to the self is a kind of repristination or apocatastasis, in
so far as the self has an incorruptible or eternal character on account of its being
pre-existent to consciousness. [ft.: and also on account of the fact that the
unconscious is only conditionally bound by space and time. The comparative
frequency of telepathic phenomena proves that space and time have only a
relative validity for the psyche. Evidence for this is furnished by Rhine’s
experiments. Cf. my Synchronicity. (“Transformation Symbolism in the Mass,”
CW 11, para. 401).
(3) Jung says that the unconscious part of the self “cannot be distinguished from that of another
individual.” (CW 11, para. 277).
Note that there is an ambiguity in Jung’s use of the term ‘individual’. Here he is referring to a
temporal individual, ego. But elsewhere refers to the absolute totality as the Individuum. That
idea of individuality seems foreign to us. That is because we are so caught up in nominalistic
philosophy, without realizing it. Nominalism allows for no realities other than individual
temporal realities. The idea of Totality is foreign to nominalism. It seems to me that Western
culture is so completely nominalistic in its outlook that it can no longer understand what Jung is
saying.
(4) Jung says that suprapersonal events take place within our own psyche. We begin the
development of the suprapersonal within the individual in order to kindle the light of the gods.
The suprapersonal is the non-ego (Kundalini, 63). He speaks of the suprapersonal, the non-ego,
the totality of the psyche through which alone we can attain the higher cakras in a cosmic or
metaphysical sense (Kundalini, 68).
As I discussed in last year’s lecture, “Jung, Ramana Maharshi and Eastern Meditation,” there is
both a descent to the personal (and pre-personal or impersonal) and an ascent to the
suprapersonal. The whole concept of Kundalini yoga has little use except to describe our own
experiences with the unconscious, the experiences that have to do with the initiation of the
suprapersonal processes (Kundalini, 70).
From suksma [impersonal] aspect, we ascend when we go into the unconscious, because it frees
us from everyday consciousness. In the state of ordinary consciousness we are actually down
below, entangled, rooted in the earth under a spell of illusions, dependent in short, only a little
more free than the higher animals. Our I is caught in this world, a spark of light, imprisoned in
the world (Kundalini, 67).
II. Individuation
Jung relates the process of individuation to Totality. He calls the individuation process “my term
for becoming whole” (Foreword to Zen Buddhism, CW 11, para. 906).
A. Stages of Individuation
So how are we to understand individuation in view of Jung’s idea of totality? To begin with the
idea of individual things and persons within time results in a very different interpretation of
individuation than if we follow Jung and begin with the idea of Totality.
Individuation means becoming a single, homogeneous being, and, in so far as 'in-
dividuality' embraces our innermost, last, and incomparable uniqueness, it also
implies becoming one's own self. We could therefore translate individuation as
‘come to selfhood’ or ‘self-realisation.’ (CW 7, para. 266).
In particular, what does individuation mean if the self is supratemporal and supraindividual?
Jacobi outlines a fourfold process o individuation.24 Others might see three or even five stages
of individuation,25 but let us use her idea of a fourfold process:
1. Becoming conscious of the shadow. The shadow is our dark side, containing those things that
we have repressed or ignored for one reason or another. It usually manifests to us in dreams as an
archetypal figure who is dark and ominous. Just as the persona is that part of us that we want to
present to the world, so the shadow contains those things that we want to hide from the world,
and from ourselves. This dark side of ourselves must be confronted and accepted, at least in part,
as the first step in the individuation process. Johnson (1991) emphasizes the need to
acknowledge and accept our shadow in order to become a whole and complete person.
2. Becoming conscious of the anima or animus. Basically, the anima is the feminine soul or
inner femininity of every man, and the animus is the inner masculinity of every women. The
individuation process is, above everything else, a process of wholeness. This includes sexual
completeness. Jung (1978) wrote that the anima and animus represent “functions which filter the
contents of the collective unconscious through to the conscious mind” (p.20). Thus when the ego
seeks to find the inner Self, it must look through the anima or animus, which colors its
perception in many different ways. Edinger (1995) distinguishes four separate progressive states
of maturation in the ego’s relation to the anima: (1) the infantile state, in which the ego is totally
24
Jolande Jacobi: The Way of Individuation, tr. R.F.C. Hall (New York: Meridian, 1983,
originally published 1965).
25
The “usual” view among Jungians is that individuation has three stages (Whitmont, The
Symbolic Quest: Basic Concepts of Analytical, 266; Edinger, Ego and Archetype: Individuation
and the Religious Function of the Psyche , 186; Alschuler, 283). In a 1942 lecture on alchemy,
however, Jung described five stages of it (Jung, Collected Works 13, pp. 199-201.; von Franz, 9-
19). The above has a sequence of four archetypes: Trickster (represented by the “nixie”),
Shadow, Life, and Meaning. In the same essay, he mentions innumerable “archetypes of
transformation.” This is the archetype of meaning, just as the anima is the archetype of life itself.
