ABSTRACT

At first, Jung was mainly a supporter of Freud. But in 1913, a meeting of the Psychoanalytical Society took place in Munich. By this time, relations between Freud and Jung were hostile and this was the last time they would meet. In his presentation, Jung explained how both Adler's and Freud's views, contrary to what Adler and Freud thought, were actually reconcilable. Freud was more introverted in that he studied what went on inside people, while Adler was more extroverted in that he concentrated on the relationships between people. Freud was an introvert who dug up his unconscious inferior extraversion in the form of his Oedipus complex. Jung claimed that any actual case of neurosis revealed both Freud's and Adler's observations, large as life. Too-long-continued entanglement in the emotional politics of the family of origin and lack of courage compensated for by power and superiority are two sides of the same coin.