ABSTRACT

This rewarding work is the product of sustained observation of and reflection on phenomena arising out of three broad topics in the field of analytical psychology. Firstly it analyses and evaluates the ambiguity in Jung's definitions and metaphors about the self, while at the same time expounding the theory of the self as a dynamic system, evolving through deintegration and reintegration processes during early infancy and childhood. Secondly it investigates the relation of the ego to the self, giving notable consideration to psychoanalytic work. Finally the presence of the self, behind or within both the religious and the alchemical experience, is explored. Fordham's innovative and original view of the self further extends our understanding of its dynamics and helps to establish some sense of the complementariness as well as differences between Jung and Klein.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part One|76 pages

Empirical foundation, hypoth and theories

chapter One|29 pages

The self in Jung’s works*

chapter Two|16 pages

Individuation and ego development*

chapter Three|14 pages

Integration–deintegration in infancy

chapter Four*|15 pages

A possible root of active imagination

part Two|140 pages

Ego and self

chapter Five|13 pages

The self as an imaginative construct*

chapter Six|21 pages

The ego and the self*

chapter Seven|5 pages

Mental health*

chapter Eight|8 pages

A clinical study*

chapter Ten|15 pages

Countertransference*

chapter Eleven|9 pages

Defences of the self*

chapter Twelve|10 pages

Jungian views of body–mind*

part Three|3 pages

Religion, mysticism, alchemy

chapter Thirteen|11 pages

Is God supernatural?*

chapter Fourteen|18 pages

Notes on the mysticism of Saint John of the Cross*

chapter Fifteen|9 pages

Alchemy*

chapter Sixteen|7 pages

Concluding reflections