C. G. Jung., Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious in Collected Works 9, par. 44-66
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
22
unaware of the anima or animus, (2) the projected state, in which the anima or animus is
projected outward into people of the opposite sex, (3) the possessed state, in which the ego is
possessed or governed by the anima or animus, and (4) the conscious state, in which the ego
becomes conscious of the anima or animus.
3. Becoming conscious of the archetypal spirit. This archetype, as I noted above, is often
represented in fairy tales as the wise old man, especially for men. For women, it often takes the
form of Magna Mater, the great earth mother. The individuation process is primarily one of
uniting opposites. In the first step, we unite good and evil and try to see ourselves as capable of
both. Eastern religions often symbolize this with the lotus, which has its roots below in the dirty
mud and its flower in the clean air above. In the second, we see ourselves as containing both
masculine and feminine characteristics. Now we must unite matter and spirit, form and
formlessness, body and psyche. Jung (1990) called the archetypes of spirit and matter “mana-
personalities” where mana means extraordinary power. In part, this step includes liberation of a
man from his father, and of a women from her mother leading, in both cases, to true
individuality.
4. Becoming conscious of the Self. Jung called this final step self-realization -- “We could
therefore translate individuation as “coming to selfhood” or “self-realization”“ (Jung, 1977, p.
173).
There must be the right relation between our temporal ego and our Self. If we identify with the
Self, there is the danger of inflation. If we deny the self (which is supratemporal), then we fall
into the danger of idolatry (of the temporal). As Jacobi says,
Again and again man has experienced that from this centre he could sense God’s
workings in his psyche at their most overwhelming, that “the voice of
transcendence resounds through it.” And as often as he put another content in his
centre in place of God–whether it were a beloved partner, money, nation, party, or
any other “ism”–and made it a surrogate for God, he became its victim to his own
destruction. (Jacobi, 54).
The right relation between ego and Self is like a mystical union with God:
They came to themselves they could accept themselves, they were able to become
reconciled to themselves, and thus were reconciled to adverse circumstances and
events. This is almost like what used to be expressed by saying: He has made his
peace with God, he has sacrificed his own will, he has submitted himself to the
will of God.” Jacobi: “The right relation between ego and Self conveys
something of this attitude of humility. For through the Self there speaks an
authority which, as God’s representative, has the character of fate. That is why
the union of the ego with the Self is indistinguishable from a unio mystica with
God, and is a shattering and profoundly religious experience (Psychology and
Religion, 81, cited by Jacobi, 56).
Jacob says that the individuation process is a journey. The earlier phases are a consolidation of
our ego through realization of one’s shadow. But the final phases represent a journey through
the underworld of suffering, and through a mystic, symbolic death into a kind of rebirth:
… begin with self-observation and self-reflection which help practitioner become
fully conscious of his sins, and then go on to demand a personal, conscious way
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
23
of living and a decision affecting his attitude to the world, which has to be
directed towards Christ as the central point and exemplar. As the final foundation
and confirmation of this decision, the stations of the way leading form the passion
of Christ to his resurrection have to be followed concretely, so to speak, in an
inner vision and actively experienced (Jacobi, 73).
Jung says that the final stage of individuation is death:
nobody has ever been able to tell the story of the whole way [of individuation], at
least not to mortal ears, For it is not the storyteller but death who speaks the final
“consummatum est.” (Mandala Symbolism, CW 11, para 617).
B. The Unconscious
Now you all know that Jung distinguishes between the personal unconscious and the collective
unconscious. The personal is that part of us, the shadow, that we have repressed, and which we
need to reintegrate. That kind of reintegration can be seen as additive. We are incorporating,
adding, feelings, ideas, thoughts that we have forgotten and repressed. It is sometimes said that
Jung’s view is that in focusing our attention, we repress other sides that go into the unconscious.
But In The Meaning of Individuation, Jung rejects that view of the unconscious:
If it were true that the unconscious consists of nothing but contents incidentally
deprived of consciousness, then it would be preposterous-or at least unnecessarily
meticulous -to worry about the question of whether the ego represents the whole
of the Psychical individual, or not. A normal ego could, and would, adequately
embody the "whole," since its losses through unconsciousness would be trifles,
and of significance only in cases of neuroses.26
What about the collective unconscious? Sometimes Jung speaks of collective unconscious in
terms of archaic images:
The collective unconscious is simply the psychic expression of the identity of
brain structure irrespective of all racial differences.” “…mankind has common
instincts of ideation and action. (“Commentary on Golden Flower,” CW 13, para.
11).
