ABSTRACT

Unas, 9 ii 187; 14 22 unbalance, spiritual, contemporary,

17 157 uncertainty: factor of, 8 972;

relationship, between conscious and unconscious, 9 ii 355; science and, 4 746

uncleanness, magical, 10 405 uncomeliness, outward, 9 ii 2 16 unconscious: this has been grouped

under the following main headings: unconscious (adjective); uncon­ scious, the; unconscious, collec­ tive; unconscious, and conscious; unconscious, and conscious mind; unconscious, and consciousness; unconscious, personal; uncon­ scious contents; unconscious­ ness; unconscious processes

unconscious (adjective): apprehension, 18 733, 735;

aptitudes, see aptitudes s.v. ; assumptions, see assumptions s.v. ; attitudes, see attitudes s.v.; combination, 18 732; conflict, see conflict s.v. ; contents, see sep. entry below; counteraction, 8 16 0 -1; counter-position, 7 118 ; effects, perceived indirectly, 17 1 12 ; factor, 14 332;

pation mystique s.v.; individuation, 1 1 756; infantile attachments, 14 750; laws, 13 30, 286; material, interpretation of, 1 1 54U motives, and free choice, 16 365; opposition, 7 187; performance, heightened, 1 137-48; problems, exteriorization of, 18 769; processes, see sep. entry below; products, 18 1 1 ; interpretation of, 5 17572; over-and under­ valuation of, 8 176; spontaneous, 13 352, 393, 460, 477; proliferation, consequences of, 17 3 13 ; psyche, see psyche s.v.; regression, 13 324; shadow-side, 16 173; symbols, 6 182-3, 204; tendencies, 7 137 , 216 ; thinking, see thinking s.v.; traumatic factor, 15 63; urges to power, 7 (p$)\ view of the world, 7 507

unconscious, the, 3 353; 4 248, 528; 6 438, 554, 576, 681; 6 180-3, 279> 837-43 (Def.); 8 62, 544, 6 4 0 -1, 702; 10 3 1 1 , 559, 634; 11 440, 760; 13 13 - 16 , 36, 7 0 - 1 , 76, 134, 14 1 , 180, 183, 209, 220, 229, 248, 272, 289, 3 14 , 334, 3 9 3 f fig-B5; 14 52, 15 1 , 257, 26 1, 277, 342, 749; 15 104; 16 12, 17 , 55, 294, 356, 389, 469, 5 18 - 19 , 529; 17 18 1 , 19 1, 217a; 18 881;

t i t l e s : “The Attitude o f the Unconscious,” 6 568-76, 626-7; “The Autonomy of the Unconscious,” 11 1-5 5 ; “The Fantasies o f the Unconscious,”

White’s God and the Uncon­ scious” I I 449-67; “The Func­ tion o f the Unconscious,” 7 266-95; “The Functions o f the Unconscious,” 18 444-60; “ General Remarks on the Therapeutic Approach to the Unconscious,” 7 192-200; “ In­ stinct and the Unconscious,” 8 263-82; “The Interpretation and Integration o f the Uncon­ scious,” 13 463-82; “On the Importance o f the Unconscious in Psychopathology,” 3 438-65; “On the Psychology o f the Un­ conscious,” 7 1 - 2 0 1 ; “ Pheno­ mena Resulting from the Assimilation of the Uncon­ scious,” 7 22 1-4 2 , 4 5 1-6 3 ; “The Rapprochement with the Unconscious,” 13 2 10 - 12 ; “The Relations between the Ego and the Unconscious,” 7 202-406; “The Role o f the Un­ conscious,” 10 1-48; “The Sig­ nificance o f the Unconscious in Individual Education,” 17 253-83; “The Significance of the Unconscious in Psychol­ ogy,” 8 356-64; “The Structure o f the Unconscious,” 7 4425 2 1; “The Technique o f Dif­ ferentiation between the Ego and the Figures o f the Un­ conscious,” 7 3 4 1-7 3 ; “The Unconscious in Historical Per­ spective,” 8 343~55; “The Unconscious as the Matrix of Symbols,” 12 5 16 - 17 ; absolute, 8 3 1 1 ; activation of, 6 400; 12 57; activity of, see activity s.v. ; Adlerian view of, 4 760; 16 152; aetiological/causal significance

