Archetypes (archetypal Dream Images)

Archetypes (archetypal Dream Images)

archetypes-archetypal-dream-images image

Archetypes in Jungian Psychology and Their Role in Dreams

While the concept of archetypes dates back to Plato, it is most widely recognized today through the work of Carl Jung, the influential Swiss psychotherapist. Unlike his mentor Sigmund Freud, Jung divided the unconscious mind into two subdivisions: the personal unconscious and the collective unconscious, the latter also known as the objective psyche. The personal unconscious is shaped by our individual experiences, whereas the collective unconscious represents our inheritance of the collective experiences of humankind. This collective experience is stored in the form of archetypes (or prototypes).

The Role of Archetypes in Human Experience

Archetypes influence how we subconsciously organize our personal experiences. For instance, we are naturally inclined to perceive someone in our early environment as a father figure due to the father archetype. If the biological father is absent, another figure (e.g., an older brother) may be absorbed into this archetype, forming the father complex, which reflects the father archetype in the personal unconscious.

Understanding Archetypes: Invisible Forces

Archetypes are not specific images or symbols; instead, they are like invisible magnetic fields that shape our perceptions. One of the key archetypes Jung identified is the self archetype, the unconscious foundation of our ego—our conscious self-image. In dreams, this self is often depicted in circular forms, such as mandalas (used in Hindu and Buddhist meditation), or by the number four, which Jung associated with wholeness, a pattern he referred to as a quaternity. These archetypal images serve as concrete representations of the otherwise elusive archetypes and appear in our dreams as archetypal dream images.

Mythology, Folklore, and the Collective Unconscious

Jung proposed that much of world mythology and folklore is a manifestation of the collective unconscious. He observed that many of his patients' dreams contained unfamiliar symbols that reflected those found in global mythologies. By studying these symbols in their cultural contexts, Jung was able to gain deeper insights into his patients' dreams, a process he called amplification.

See Also: Archetypes, Collective Unconscious, Dreams, Mythology.

[1]

Sources and Authors

  1. Dream Encyclopedia by [Back to dream]

A to Z Dream Interpretation