Yet in his lectures on Kundalini yoga, he also speaks of the unconscious as impersonal,
as something to be attained. His lectures on Kundalini show that any work at integrating
merely the personal unconscious is “basement work.” It is essential to Jungian analysis,
but we must remember that this is all just preparatory. And elsewhere he says,
…the unconscious is an irrepresentable totality of all subliminal psychic factors, a
“total vision” in potentia. It constitutes the total disposition from which
consciousness singles out tiny fragments from time to time.” (Foreword to Zen,
CW 11, para. 897).
26
C.G. Jung: “The Meaning of Individuation,” The Integration of the Personality, tr. Stanley M.
Dell (New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1939), 13. See also C.G. Jung: Collected Works 11, par.
390.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
24
In my view, we must distinguish between the personal unconscious, which is what our ego has
repressed, and the collective unconscious. But the collective unconscious has a pre-personal level
(the instinctual), a multi-personal level (collective archaic myths) and a transpersonal level. The
personal and multi-personal unconscious is not the transpersonal unconscious.
The stages of individuation of shadow and persona relate only to the temporal, individual ego.
So do the issues of integrating instinct, and the collective archaic images. As Jung says, all of
this is merely “basement work” preparatory to the real work of spiritual transformation.27
C. The Archetypes
The way in which we view Totality also affects how we view the archetypes. I discussed this
issue in much more detail in my lecture “Jung, Ramana Maharshi and Eastern Meditation.”
There are various ways that the archetypes can be understood, and Jung is ambiguous as to what
he means. An excellent article on this subject is by Ray Harris.28 Harris points out that
sometimes Jung speaks of archetypes as archaic vestiges and dispositions, primordial images,
and instincts:
... there must be a transconscious disposition in every individual which is able to
produce the same or very similar symbols at all times and in all places. Since this
disposition is usually not a conscious possession of the individual I have called it
the collective unconscious, and, as the bases of its symbolical products, I
postulate the existence of primordial images, the archetypes. [... ] the identity of
conscious individual contents with their ethnic parallels is expressed not merely in
their form but in their meaning. (Mandala Symbolism, CW 11, para 711).
In “On the Nature of the Psyche” Jung says these primordial images act like instincts:
To the extent that the archetypes intervene in the shaping of conscious contents by
regulating, modifying and motivating them, they act like the instincts. It is
therefore very natural to suppose that these factors are connected to the instincts
and to inquire whether the typical situational patterns which these collective form-
principles apparently represent are not in the end identical with the instinctual
patterns, namely, with the patterns of behaviour. I must admit that up to the
present I have not laid hold of any argument that would finally refute this
possibility. (On the Nature of the Psyche, CW 8, para. 404).
But, as Harris points out, Jung says something different in the very next paragraph:
That is, the archetypes have, when they appear, a distinctly numinous character
which can only be described as 'spiritual', if 'magical' is too strong a word.
27
C.G. Jung, The Psychology of Kundalini Yoga: Notes of the Seminar Given in 1932 by C.G.
Jung, ed. Sonu Shamdasani (Princeton, 1996), p. 68. We may descend to the sixth cellar, but we
remain in the depths of the earth; we have not been awakened until we take the path of ascent.
28
Ray Harris: “Revisioning Individuation: Bringing Jung into the integral fold,” online at
[http://www.integralworld.net/harris2.html].
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
25
The entire manifest world arises out of the Formless (or causal Abyss), and the
first forms to do so are the forms upon which all others will rest --they are the
"arche-forms" or archetypes. Thus, in this use, the archetypes are the highest
29
Ken Wilber: Sex, Ecology, Spirituality, (Boston: Shambhala, 1995), p. 257.
30
Ken Wilber, A Brief History of Everything, (Boston: Shambhala, 1996), p. 196.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
26
Forms of our own possibilities, the deepest Forms of our own potentials -- but
also the last barriers to the Formless and the Nondual. 31
Jung himself confirms that there are two directions:
I will only say, for clarity's sake, that there are two methods of treatment: 1. the
reductive, and 2. the synthetic. The former traces everything back to primitive
instincts, the latter develops the material into a process for differentiating the
personality. The two methods are complementary, for reduction to instinct leads
back to reality, indeed to an over-valuation of reality and hence to the necessity of
sacrifice. The synthetic method elaborates the symbolic fantasies resulting from
the introversion of libido through sacrifice. This produces a new attitude to the
world whose very difference offers a new potential. I have termed this transition
to a new attitude the transcendent function. In the regenerated attitude the libido
that was formerly sunk in the unconscious emerges in the form of some positive
achievement it is equivalent to the renewal of life, which Eckhart symbolizes by
God's birth. Conversely, when the libido is withdrawn from external objects and
sinks into the unconscious, the soul is born again in God. This state, as he rightly
observes, is not a blissful one, because it is a negative act, a turning away from
life and a descent to the deus absonditus, who possesses qualities very different
from those of the God who shines by day (Psychological Types, CW 6, para. 427).
