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Confrontation with the Unconscious Scott J. Hill

Confrontation with the Unconscious By Scott J. Hill

Confrontation with the Unconscious by Scott J. Hill


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Summary

An exploration of the use the of psychedelics and Jung's work on trauma, the shadow, psychosis, and psychospiritual transformation.

Confrontation with the Unconscious Summary

Confrontation with the Unconscious: Jungian Depth Psychology and Psychedelic Experience by Scott J. Hill

An exploration of the use the of psychedelics and Jung's work on trauma, the shadow, psychosis, and psychospiritual transformation.

Carl Gustav Jung pioneered the transformative potential of the deep unconscious. Psychedelic substances provide direct and powerful access to this inner world. How, then, might Jungian psychology help us to better understand the nature of psychedelic experiences? And how might psychedelics assist the movement toward psychological transformation described by Jung?

Jungian depth psychology and psychedelic psychotherapy are both concerned with coming to terms with unconscious drives, complexes, and symbolic images. Unaware of significant evidence for the safe clinical use of psychedelic drugs, Jung himself remained wary of psychedelics and staunchly opposed their therapeutic use. His bias has prevented Jungians from objectively considering the benefits as well as the risks of using psychedelics for psychological healing and growth.

Confrontation with the Unconscious intertwines psychedelic research, personal accounts of psychedelic experiences, and C. G. Jung's work on trauma, the shadow, psychosis, and psychospiritual transformation - including Jung's own confrontation with the unconscious - to show the relevance of Jung's penetrating insights to the work of Stanislav Grof, Ann Shulgin, Ronald Sandison, Margot Cutner, among other psychedelic and transpersonal researchers, and to demonstrate the great value of Jung's penetrating insights for understanding difficult psychedelic experiences and promoting safe and effective psychedelic exploration and psychotherapy.

About Scott J. Hill

Scott J. Hill, Ph.D., lives in Sweden, where he conducts scholarly research on the intersection between psychedelic studies and Jungian psychology. He holds degrees in psychology from the University of Minnesota and in philosophy and religion from the California Institute of Integral Studies.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

Part 1: Encountering the Unconscious

Chapter 1: Jung's Confrontation with the Unconscious and Its Relation to Psychedelic Experience
Psychedelic Research and Theory: A Brief History
Jung, Jungians, and Psychedelic Experience

Chapter 2: Psychedelic-Enhanced Psychotherapy
Psycholytic and Psychedelic Models
Psycholytic Therapy
Psychedelic Therapy
Common Features and Goals
Schools of Psychedelic-Enhanced Therapy
Psychoanalytic
Grofian
Shamanic
Hybrid
An Early Jungian Approach to Psychedelic-Enhanced Psychotherapy

Chapter 3: Basic Jungian Concepts and Principles
Consciousness and the Unconscious
The Relationship between Consciousness and the Unconscious
Individuation
Archetypes and Their Manifestation in the Psyche
Dreams and Other Symbolic Products of the Unconscious

Chapter 4: Jung's Explanation of Psychedelic Experience
A Lowering of the Threshold of Consciousness
The Limits of Integration
Ronald Sandison's Response to Jung's Criticism

Part 2: Jungian Insights into Difficult Psychedelic Experiences

Chapter 5: Psychedelic Experience and Trauma
Difficult Psychedelic Experiences as Potentially Traumatic
Psychedelic-Induced Trauma
Psychedelic-Enhanced Therapy as Treatment for Past Trauma
The Relation of Trauma in Jungian Psychology to Psychedelic Experience
Kalsched's Model of the Psyche's Archetypal Self-Care System
Trauma and Dissociation in Jung's Psychology
Trauma and Jung's Theory of the Complex
Possession by Complexes in Relation to Archaic Psychological Defenses
The Emergence of Trauma-Based Imagery in Psychedelic Experience

Chapter 6: Psychedelic Experience and the Shadow
The Shadow in Jung's Psychology
Personal and Archetypal Levels of the Shadow
The Overwhelmingly Numinous Nature of the Archetypal Psyche
Resistance to and Projection of the Shadow
The Shadow in Psychedelic Experience

Chapter 7: Psychedelic Experience and Psychosis
Psychosis and Psychotic States
Psychedelics as Psychosis-Inducing Substances
From the Psychotomimetic to the Psychedelic Paradigm
The Psychotomimetic Model Reconsidered
Transpersonal Explanations of Psychedelic-Induced Psychotic States

Chapter 8: Psychosis in Jung's Psychology
Jung's Focus on Schizophrenic Forms of Psychosis
Commonalities between Schizophrenia and Other Conditions
Neurosis, Latent Psychosis, and Manifest Psychosis
Reduced Consciousness and Psychedelic-Induced Psychotic States
Accounts of Psychedelic-Induced Psychotic States

Chapter 9: Psychedelic Experience and Transformation
The Transformative Potential of Psychedelic Experiences
The Transformative Potential of Psychotic States
The Transformative Potential of Psychedelic-Induced Psychotic States

Chapter 10: A Jungian Approach to the Transformative Potential of Difficult Psychedelic Experiences
Jung on the Healing Potential of Psychotic Experiences
The Painful Passage through the Shadow towards Wholeness
Treating Trauma: Integration Versus Abreaction in Jung's Psychology
Jung's Definitions of Trauma and Abreaction
Grof's View of Abreaction
Jung's Critique of Abreaction
Drawing from Both Grof and Jung
The Transformative Potential of Psychedelic-Enhanced Psychotherapy: Two Case Studies
Dr. Rick Strassman's Report
Dr. Margot Cutner's Report

Part 3: Jung's Psychology and Psychedelic-Enhanced Psychotherapy

Chapter 11: The Transcendent Function: Jung's Approach to Integration

Chapter 12: Jungian Psychotherapy
The Method and Purpose of Psychotherapy
Gaining Access to the Unconscious
Coming to Terms with the Unconscious
The Relationship between Analyst and Patient
The Analyst
The Dialectical Relationship
The Transference
Dreams and Their Interpretation
The Sphere of the Irrational
The Purpose and Value of Dreams
The Compensating Function of Dreams

Chapter 13: Implications for Psychedelic-Enhanced Psychotherapy
Subject Readiness
The Therapist and the Dialectical Relationship
The Compensating Function
The Significance of the Collective Unconscious
Integration and the Role of Ego-Consciousness

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Additional information

NLS9781913274023
9781913274023
1913274020
Confrontation with the Unconscious: Jungian Depth Psychology and Psychedelic Experience by Scott J. Hill
New
Paperback
Aeon Books Ltd
20190630
250
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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