alchemy and, see alchemy $.v.; ambivalence/two aspects of, 14 2 5 3 ; 1 8 * 5 3 7 - 8 ; analysis of, 7 192-7, 205/446, 342, 387, 420; 12 60; 17 180, 184, 193, 261; ancestral/instinctual, 8 673; 16 6 1; and anima, see anima s.v.; animal impulses of, 12 186, 203; animal representing, see ani­ mals s.v.; animation of, 12 20 1; animus as personification of, see animus s.v.; antinomies of, 9 i 4 19 ; 17 203; and apperceptive disturbance, 3 5 6 ; approach of, 12 53, 60; Aquaster (Paracelsus) as, 13 1 7 5 ; archaic vestiges in, 16 205; archetypal associations o f products of, 5 683; archetypal configurations of, 13 304; archetypal structures of, 5 337, 6 1 1 ; 14 558; and archetypes, 1 1 238; archetypes of, 12 20; 14 5 17 ; autonomous, 5 467; and artists, see artistic s.vv. ca­ pacity; creation; experience; assimilation of, see assimilation s.v. ; an assumption, 11 64; attention to, 14 180, 193; attitude of, see attitudes s.v.; autonomous activity of, 7 204/ 445-205/446; autonomy of, 8 545; 10 634, 832; 1 1 1 - 5 5 , 1 4 1 ; 12 5 1 ,6 5 , 1 18 , 24 9 ,437«; 13 438; 14 343; as barrier, 7 140;

cannot be discriminated, 1 1 419 ; cannot be “done with,” 9 ii 40; cannot be emptied, 7 20&/446, 258/473; “can only wish,” 4 3 18 ; 7 2 12 , 2 16; capriciousness of, 18 734; Caucasus of, 13 13 ; centre in, 7 509; 9 i 492; chaos of, 16 392; chaotic fragments of, 13 1 1 1 ; Christ as personification of, 13 448; and Christ-phenomenon, 18 1828; chthonic, 12 26; collective, see sep. entry below; as collective ideal, 17 2 18 ; comparative research into, 17 205; compensatory function/ relation of, 5 272; 6 30, 574-5, 843, 904; 7 279, 282-3; 8 *7W» 466, 9 31; 9 ii in i; 10 23, 448, 732; 11 802; 12 63; 13 294, 454; 14 149, 192, 22 1, 286, 3 12 , 470, 486, 492, 5 14 , 705, 7°7> 756; 16 372; cannot be compelled, 1 1 797; to the con­ scious, 3 448-9; 5 575; 8 17, 132 ; 10 33; 14 184; 16 252, 33°* 365; to conscious attitude, 11 779; 16 12 ; 17 282; 18 1388; to conscious contents, 10 2 1 ; to conscious mind, 5 98, 587, 616; 7 204/445; 12 26, 5 1 ; to con­ sciousness, 5 61 m; 6 568, 904; 8 17W; 12 26, 48&W; 14 736; 15 15 2 -3 ; 18 1377, 14 18 , 1484, 14 9 1, 1584; purpose of, 10 732; realization of, 1 1 784 (see also unconscious processes s.v. compensatory); complexes and, see complex

conflict with, see conflict s.v.; confrontation/encounter with, 13 428, 462, 481; and conscious, see sep. entry below; and conscious mind, see sep. entry below; and consciousness, see sep. entry below; constellated, see constellation s.v. ; contamination by/of, see con­ tamination s.v.; continuity of, 1 1 53; 16 '5205; 18 13 ; conveys experience of unity, 1 1 4 4 o; cosmic aspect, 12 226; counterposition in, 14 257; creates new contents, 8 702; creativity of, 5 182, 329; 8 135, 339; 1 1 87 5 ; 16 62; 17 185; crossing threshold of, 1 1 86; dangers of, 14 184; darkness of, 5 523, 539; 13 34; dawn-state and, 9 ii 230; deadly grip of, 5 523, 539; and death, 8 809; deeper unity in, 1 1 943; definition/meaning o f term, 1 i66n; 3 438-9, 44 1; 4 2 10 ; 8 270; 9 i 1; 18 1 1 ; deliberations of, 18 545; demands of, 5 458; denial of, 10 1; deposit o f all experience, 8 339; depotentiation of, 12 163; depreciation of, 4 7 6 1-2 ; 7 352; 12 60; 18 468; descent into, 12 436-7; destructive tendency of, 14 i 4 9 > 258; devaluation of, 6 82; devil/Satan as representative of, 18 1653;

dialectic/coming to terms with, 12 3-4, 36, 12 1 , 193, 390, 496; different conceptions of, 18 124, 273; directness of, 7 386; discovery of, 10 4 3 1, 678; 17 129; 18 757; disordered, 7 392; disturbance(s) in, 8 640; 1 1 665, 668, 676; dominants of, 1 1 850; 12 346, 3 9 *; dreams and, see dreams s.v.; dynamics of, 7 195; early conceptions of, 16 204; early use of term, 10 1; and Eastern symbolism, 15 90; effects of, on therapist, 16 366; ego and, see ego s.v.; and ego-consciousness, see ego-consciousness s.v.; empirical approach to, 18 114 4 ; energic charge of, 18 832; and eternity, 12 135 ; European, 15 92; everywhere identical, 16 254; evil aspect of, see evil s.v.; experience of, 12 59-6 1, 129, 3 4 7 ; extent of: indefinite, 1 1 390; unknown, 1 1 14 1 ; 18 754; o f extravert, egocentric infan­ tile tendency in, 6 569-72, 576, 602; of extraverted intuitive type, 6 6 *5 ; fantasy and, see fantasy s.v. ; fantasy-structures and, 3 4 14 - *5 ; fascination by, 12 439, 448; favourable side of, 7 166, 196; fear of, 9 ii 62; 10 244; 11 28; 12 60, 325; 16 374; fear o f impersonal forces in, 1 1