Ray Harris refers to other problems with Jung’s idea of archetypes:
One of the major gaps in Jung's work was his failure to make a definitive list of
the archetypes, or to place them in a developmental sequence. This has led to a
number of confusions. Wilber has correctly pointed out that Jung's concept of the
archetype suffers from the Pre/Trans fallacy. I deal with this particular point in a
paper called “Revisioning Individuation.” However, there are other confusions.
How many archetypes are there? For example, Jung speaks of the Anima
archetype, then separately delineates the Mother and Kore archetypes whilst
suggesting that they are forms of the Anima. So, are they archetypes in their own
right, or sub-archetypes?
Are Senex, Puer Aeterna, the Hero and the Great Father archetypes in their own
right, or sub-archetypes of Animus? Is the Trickster an archetype in its own right
or an aspect of the Shadow? In Symbols of Transformation Jung uses the Miller
fantasies as the basis to discuss a process of transformation through various
archetypal symbols. This suggests a pattern of unfolding, a pattern of
development, one that typically involves working with several archetypes after
the fashion of a heroic journey.32
31
Ken Wilber, The Eye of Spirit, (Boston, Shambhala, 2000), p 240.
32
Ray Harris: “The Blood Brotherhoods: A developmental look at terrorism from the perspective
of mythos” online at [http://www.integralworld.net/harris7.html].
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
27
D. False Individuation
There has not been enough discussion in Jungian psychology of false ways in which we attempt
to individuate. Note: Jolande Jacobi’s book The Psychology of C. G. Jung contains two plates
(17 and 18) showing false and true conjunctio.
Here are some important distinctions to be kept in mind in determining what is true and what is
false individuation:
(1) Individuation is not a descent to the instinctual. To descend to the instinctual merely
strengthens the ego, and deals only with matters on the periphery. In his lectures on Kundalini
yoga, Jung says that after the descent, and the strengthening of the ego, we start the ascent.
(2) Individuation is not individualism. This is the prevalent view of individuation—that we are
all separate individuals, and that Jungian analysis will allow us to separate out from the rest of
humanity, the other individuals. This is a view of individuation that either denies the center or
gives priority to the periphery, denying the idea of totality.33
Jung says:
Individuation is not that you become an ego -- you would then become an
individualist. You know, an individualist is a man who did not succeed in
individuating. He is a philosophically distilled egotist (Kundalini, 39).
The Self is our life's goal, for it is the completest expression of that fateful
combination we call individuality (“Two Essays on Analytical Psychology,” CW
7, par. 404).
(3) Individuation is not eccentricity, although that is James Hillman’s view:
The goal of my therapy is eccentricity, which grows out of the Jungian notion of
individuation. Jung says, “You become what you are.” And nobody is square. We
all have, as the Swiss say, “a corner knocked off.” 34
(4) Individuation does not mean separation from others
In Psychological Types, the definition of individuation seems at first to say that individuation as
individualistic. Jung says that everything that is not collective is individual and individuation is
33
As an example, see the essay by Michael W. Clark, “Ego, Archetype and Self: C.G. Jung and
Modernity,” online at [http://ca.geocities.com/earthpages5@rogers.com/jung_eas.htm].
It seems the problem lies in his notion of self as a "psychic totality." For Jung
really offers a two-tiered model of the psyche. The conscious part is individual,
the unconscious collective aspect is impersonal. Jung would have done better to
dismiss the "totality" component of his definition of self. As he did not, however,
"self" is ambiguous and indistinct from a strictly theoretical standpoint. Why call
it self if indeed it is everyone?
34
James Hillman: We’ve had a Hundred Years of Psychotherapy- And the World is Getting
Worse (New York: Harper Collins, 1992), 35.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
28
the development of the psychological individual as a being distinct from the general, collective
psychology. It is a process of differentiation. (Psychological Types, CW 6, par 757).
And yet the same definition says,
As the individual is not just a single, separate being, but by his very existence
presupposes a collective relationship, if follows that the process of individuation
must lead to more intense and broader collective relationships and not to isolation.
In his lectures on Kundalini, Jung comments on a man who sees another couple, and he identifies
with the other man.
Yet he has an inkling that he is in a peculiar way identical with him, that man is
himself continuing life; he is not cast aside. For his substance is not only his
personal self but the substance of that young man, too. (Kundalini, 48).
And on the next page he says,
…this extended consciousness knows not only “That is Thou” but more than
that—every tree, every stone, every breath of air, every rat’s tail—all that is
yourself; there is nothing that is not yourself.
The ascent towards the center and towards Totality therefore brings us into greater connection
with others.
(5) Individuation does not mean the development of some private morality. We must first attain
to a minimum of the collective norms:
Under no circumstances can individuation be the sole aim of psychological
education. Before it can be taken as a goal, the educational aim of adaptation to
the necessary minimum of collective norms must first be attained (Psychological
Types, CW 6, para. 760.).
