ABSTRACT

The Practice of Psychotherapy brings together Jung's essays on general questions of analytic therapy and dream analysis. It also contains his profoundly interesting parallel between the transference phenomena and alchemical processes.

The transference is illustrated and interpreted by means of a set of symbolic pictures, and the bond between psychotherapist and patient is shown to be a function of the kinship libido. Far from being pathological in its effects, kinship libido has an essential role to play in the work of individuation and in establishing an organic society based on the psychic connection of its members with one another and with their own roots.

part I|125 pages

General Problems of Psychotherapy

chapter I|18 pages

Principles of Practical Psychotherapy 1

chapter II|8 pages

What is Psychotherapy? 1

chapter III|7 pages

Some Aspects of Modern Psychotherapy 1

chapter IV|17 pages

The Aims of Psychotherapy 1

chapter V|23 pages

Problems of Modern Psychotherapy 1

chapter VI|8 pages

Psychotherapy and a Philosophy of Life 1

chapter VII|10 pages

Medicine and Psychotherapy 1

chapter VIII|17 pages

Psychotherapy Today 1

chapter IX|15 pages

Fundamental Questions of Psychotherapy 1

part II|197 pages

Specific Problems of Psychotherapy

chapter I|10 pages

The Therapeutic Value of Abreaction 1

chapter II|23 pages

The Practical Use of Dream-Analysis 1

chapter III|1 pages

The Psychology of the Transference 1

Interpreted in Conjunction with a set of Alchemical Pictures

chapter |3 pages

Foreword

chapter |36 pages

Introduction

chapter |3 pages

Epilogue