feelings and concepts in, 1 148; female/of woman, 7 3 3 1 ; 9 i 296; 14 159, 229; 16 5 18 ; feminine, 5 672; 14 172, 18 1, 364, 736; o f man, see man s.v. femininity; fight with, symbolized, 5 450n\ figures of, 13 56, 62-3; fishes as product of, 9 ii 232; Freud’s view of, see Freud s.v.; frightening figures in, 9 ii 355; fundamental mistake about, 16 3 3 o; and future conscious contents, 7 204/445; general psychology and, 16 232; Germanic, tensions in, 3 5 4 . 44778; in given leadership, 7 347; Gnostics and, see Gnostic s.v.; God and the, 11 757; o f God, 11 56 1, 575, 597, 600, fi38> 659; and God-image, 11 740, 757; goodwill of, 18 54 1; guidance by, 12 74; guiding function, 10 34; has no known limits, 18 1672; has no time, 18 684; as the “hereafter,” 12 559; hermaphroditism of, 14 220; hierarchy of, 7 378; highly extensive, 8 673; in Hippolytus and Epiphanius, 9 ii 119 ; and horse, 5 4 2 1; I Ching and, 11 997; idees forces of, 14 7 5 1; illimitable, 12 247; illumination of, 14 2 1 1 , 307 (see also below luminosity); images in, 5 258; 12 14; o f wholeness, 1 1 757; and immortality, 8 673; 9 i 249; impersonal, 7 103, 220, 243/

tive); as impersonal psyche, 9 i 3 14 ; importance of, 9 ii 7; increase o f potential of, 14 5 10 ; indistinctness o f idea in, 3 2 18 ; inductive action of, 16 364; inertia of, 17 2 7 1; infantile-perverse-criminal, 16 327; and inferior function, 6 17 1 , 502-3; influence of, 7 (p 124), 342; inherited, 12 184; instinctive activity of, 7 253; 8 270; instinctuality o f native’s wis­ dom of, 13 448; integration of, see integration s.v.; intellectual activity of, 1 148; interventions of, 18 5 7 1; intuitions of, see intuition s.v.; inundation by, 13 428; invasion(s) by, 5 6 16 - 17 ; 7 163; 12 57Sen; 14 1 1 7 n; 16 479; invasion(s) of, 11 533; 14 184, 782; irrational standpoint of, 7 350; irreality of, 7 3 5 1 ; irruption/breaking through of, 9 i 268; 11 665, 698, 708; 14 144W, 272; Janet and, 17 128; as land o f dreams, 18 754; language of, 7 21/434; 10 23; 18 637, 6 7 1, 837; layers of, 7 118 ; left/sinister, see right and left: the left s.v.; libido and, see libido s.v.; localization of, 18 76 1; loses ascendancy, 7 382; lumber-room of, 1 1 899; luminosity/multiple scintillae of, 14 50n, 270, 700 (see also above illumination);

magical rites as defence against, 1 1 32; and mana-personality, 7 390; in manic state, 18 829; manifestations of, 1 1 35, 63, 4 4 1; . mankind’s unwritten history, 1 1 280; mask of, 12 29; maternal character of, see mother s.v.; “matriarchal” state of, 9 i 425; as matrix: o f consciousness, see sep. entry below unconscious and consciousness s.v.; o f dreams, 8 545; o f the future, 5 459; o f the human mind, 16 384; o f mythology/philosophy etc., 1 1 899; o f symbols, 12 5 16 - 17 ; 18 603, 637; meaning o f concept, see above definition; Mercurius as, see Mercurius s.v.; message of, 18 4 7 1; mother as, see mother s.v.; mythological activity of, 7 160n; nature of, 7 (pp$, 124), 203/ 444, 288-9; 10 52; necessary evil, 12 247; negative: attitude to, 7 195; movement of, 7 357; role of, 7 166 (see also below positive and negative); neutrality of, 16 329; 18 1586; never at rest, 17 102; never deceives, 5 95; as nigredo, 14 646; not directly observable, 16 3 5 6 w; not only evil, 16 389; numinosity of, 1 1 222; 12 247; objectivity of, 10 562; old theories alive in, 17 44; opening up of, 11 5 3 1 ;