But the attainment of such collective norms is not an unthinking adherence to morality:
The ability to “will otherwise” must, unfortunately, be real if ethics are to make
any sense at all. Anyone who submits to the law from the start, or to what is
generally expected, acts like the man in the parable who buried his talent in the
earth. Individuation is an exceedingly difficult task: it always involves a conflict
of duties, whose solution requires us to understand that our “counter will” is also
an aspect of God’s will. (“A Psychological Approach to the Dogma of the
Trinity,” CW 11, para. 292).
And Jung says we should not attempt to live beyond the opposites.35
(6) Individuation is not to be understood in terms of Hillman’s polytheistic archetypal
psychology.
James Hillman misunderstands Jung, or tries to reinterpret him in a way contrary to Jung’s
intent. Jung emphasizes the self. Hillman does not use the idea of the self, but rather at temporal
35
Letter from C.G. Jung to V. Subrahmanya Iyer, dated August 29, 1938 (in English), C.G. Jung:
Letters, ed. Gerhard Adler (Princeton, 1973), Vol. 1, p. 247.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
29
expressions of the ego. This is looking at the temporal periphery, the conflicting complexes.
Hillman’s archetypal psychology assumes that these complexes are ultimate in their diversity.
He denies their unity.
Jung’s emphasis is unity in a diversity, a unity that expresses itself in diversity. Hillman’s views
do not emphasize Totality, but rather temporal multiplicity. This gives rise to Hillman’s
polytheistic use of archetypes. But Jung warns against this. He says that we
are not to project the one light of highest consciousness into concretized figures
and dissolve it into a plurality of autonomous fragmentary systems. (Commentary
on Golden Flower, CW 13, para. 50).
In para 55 of that same text, he explains how these fragmentary systems come into being.
[Actual psychic personalities] are “real” when they are not recognized as real and
consequently projected. they are relatively real when brought into relationship
with consciousness in a cult. Unreal when consciousness detaches itself from its
contents. That happens only when life has been lived so exhaustively and with
such devotion that no obligations remain unfulfilled and no desires that cannot
safely be sacrificed stand in the way of inner detachment from the world.
Maureen B. Roberts criticizes Hillman’s views:
Hillman is accordingly, I suggest, setting up a straw Jung when he attempts to pit
his ideology of multiple soul against Jung's focus on wholeness, particularly as it
is symbolized in the mandala. The mandala, after all, is not an image of undivided
unity but rather one of totality, in which opposing forces at the circumference are
reconciled in the still centre. As such, neither circumferential multiplicity nor core
unity are privileged; instead they both thrive through creative tension in a
compensatory relationship. Such wholism as 'unity-in-diversity' is not - as
Hillman at times seems to suggest it is - Jung's pet philosophy, since as Jung
(based on his immense experience) takes great pains to stress, mandalas arise in
nature and are dreamed, drawn, danced, or enacted spontaneously, particularly by
individuals in crisis or conflict situations. (A notable example is mandalas drawn
by chronic sufferers of schizophrenia, in which a fragmented central area is
counterbalanced by an ordered circumference).
A more feasible opposition, I suggest, is that between integration (i.e.
'individuation') as the conscious cooperation, mediated by the central Self,
between multiple or opposing soul-parts, and the kind of pathological dissociation
which occurs, for example, in Multiple Personality Disorder [MPD], debilitating
schizophrenia, and destructive psychoses, all conditions in which splinter
personalities are unaware of or hostile.36
36
Maureen B. Roberts: “Re-Connection vs. Re-Colleciton: Individuation & Soul Retrieval as
Remembered Wholeness,” online at [http://www.jungcircle.com/ind.html].
(7) Individuation is not just becoming more conscious. For consciousness is related to the ego,
to the periphery.
In his Ascona lectures, “The Meaning of Individuation” Jung says that we cannot ever integrate
unconscious into consciousness:
Coming now to the problem of individuation, we see that we are confronted with
a rather extraordinary task: the psyche consists of two incongruous halves that
should properly make "whole" together. One is inclined to think that the ego-
consciousness is capable of assimilating and integrating the unconscious; one
hopes, at least, that such a solution is possible. But, unfortunately, the
unconscious is really unconscious; it is unknown. And how can you assimilate
something unknown? Even if one has a pretty complete idea of his anima and of
other such figures, he has not yet sounded the depths of the unconscious. One
hopes to dominate the unconscious, but the past masters of this art of domination
the yogis-wind up with samadhi, an ecstatic condition that seems to be equivalent
to an unconscious state. The fact that they call our unconscious the universal
consciousness, does not change things in the least: in their case the unconscious
has devoured the ego-consciousness. They do not realize that a "universal"
consciousness is a contradiction in terms, since exclusiveness, selection, and
discrimination are the root and essence of all that can claim the name of
consciousness.
