Advertisement
Western Collective Unconscious Print E-mail
Thursday, 08 March 2007
Image
Joseph A. Bailey, II, M.D.
Through Saint Augustine's "Principles," Freud and the Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung learned of and applied African concepts (Bynum, African Unconscious, p. 125; King, African Origins p16,22). In the 1920s Jung greatly modified these African concepts from a spiritual into a more material world focus. He spent a lifetime attempting to uncover the archaic roots of the Western version of the Collective Unconscious by studying commonalities in modern humans. He said that certain symbols in dreams and myths were residues of ancestral memory preserved in the Collective Unconscious. Deciding these special symbols to be "essence-ideals" that give rise to the conscious thoughts, feelings, expressions, and behaviors of members of a society, he called them "archetypes of the unconscious." An example of such a universal symbol from the most primordial times is the "cross."  It has been a symbol of the cosmic axis between heaven and earth, the union of opposites, and all aspects of God.  Linn (Secret Language p. 15) says that when thousands of people for hundreds of years focus on a sign or symbol, an etheric energy (vital energy from the cosmos) is generated around that sign and is held in the Collective Unconscious.  Anytime one focuses on a particular sign, one is connecting with the force that has been created through the years by others who have used that same symbol.

To illustrate the Western belief of how the first form of a Collective Unconscious may have developed, imagine the scenario of creating a path in the virgin snow. Then transfer this image to supposing Primitive man encountered the dangers of darkness and the poisonous bite of snakes. Both made such deep unconscious representations on the Humanity Common Unconscious as to be deemed primordial images, dominants, imagos, mythological images, and behavior patterns. These representations form "racial memories"--mental structures inside the Humanity Unconscious-memories now capable of being inherited by each soul. Hence, descendants of each Primitive man would be predisposed to fear the darkness and snakes-a tendency which could be reinforced by one's own personal experiences or by the related stories one hears. Yet, I suspect there are better explanations for some of these happenings.

The important point is that "the Collective Unconsciousness" of Jung is about a culturally transmitted message operating within a given people's activities of daily living plane of existence.  Jung did not believe it was based on genetics or traditional customs or by the Cartesian theory (a theory about the equal distribution of characteristics common among all mankind).  In other words, by simply "doing what comes naturally," one society may evolve a life system not unlike another society ten thousand miles away across distant oceans. The primary image of the archetype "is a memory deposit, an engram, derived from a condensation of innumerable similar experiences . . . the psychic expression of an anatomically, physiologically determined natural tendency" (Campbell, "Primordial Myth", p. 32). Engrams were discussed by Plato when he likened human memory to soft wax.  Experiences would then produce imprints or impressions on the "wax" -- called "memory traces" or engrams.  In this way, the Collective Unconsciousness would contain layer upon layer of information from all of humanity's past (similar to computer files) and these layers are shared by all.  Joseph Campbell gave it extensive research support in his studies of the world's mythologies  and concluded that archetypes are the common ideas of myth (Moyers, The Power of Myth p. 60).

website: jablifeskills.com

Joseph A. Bailey, II, M.D.

 
< Prev   Next >

BVN Vid Cast

Caroline Kennedy provides her first-ever sit-down interview and discusses her interest in the Senate seat currently held by Hillary Clinton.

Advertisement
Advertisement

BVN Calendar Events

January 2009 February 2009
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
Week 1 1 2 3
Week 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Week 3 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Week 4 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Week 5 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Advertisement