order in, 12 189; organising principle of, 9 ii 3 18 ; “our sea” symbol of, 9 ii 2 19 ; outside nature, 12 400; overpowering by, 12 437; overrating of, 8 568; and paintings by mental pa­ tients, 15 2 0 6 -11 ; paradoxical/contradictory, 12 5 17 ; 13 250; 14 88; parental influence and, 4 739; perceptiveness of, 1 1 608, 638, 738; 18 78 1; and persona, 7 308; 18 110 2 ; personal, see sep. entry below; personalistic view of, 16 205; personification of, 8 673; 14 128 (see also anima; animus; Mercurius; mother; and see above Christ; below Proteus; soul); physiological aspect of, 18 »3 89 ; physiological and psychologi­ cal, 3 438; positive activity of, 8 702; positive and negative aspects of, 5 580, 609 (see also above negative); possession by, 1 1 648; 16 397; powers of, 18 1505; predominance of, 13 16; as prima materia, 12 5 16 ; primitives and, 6 422; 1 1 28; productivity of, 7 205/446; and projection, see projection s.v. ; and Prometheus-Pandora myth, 6 294, 300; prospective role of subliminal combinations, 7 197; Proteus personifying, 9 ii 338; psyche and, see psyche s.v.; psychic forces and, 10 387;

psychoid, 14 788; psychology of, see psychology s.v. ; and psychosis, 3 49 1; as a quality, 17 199; rapprochement with, 13 222; reality of, see reality s.v. ; as real psyche, 16 205; reasons for controlling, 8 159; receptivity of, 1 138, 147; reductive function of, 8 496; reflected in dogma, 1 1 8 1; regulating factors of, 8 165; regulating images and, 13 396; rejection of, 5 450; 6 83; and relationship, 17 326; is relative, 8 385 (see also below space-time relativity); and religion, 10 26; 14 193; religion as escape from, 1 1 7 1 ; religious aspect of, 7 4 7 1; 10 565; 18 1583; religious function in, 1 1 3; in religious persons, 10 563; repressed material in, 16 6 1; 17 i 9 9 a; and repression, 7 202/443; repudiation of, 7 472; in schizophrenia, is dreamlike, 18 832; scientific theories and, 16 478; and the sea, see sea s.v. symbol; secret o f opus in, 12 36 1; seeks to divide and unite, 1 1 7 4 o; self and, 9 ii 1; self in, birth of, 14 548; self latent in, 12 105n\ settlement with, 7 342; sexuality of, 16 533-4 ; significance of, 8 49 1, 494; 16 325; as skeleton in cupboard, 12 207; as “somatic,” 16 2 3 1;

soul’s relation to, 6 278-9, 420; space-time relativity of, 12 175, 2 4 7 » spatial and temporal relations in, 9 i 408; spectral world of, 18 759; spiral/circular movement of, 12 34, 129, 325; splitting off of, 7 195; spontaneous: manifestation of, 11 35; statements of, 13 24 1; symbolism of, 13 364; statements about it unverifiable, 8 4 1 7 ; stone as outcropping of, 13 289; as storehouse o f relics, 18 84; structure of, 13 5 1 , 90, 253; 18 4 > subconscious/superconscious, 12 175, 20 1, 397; subject and object merged in, 5 500; subject of, 8 369; subliminal material in, 7 203/ 4 4 4 ; and subliminal perceptions, 18 7 4 7 ; submission to, 1 1 273/2; suppression of, 6 82-3; supra-individual universality of, 5 258; suprapersonal, 10 13; surrender to, 5 675; symbol(s) and, 4 680; 6 182-3, 202; as exponent of, 6 204; spontaneous, 13 364; symbolic language of, 18 837; symbol(s) of, 5 26 1; 11 779; instances: black, 4 737;

water, see water s.v.; whale, 1 2 fig. 222;

symbol-producing, 18 603, 637; symbols representing, 1 1 8 10 ; and sympathetic system, 9 i 4 1; synthetic work of, 12 323; and telepathy, 8 8 13 ; tendencies of, 17 199; therapeutic approach to, 7 192-200; theriomorphism and, see theriomorphism s.v.; timelessness of, 16 529, 5 3 1 ; as “ total vision,” 1 1 897; transcendental, 12 175 ; transformation of, 1 1 854; transformation process in, 5 669; transpersonal, 7 103; a treasure-house o f lost memories, 18 747; treatment of, 14 274-5; turning away from, 16 149; two parts of, 8 588-9; 17 207; unconcern of, 7 346; underestimation of, 12 29 1; undifferentiated, 6 18 0 -1; unfavourable side of, 7 195; uniformity of, 5 258; uniting symbol in, 10 784; is universal, 5 258; unknowable, 14 7 10 ; as unknown in inner world, 9 ii 2; as unknown psychic, 8 382; as whale, 1 2 fig . 222; without qualities, 9 ii 298; o f woman, see above female; working out solution o f con­ flict, 5 1 1 7 ; worldwide human, 6 193; Wundt’s view of, 8 3 5 1 ; yoga and, 1 1 871