The conscious mind does not embrace the totality of a man, for this totality
consists only partly of his conscious contents. (CW 11, par. 390).
and
A "universal" consciousness is logically identical with unconsciousness. It is true
that an accurate application of the methods of the Pali-canon, or of the Yogasutra,
produces a remarkable extension of consciousness. But the contents of
consciousness lose in clearness of detail with increasing extension. In the end,
consciousness becomes vast but dim, with an infinite multitude of objects
merging into an indistinct totality-a state in which the subjective and objective are
almost completely identical. This is all very well, but scarcely to be recommended
anywhere north of the Tropic of Cancer.
Ray Harris sees confusion here. Jung says individuation involves making 'unconscious contents'
conscious. In other words, translating the unconscious into a 'rational' understanding whereby the
ego can 'control' the psyche. Spiritual practice on the other hand involves surrendering the ego
and rationality to the higher levels of consciousness, allowing the ego and rationality to be
transcended and included in a higher order. It involves retranslating rational translations of the
archetypes into higher translations yet again, until the archetypes are experienced in their causal
purity and finally dissolved into Emptiness.
In Harris’s view, the confusion arises because of an inability to distinguish between the 'pre'
aspects of the archetypes calling for integration, and the 'trans' aspects calling for transformation.
(8) Individuation does not mean “following your bliss.” That idea comes from Joseph Campbell,
who takes a very individualistic view of individuation, and who refers to the entitlement,
uniqueness and choice that characterize our culture:
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
31
This, I believe, is the great Western truth: that each of us is a completely unique
creature and that, if we are ever to give any gift to the world, it will have to come
out of our own experience and fulfillment of our own potentialities, not someone
else’s.37
But this idea of following one’s bliss ignores Jung’s emphasis on the terribly difficult nature of
individuation, and its nature as a cross of conflicting opposites that need to be brought into a
unity.
(9) Nor is individuation becoming a well-rounded person. Campbell gives the example of a
baseball player making a speech, and being confident. And he compares this person to a
professor, too caught up in books, terrible presentation. But individuation is not just becoming
an all-American person who can win friends and influence people. It is a spiritual process.
Joseph Campbell is an example of someone who does not distinguish archetypes as to levels of
consciousness. He relates stories of a hero dying in order for life to appear. In the PBS series by
Bill Moyers, Campbell refers to a ritual in New Guinea, where he says they really enact the myth
of death and resurrection.38 In the initiation of young boys into manhood, there is a five-day
ritual of drumming and chanting. The rituals are boring, and wear you out until you break
through into something else. Then he says comes the great moment. They build a great shed of
enormous logs, supported by two uprights. Then a young woman, ornamented as a deity, is
brought in and made to lie down. With drumming and chanting, six boys were permitted their
first public intercourse. The last boy comes in, and with her in full embrace, the supports are
withdrawn, the logs drop, and the couple are killed. He says this is the union of male and female
as they were in the beginning, begetting and death. The pair are pulled out, roasted and eaten
that evening. Campbell then says, "You can’t beat that. "That’s the sacrifice of the Mass. When
I first heard Campbell say this, I lost my respect for his ideas.
To be fair to Campbell, he also says,
The bliss of pure Self can unfold only to an Imagination that has been clarified
and made steady, as the result of constantly practiced meditation. He who has
experienced in himself this bliss, is “Redeemed in this life”39
But because Campbell does not distinguish between the pre-personal and the transpersonal
archetypes, he cannot give direction here.
I agree that in some sense, the stages of individuation can be seen as a hero’s journey. But the
stages are not to be understood as a temporal heroics. There is a relation to and from the
supratemporal. And that is supported by what Jung says about the hero:
. . . if a man is a hero, he is a hero because, in the final reckoning, he did not let the
monster devour him, but subdued it, not once but many times. Victory over the collective
psyche alone yields the true value—the capture of the hoard, the invincible weapon, the
37
Joseph Campbell: The Power of Myth, with Bill Moyers, (New York, Doubleday, 1988), 151
38
Bill Moyers: The Power of Myth: Sacrifice and Bliss (television series)
39
Campbell’s review of Heinrich Zimmer’s Der Weg zum Selbst in Review of Religion 11, no. 3
(March 1947) 290-93.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
32
magic talisman, or whatever it be that the myth deems most desirable. Anyone who
identifies with the collective psyche—or, in mythological terms, lets himself be devoured
by the monster—and vanishes in it, attains the treasure that the dragon guards, but he
does so in spite of himself and to his own greatest harm. (Two Essays on Analytical
Psychology, CW 7, para. 261).
But we can ask whether the hero or warrior is really an archetype? Certainly the hero is a
symbol, and used in myth. But are all myths, all symbols, really archetypes?
With the birth of the symbol, the regression of libido into the unconscious ceases.
