释义 |
Jungian, a. and n.|ˈjʊŋɪən| [See -ian.] Of or pertaining to Dr. Carl Gustav Jung (1875–1961), the Swiss leader of the school of analytic psychology, or his teaching. Also n., a follower or adherent of Jung. Hence ˈJungianism, the teaching or system of Jung; a characteristic specimen of this.
1933D. C. Daking (title) Jungian psychology and modern spiritual thought. 1942K. W. Bash tr. Jacobi's Psychol. C. G. Jung iii. 59 Jungian psychotherapy is no analytical procedure... It is..a ‘way of healing’. 1947Downside Rev. 35 For the Jungian the whole position is altered... The historical causality of complexes is not denied, and the methods of releasing these complexes, as discovered by Freud, are recognized. 1956Essays in Crit. VI. 417 How we can now avoid Jungianism is a difficult problem. 1958Times Lit. Suppl. 1 Aug. 438/5 The church has a resident Jungian psychiatrist. 1959Ibid. 20 Mar. 164/5 To non-Jungians..this will seem merely another Jungian book. 1964M. McLuhan Understanding Media (1967) II. xx. 207 Myth and Jungian archetypes. |