unconscious, collective, 4 (^302); 5 258/1, 447; 6 373, 383, 4 12 , 624,

C

1 1 3 . 12 3 * »50-3 > 22°> 23 *> 24 3 > 25 4 - 27 5 > 3 7 4 . 3 9 5 - 509-516 . 5 2°'> 8 2 30 -1, 254, 270, 3 1 1 - 1 2 , 589, 720; 9 i 3-5 , 262, 543, 552, 634, 7 1 1 ; 10 13 , 285, 447, 7 14 ; 12 3 1 , 38, 40, 42, 57, 68n, 8 1, 265, 329; 13 (p3), 44, 46, 218, 253, 287, 337n, 450, 4 8 1; 14 88, 93, 10 1, 107, 124, 128, 145, 257, 349, 372, 374, 4 10 , 744; 15 126, 152, 174; 16 15, 1 1 1 , 218 , 254, 470, 476, 502, 504, 530; 17 207; 18 84-5, 115 6 ;

t i t l e s : The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious, 9 i; “The Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious,” 7 1 4 1 - 9 1 ; “ Archetypes o f the Collective Unconscious,” 9 i 1-8 6 ; “The Concept o f the Collective Un­ conscious,” 9 i 8 7 - 1 10 ; “The Hypothesis o f the Collective Unconscious,” 18 12 2 3 -5 ; “The Personal and the Col­ lective (or Transpersonal) Unconscious,” 7 9 7 -12 0 ; activation of, 18 369, 372; adaptation to, 7 252; in alchemy, 16 5 3 1 ; and ancestral life, 7 1 18 ; anima/animus and, 5 500; 9 i 4 3 9 .5 18 ; archetypes of, 5 224; 9 i 88-90; 12 38, 42, 329; 14 10 1 , 107; 18 80, 1 1 1 7 ; and astrology, 8 325, 392; basis o f individual psyche, 8 3 2 1 ‘> brain and, 17 207-8; Catholics and, 8 338; in children, see children s.v. ; composition of, 7 520; contents of, 5 259; 6 625, 655; 7 153 , 220, 233, 387, 5 13 , 5 15 , 5 18 , 520; 8 325, 589; 18 79; ac­

8 5 9 5 ; definition of, 5 6 3 1; 9 i 88-90; 13 1 1 ; deposit o f ancestral experience, 8 729; diagnosis not always easy, 9 i 92; Dionysian state and, 6 230; discovery of, 18 1 1 3 1 ; dominants of, 7 377, 388; in dreams, 7 248; Elijah as, 18 1526; fantasies of, 7 372, 387; in Germans, 18 1322 ; and Gnosticism, 18 1480, 15 0 1; historical mirror-image o f world, 7 507; identical in all men, 9 i 3; images of, play positive role, 7 183; immortality of, 8 673; influence on individual psyche, 7 240, 269; inherited, 8 676; 9 i 90; irrepresentable, 8 840; and man a-personality, 7 377, 388; Mercurius as, see Mercurius s.v. unconscious, collective; as microcosm, 8 9 3 1; 1 1 373; mother as, 5 393; 12 92; and mutation o f dominant ideas, 18 1 16 1 ; and nations, 18 1330 ; patient’s, onslaught of, 18 354; and personal unconscious, see unconscious, personal s.v. and collective; poets and, 6 3 2 1-3 ; and primitive psychology, 18 1286, 1288; processes of, 18 5; in modern man, 13 (/?4); and mystics, 18 218;, projection of, 10 43; 13 277;

C

reaction from, 9 i 44; regulating influence of, 18 116 2 ; sea as, 12 57; 16 15 ; and self, as ruler of, 5 576; sheer objectivity, 9 i 46; soul and, 6 28 1; spirit in, 5 641; spiritualism and, 8 599; Spitteler and, 6 324; as sum o f instincts and ar­ chetypes, 8 28 1; symbolism in, 18 8 1; as totality o f archetypes, 18 1536; unconscious o f own contents, 8 674; understanding of, 7 253; unity of, 10 849; 16 254; why so called, 9 i 3; Zarathustra and, 6 322; see also unconscious s.v. imper­ sonal

unconscious, and conscious, 14 275; 17 102;

t i t l e s : “ Conscious and Uncon­ scious,” 8 3 8 1-7 ; “ Conscious, Unconscious, and Individua­ tion,” 9 i 489-524; ascendancy o f ucs. over cs., 5 681; assault o f ucs. on cs., 5 459; bringing together, 5 459; collaboration, 6 204; compensatory relationship, see unconscious s.v. compensatory; conflict and synthesis, 14 523; confrontation, 14 257, 294, 306; conscious view o f unconscious, 9 i 42; contamination of, 14 367; differentiation, 6 268; 1 1 64; dissociation between, see dis­ sociation s.v. ; equal status, 14 540;

integration of, 5 459; 16 5 3 1 ; invasion of cs. by ucs., 5 577, 6 16 - 17 , 683; necessity for connection be­ tween, 5 457, 463; in neurotic, 17 203; opposition between, 6 910 ; personality, 14 705; separation of, removed, 8 145; split between, 9 ii 390W; 13 48, 298; ucs. made cs., 14 258, 446, 498; union, 4 76 1; 5 6 14 ; 6 187; 11 285; 13 223; 14 364, 54 1, 593, 706, 770; 16 474; feminine personification of, 13 225 (see also unconscious, and conscious mind s.v. ; unconscious, and consciousness s.v.)