Regression is converted into progression, the blockage starts to flow again, and
the lure of the maternal abyss is broken. (Psychological Types, CW 6, para. 445).
Jung says of the hero,
The myth of the hero... is first and foremost a self-representation of the longing of
the unconscious, of its unquenched and unquenchable desire for the light of
consciousness. But consciousness, continually in a danger of being led astray by
its own light and of becoming a rootless will o' the wisp, longs for the healing
power of nature, for the deep wells of being and for unconscious communion with
life in all its countless forms. (“The Origin of the Hero,” Symbols of
Transformation, CW 8, para. 29).
Similarly, with all the other popular presentations of so-called archetypes: the warrior within us,
the king, the wise old man, the trickster, the magician, etc. If these are understood in a purely
temporal way, they will lead not to individuation, but to individualization.
I am not sure who is most to blame for this. But we find it in many people who claim to be
following Jung. People like Joseph Campbell. Or Hillman’s polytheistic archetypal psychology.
Or Thomas Moore, who follows Hillman in his influential book Care of the Soul. Or the
feminist use of the idea in Women Who Run with the Wolves. In all of these cases, Jung’s words
are used in a totally temporal way, ignoring the relation to a supratemporal selfhood and Totality.
(10) Individuation is not Identification with the Self
We should not suppose that self-realization means being lost in or swallowed up by some greater
reality (which might be suggested by the Indian image of a drop of water rejoining the ocean).
Nor does self-realization mean being swamped by the unconscious. That would be a state of
psychosis, a state of ‘possession.’ Rather, it means that a person is now fully conscious, but now
realizes that ‘his’ consciousness is also the consciousness that is everywhere, in all things (what
in mystic- meditative traditions is sometimes referred to as ‘cosmic consciousness’).
Identification with the Self (the idea that I am God, I am Brahman), leads to inflation. Jung
distinguishes between the God-image and God. He says that we should not identify with the Self
or God; rather, we should hold to the idea that “Christ lives within us.”
And he says,
But again and again I note that the individuation process is confused with the
coming of the ego into consciousness and that the ego is in consequence identified
with the self, which naturally produces a hopeless conceptual muddle. (Glossary,
Memories, Dreams, Reflections).
E. True Individuation
(1) True individuation involves going beyond ego
We have seen how Jung distinguishes between Self and ego. The temporal ego is not our psyche
or Self. Jung says that the only criterion of individuation is that it must be a transformation
where one goes beyond one’s ego:
The goal [of psychotherapy] is transformation–not one that is predetermined, but
rather an indeterminable change, the only criterion of which is the disappearance
of egohood. (Foreword to Zen Buddhism, CW 11, para. 904).
But he goes on to say in the same paragraph:
…it frequently happens with us also that a conscious ego and a cultivated
understanding must first be produced through analysis before one can even think
about abolishing egohood or rationalism.
Our ego is subordinate to the Self. Or, said the other way, the Self is superordinate to the ego.40
And so this further stage of individuation involves “articulating one's ego-consciousness with a
supraordinate totality.” (CW 11, para. 276). In this, we experience a non-ego that has the
conscious mind as its object. Another subject appears in place of our ego. Jung refers to St.
Paul’s words in Gal. 2:20, It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.” (Foreword to
“Introduction to Zen Buddhism,” CW 11, para. 892).
If you function in your self you are not yourself; as if you were a stranger; buy as if you did not
buy. St. Paul: But it is not I that lives, it is Christ that liveth in me.
There is a breakthrough to a “knowledge of the knower.” “Such a passion is practically
indistinguishable from the driving force of religion; consequently this whole problem belongs to
the religious transformation process, which is incommensurable with intellect.” (“Introduction to
Zen Buddhism,” CW 11, para. 892).
There is a new centre of gravity of the total personality:
It is then no longer in the ego, which is merely the centre of consciousness, but in
the hypothetical point between conscious and unconscious. This new centre
might be called the self. (Commentary on Golden Flower, CW 13, para. 67).
Individuation is becoming that thing which is not the ego, and that is very strange.
Therefore nobody understands what the self is, because the self is just the thing
which you are not, which is not the ego. The ego discovers itself as being a mere
appendix of the self in a sort of loose connection. (Kundalini, 39).
40
C.G. Jung: "Two Essays on Analytical Psychology", Collected Works 7, para. 274. The
original German reads "als untergeordnet oder enthalten in einem übergeordneten Selbst als dem
Zentrum der ganzen, unbegrenzten und undefinierbaren psychischen Persönlichkeit" (C. G. Jung,
"Psychologie und Religion").
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
34
41
I have not yet located the source for this reference. It is cited online at:
[http://www.teosofia.com/Mumbai/7410ladder.html].
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
35
And this fact, that the psychic reality is what one is not, is why Jung calls this ‘psychic
objectivity. “My term for the process which tantric yoga calls the awakening of Kundalini
is psychic objectivity.” (Kundalini, 93).
