Doctor of the psyche
Jung trained as a psychiatrist and worked at the Burghölzli hospital in Zürich, where his research into complexes and word association helped establish his reputation.
A digital museum for Carl Jung’s life, works, dreams, symbols, archetypes, shadow, synchronicity, and the lifelong journey toward individuation.
Carl Gustav Jung founded analytical psychology and developed ideas that still influence therapy, mythology, religion, literature, art, and modern self-development.
Jung trained as a psychiatrist and worked at the Burghölzli hospital in Zürich, where his research into complexes and word association helped establish his reputation.
Jung first collaborated with Sigmund Freud, then separated from him as Jung’s work moved deeper into myth, symbols, religion, and the collective unconscious.
Jung’s mature work focused on individuation — the process of integrating conscious and unconscious material into a more whole human life.
Carl Gustav Jung was born on July 26, 1875, in the canton of Thurgau, Switzerland.
Jung began work at Zürich’s famous psychiatric hospital, where he studied mental illness, complexes, and association experiments.
After his break with Freud, Jung entered a period of intense inner exploration that shaped his later psychology.
Jung worked on Liber Novus, later known as The Red Book — a visionary manuscript of images, dialogues, and psychological experimentation.
Jung died on June 6, 1961, leaving behind one of the most influential bodies of psychological writing of the 20th century.
Jung’s language can feel mystical, but the foundation is practical: become conscious of what moves you from beneath the surface.
Archetypes are recurring symbolic patterns — mother, hero, trickster, wise old man, shadow — that appear in myths, dreams, stories, and behavior.
The shadow contains rejected, hidden, or undeveloped parts of the personality. Jungian growth requires meeting it honestly instead of projecting it onto others.
For Jung, the Self is not simply ego. It represents psychic wholeness — the deeper organizing center that pulls the personality toward integration.
Dreams reveal unconscious material through symbolic scenes. Jung treated dreams as meaningful expressions, not random mental debris.
Synchronicity describes events connected by meaning rather than obvious cause — one of Jung’s most famous and controversial ideas.
Individuation is the lifelong process of integrating unconscious material, balancing opposites, and becoming more fully yourself.
The Red Book, also called Liber Novus, was Jung’s private illuminated manuscript created from his intense inner experiments, visions, fantasies, and symbolic dialogues. It was not publicly published until 2009.
This section of Jung8 can become the emotional centerpiece of the site: a gallery-style exploration of the images, symbols, and psychological breakthroughs that shaped Jung’s later theories.
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Introduced Jung’s theory of introversion, extraversion, and psychological functions — ideas that later influenced personality systems.
A major work on symbolic material, myth, libido theory, and Jung’s break from Freud’s narrower sexual interpretation.
Jung analyzed UFO reports as modern myths and symbolic expressions of the collective psyche.
Published after Jung’s death, this accessible work introduced Jungian ideas to a broader public.
This site should not stay as a pretty museum only. It can become an evergreen educational brand.
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Create downloadable PDFs: Shadow Work Journal, Dream Symbol Workbook, Red Book Beginner Guide, Archetype Cards.
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A future newsletter for dreams, symbols, archetypes, shadow work, and practical wisdom from analytical psychology.