unconscious, and conscious mind, 12 23, 137 , 166, 192, 436/1, 452; 16 12 , 125-6 , 522; 17 195, 227;

attempts to abolish separation between, 12 174; collision, 16 533; compensatory relation, see un­ conscious s.v. compensatory; complementary relation be­ tween, 14 124; conflict of, see conflict s.v. ; conjunction, 5 672; descent o f cs. into ucs., 12 437; dialectic, 12 3; energy attracted by ucs. from cs., 5 6 7 1; fear o f ucs., 9 ii 355; forward striving checked by ucs., 5 458; and guidance, 15 1 14 ; influence o f ucs. on conscious mind, 15 1 14 , 123; invasion o f conscious mind, by ucs., 5 577, 6 16 - 17 ; mistrust between, 14 145; modification by ucs., 12 26; products of, 1 1 64;

ucs. as dustbin of, 18 468; ucs. as corrective, 16 12; union of, 12 59, 328 (see also unconscious, and conscious s. v .; unconscious, and consciousness s.v.)

unconscious, and consciousness, 1 1 665, 7 13 , 740, 745, 755; 12 516 ; 14 i8on, 195, 272, 3 2 1, 5 18 , 538, 660, 673, 758; 15 206-7; 16 6 1, 25 2» 5 ° 3 ; 17 26o> 262> 3 3 ^ ;

t i t l e s : “The Effects of the Un­ conscious upon Conscious­ ness,” 7 202-65; “The Uncon­ scious as a Multiple Conscious­ ness,” 8 388-96; collaboration, 18 54 1; comparison of energies, 18 75 1 - 2 ; compensatory, see unconscious s.v. compensatory; complementarity, 8 13 2 -3 , 385/1; 12 48; confrontation between, 14 364; consciousness as archetype of ucs., 14 50 1; consciousness rooted in/arises from ucs., 9 ii 57; 12 40; 14 1 17 ; 16 6 1; 18 15 ; consciousness surrounded by sea o f ucs., 18 754; development o f consciousness from ucs., 17 130; disintegrating effect o f ucs. on consciousness, 13 46; dissociation, 10 1008; endangering/menacing of con­ sciousness, by ucs., 9 i 260; 14 7 5 3 ; in Freud’s theory, 18 1223; in human personality, 1 1 66; independent and opposed, 18 1223; invasion of consciousness by ucs., 12 578cn, 74;

745; 14 627; matrix o f consciousness, 5 320: 17 102, 207; 18 115 6 , 1378, 1389; myth as bridge between, 14 7 5 i; as nonsense and sense, 18 602; as pair o f opposites, 7 16, 78; 1 1 755-6; 12 192; 14 127; rapprochement, 14 753; reciprocal, 10 634; relative importance of, 18 •585; reunion of, 1 1 445; separation of, 12 74; Sol/Luna as, see Sol and Luna; totality of, 14 520; ucs. conditions consciousness, 9 i 118 ; ucs. dependent on conscious­ ness, 10 8 3 1; ucs. not derivative o f con­ sciousness, 13 62; ucs. is fringe o f consciousness, 8 382; ucs. is mother o f consciousness, 9 i 50 1; 17 207; ucs. is multiple consciousness, 9 i 6 14 ; ucs. pregnant with conscious­ ness, 14 219 ; union of, 12 184; 14 2 1 1 , 5 18 , 736; 18 263, 269 (see also un­ conscious, and conscious s.v.; unconscious, and conscious mind s.v.)

unconscious, personal, 7 103, 218/ 449-50, 235/456, 243/464, 275, 387, 5 17 ; 8 270, 3 2 1, 397, 588; 9 i 3, 634; 10 10 - 12 ; 1 1 939; 12 38, 8 1, 83, 242n; 13 48 1; 16 65; 17 207, 209; 18 78, 115 9 , 1224;