Individuation is becoming that thing which is not the ego, and that is very strange.
Therefore nobody understands what the self is, because the self is just the thing
which you are not, which is not the ego. The ego discovers itself as being a mere
appendix of the self in a sort of loose connection. For the ego is always far down
in muladhara and suddenly becomes aware of something up above in the fourth
story, in anahata, and that is the self. ...The purusha is a symbol that expresses
impersonal processes. The self is something exceedingly impersonal, exceedingly
objective. If you function in your self you are not the ego -- that is what you feel.
...As St. Paul expresses it, "It is not I that live, it is Christ that liveth in me,"
meaning that his life had become an objective life, not his own life but the life of
a greater one, the purusha (Kundalini, 40).
In individuation, our consciousness separates from objects and ego to another center:
Individuation begins with the self severing itself as unique from the objects and
the ego. As if consciousness separated from the objects and from the ego and
emigrated to the non-ego to the other center, to the foreign yet originally own.
(Kundalini, 83).
(5) Individuation is not for everyone.
Although Jung calls individuation an “ineluctable (not to be avoided) psychological necessity”
he also says that its nature is aristocratic, and that it is available only to individuals who are
predisposed to attain a higher degree of consciousness and who are called to it from the
beginning.
(6) Individuation is a preparation for death.
Aniela Jaffé once said, “The psychological path of individuation is ultimately a preparation for
death.”42
But why does the ego need to approach the Self, if it is to all end in death? Jung says “The
psyche itself, in relation to consciousness, is pre-existent and transcendent,” while the ego is
born, grows, and dies, in the same way as the body. (Development of personality, CW 17, para.
170). Jung’s supratemporal archetypal Self is probably the chief subject of disagreement with
other psychologists, and one reason why mainstream materialistic psychologists fail to take him
seriously. He is, however, taken seriously by today’s transpersonal psychologists.
(7) Transcendent function
The self as the centre that guides the individuation process can be referred to as the realized self,
or what Jung calls the transcendent function. Why does he call it the transcendent function? I
believe because it relates to the self, which really is transcendent to all our temporal functions
and correlative oppositions. The transcendent function is the third that unites two opposites. It is
42
Aniela Jaffé: Was Jung a mystic? (Daimon Verlag, 1989), 33, 38.
© 2008 J. Glenn Friesen
36
a third viewpoint which takes into account the way things appear from both the conscious and
the unconscious perspectives without being limited to either one.
Again, we must distinguish between the regressive journey downwards and the spiritual journey
upwards. Jung says,
I will only say, for clarity's sake, that there are two methods of treatment: 1. the
reductive, and 2. the synthetic. The former traces everything back to primitive
instincts, the latter develops the material into the process for differentiating the
personal two methods are complementary, for reduction to instinct leads back to
reality, indeed to an over-valuation of reality and hence to the necessity of
sacrifice. The synthetic method elaborates the symbolic fantasies resulting from
the introversion of libido through sacrifice. This produces a new attitude to the
world whose very difference offers a new potential. I have term this transition to a
new attitude the transcendent function. In the regenerated attitude the libido that
was formerly sunk in the unconscious emerges in the form of some positive
achievement it is equivalent to the renewal of life, which Eckhart symbolizes by
God's birth conversely, when the libido is withdrawn from external objects and
sinks into the unconscious, the soul is born again in God. This state, as he rightly
observes, is not a blissful one, because it is a negative act, a turning away from
life and a descent to the deus absonditus, who possesses qualities very different
from those of the God who shines by day. (Psychological Types, CW 6, para.
427).
(8) Individuation means letting Christ live in me
This is a phrase that Jung repeats many times.
If you function in your self you are not yourself–that is what you feel. You have
to do it as if you were a stranger; you will buy as if you did not buy; you will sell
as if you did not sell. Or, as St. Paul expresses it, “But it is not I that lives, it is
Christ that liveth in me,” meaning that his life had become an objective life, not
his own life but the life of a greater one, the purusha (Kundalini, 40).
He quotes St. Paul: “Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.” (Commentary of the Golden Flower, CW
13, para. 77). And
The Self or Christ is present in everybody a priori, but as a rule in an unconscious
condition to begin with. But it is a definite experience of later life, when this fact
becomes conscious. It is only real when it happens, and it can happen only when
you withdraw your projections from an outward historical or metaphysical Christ
and thus wake up Christ within. (CW 18, para. 1638).
We have looked at the idea of individuation in relation to the philosophy of Totality, the relation
of the periphery to the Center. As I mentioned, the philosophy of Totality was related to a
renewed interest in the German Christian philosopher Franz von Baader. In Lecture 2 we will
look at how these key ideas of Jung were anticipated by Baader. And we will make some
contrasts between Baader’s theosophy and Gnosticism.