Unconscious,” 7 97-120 ; analysis of, 7 247; autonomy of, 9 i 497, 500; cannot be swallowed, 9 i 5 2 1; and collective, 8 555, 588-9; 1 1 222, 4 19 , 944; 12 8 1; 14 257; distinction/border line, 7 123 ; 9 i 88; contents of, see unconscious contents s.v. personal; fantasies of, 9 i 290; and impersonal, 9 ii 12 , 261; a potential reality, 9 i 498; relative, 18 9 1, 1 1 3 ; shadow and, 5 26712, 393; 7 103&12; 9 i 44

unconscious contents, 5 78n, 272; 6 281, 295, 838-42; 7 5 1 1 - 1 3 , 5 15 - 18 ; 8 132 , 298, 352, 382, 589, 709; 10 8-9, 25; 1 1 637, 676, 897; 13 53, 108, 122; 14 3 12 , 404&W, 16 26-7, 357; 17 199a;

acquired, 7 205/446; activation of, 6 399; assimilation of, by conscious, see assimilation s.v. ; autonomous, 5 29cm; 7 233; 18 1223; behaviour of, 3 442-6; 8 254; breakthrough in Gnosticism, 6 30; collective, see above uncon­ scious, collective s.v. contents; constellation of, 5 450; 16 383; contamination of, 14 660; crossing into consciousness, 14 180, 193; dangerous alliance with, 6 458; deliberate evocation of, 8 156; dissociation of, from conscious, see dissociation s.v. o f conscious and unconscious; dreams and, 7 26; 8 477; o f ego, three groups, 9 ii 4, 12; emotionality of, 18 59 1;

essentially relative, 8 498; fascination of, 18 154; feeling relationship to, 16 489; feeling-toned, 6 201; fish as, see a n i m a l s : fish; in Freud’s theory, see Freud s.v. ; god as, 5 349; impersonal, 7 205; infantile, 7 2 1 , 27, 202/443; infantile material in, 5 276; integration of, into conscious­ ness, see integration s.v. o f un­ conscious contents; irrational, 14 306, 672; and man’s totality, 9 ii 216 ; nature of, 16 126, 3 5 1 ; numinous, 12 448; object and, 6 216 ; origin of, 18 i486; overpowering o f consciousness by, 12 437; personal, 7 103, 118 , 202/443, 384, 387; 17 207; 18 1 12 , 1 1 3 ; physical symptoms and, 14 3 18 ; power of, 6 305; projection of, see projection s.v. ; reality of, 6 279-80; reflected in nature, 5 i7on; religious, 6 325; “ representedness” of, 8 352; as repressed wishes, 7 202/443; repression of, by conscious mind, 17 199a; soul as personification of, 6 420-1

unconsciousness, 7 23, 290 -1; 9 i 485; 12 7, 3 1 , 123, 189, 259, 437, 557* 563; 13 1 18 , 163, 210 , 22 1, 24 1, 244, 332, 36m , 393; 14 627n, 742; 15 122; 17 146;

artificial, 14 672; bestial, 13 1 3 1 ;

in civilization, 18 9 1; difficulty of giving up, 17 146; o f educator, 17 155; as egoless, 9 i 492; general and secondary, 5 262; and hysterical dissociation, 3 500; introversion into, 6 186; Jewish, and Aryan, 10 353; and the Logos, 9 i 178; o f mass man, 10 150; mutual, 18 322; o f doctor and patient, 16 364, 367; nigredo as, 14 696; original psychic distress, 9 i 288; original sin, 4 730; original state of, 5 652; 7 329; 18 262; overcoming of, 13 449; partial, 17 325; primitive, 13 66; primitive man’s victory over, 5 248; primordial, 14 660; 17 2 1 1 ; and proneness to suggestion, 9 ii 39on; sin of, 9 i 455; 9 ii 299^ 10 676; Sophia sunk in, 13 454; symbolized by pig, 9i 644; through mutual contamina­ tion, see contamination s.v. ; transformation of, 14 82; as treasure, 18 263; Way of, 16 223; woman’s, 10 242, 245

unconscious processes, 5 (pxxv), 670, 674; 7 272, 292, 342; 8 296; 13(^56); 1 5 8 i; 16 365; 18 75-6;

in alchemy, 16 399; symbolism of, 9 ii 278; as basis o f consciousness, 3 56; centralizing, 12 325, 327, 564; compensatory to conscious, 6 843; 9 ii 320; 18 115 6 ; and energy, 8 29;

and religious experience, 1 1 555; . splitting off from conscious­ ness, 15 207; symbolism of, 1 1 779; teleological character of, 18 1 15 6

uncontrollable natural forces/acts o f God, 9 ii 48-51

Uncreated, the, see Increatum “under,” motif of, 12 69-70, 148 “ underlying,” 8 965 “understand,” etymology of, 5 682 understanding, 4 436; 5 14; 7 184,

399, 406, 46 1; 12 59, 350; 13 118 , 27 7 > 3 9 1 ’ 424, 436, 477;

aesthetic formulation of, 8 177; in alchemy, 12 366, 38 1, 382, 4 42 ,564 ; causal, 3 392-6; child’s need of, 17 222; constructive, 3 39 1, 406-8; by doctor, 1 1 498-9, 5 18 ; and patient, 16 3 12 ; 17 173; Eastern, 13 2; o f fantasies, 7 342, 353; intellectual, 7 342, 344; 13 332, 482; limitations of, 8 468; intuitive, 17 198; Keyserling and, 10 941; and knowledge, 10 495, 532; objective, see below subjective; “poison” of, 7 129; prospective, 3 39 1, 397; psychological, 7 50 1, 502; 13 73; between East and West, 13 83; reductive, 7 342; retrospective, 3 39 1, 397; scientific, 13 1, 195; spiritual, 13 429; subjective, 3 394; and objec­ tive, 3 395-7, 4 16 ; o f unconscious, collective, 7 253;

438 ,figs. 69, 15 1 ; dragon chained in, 13 290; Egyptian, 5 566; gods of, 9 ii 3 5 1 ; imprisonment in, 14 3 16 ; journey to, 5 449, 572, 654; life in, 5 634; psychic, 18 58 1; and upper world, 5 449w; and water, 18 259, 2 7 1; see also darkness; Hades

undifferentiated unconscious state, 5 650

unemployed, in Germany, 10 373, 420

Unesco (United Nations Educa­ tional, Scientific, and Cultural Organization), Second General Conference, 18 (/>6o6n);

J . ’s memorandum to, 18 1388-1402 ; Royaumont Conference, 18 (/>6o6n)

unfaithfulness, in marriage, 17 334 Uniate rites, 11 3 1m unicellular organisms, psychic func­

tion and, 8 233 unicorn, see a n i m a l s s.v. unificationfherwsis, 13 357, 358 uniformity, psychic, 8 228, 436 unifying function, see function s.v. unigenituSy 10 7 5 1; 12 458, 5 2 1;

Mercurius as, 13 283; see also Monogenes

unio: mentalisl mental union, 14 663-6, 670, 674, 679, 682-7, 69°* 694-5, 707, 7 1 1 , 722, 730, 742, 7 4 7 * 752, 757-9 * 7 7 3 ^

mysticay 54 38 ; 14 208, 634, 767, 7 7 1 ; 16 35 4 . 4 1 9 . 462 . 5 2 5 . 5 3 2 (see also marriage, divine/ mystic); naturalis, 14 696

union, 7 156; 13 446; alchemical, 16 509; o f ele­ ments, 16 4 5 1; of king and son,

of conscious and unconscious, see unconscious, and conscious s.v. ; o f consciousness/life, 13 29, 36; o f dissimilars, 12 433; with feminine personification of unconscious, 13 225, 226; o f God and man, 11 427; 13 30 m; and matter, 16 38 1; hermaphroditic, see hermaph­ rodite; of irreconcilables, 12 186, fig. 72; of like and like, 12 435, 496; with mother, 5 398, 500, 640; mystic, 5 438; of nature and spiritual man, 13 1 9 4 ; of natures, in alchemy, 13 198; 14 654; o f opposites, see opposites, union of; of persons in Trinity, 13 357 (see also Trinity s.v. unity); with self, 13 3 3 1 ; o f sexes, 12 fig. 60; with shadow, 13 435; with soul, 13 193; o f soul and body, 12 418 , 462, 500; symbolism o f cross as, see cross s.v. ; o f tree and snake, 13 fig. 12; o f water and fire, 12 figs. 72, 160; 13 3 10 ; see also unio s.v. mystka

uniped(s), 14 pis. 4, 5, 6; see also Monocolus

uniqueness, 8 82 1; individual, not always an asset, H 2 5 6

United Kingdom, 10 601; see also England

United Nations Educational, Scien­ tific, and Cultural Organization, see Unesco

828; 8 39671; 9 i 285, 293, 523&T*; 9 ii 304; 10 734, 774, 784; 1 1 39677, 7 12 , 727, 738; 12 404&77, 553* 557; 14 669, 707; 16 4 5 1, 462, 474, 533;

t i t l e s : “The Significance o f the Uniting Symbol,” 6 3 18 -7 4 ; “The Uniting Symbol in Spitteler,” 6 434-60; in alchemy, 9 i 523; Brah manic conception of, 6 3 3 1 - 4 7 ; in Chinese philosophy, 6 3587o; dragon as, 12 460; in Indian religion, 6 348-57; Mercurius as, see Mercurius s.v. ; of self, 8 396; self as, 10 779; in the unconscious, 10 784

unity, 4 556; 8 927; 9 i 430; 9 ii 59, 60, 64; 10 299; 12 165; 13 40, 226;

in alchemy, 1 1 353; 12 3 1 9fig. 2 5 1; 14 760; absolute, in Kircher’s system, 9 ii 4 17 ; o f ar­ cane substance/arcanum, see arcane substance s.v.; o f Mer­ curius, see Mercurius s.v. unity; transcendent, 16 454; — stone as, 9 ii 264; archetypes and, see archetypes s.v. ; circle as symbol of, 12 165; of conscious psyche, 1 1 443; o f consciousness, see conscious­ ness s.v. ; o f cosmos, 1 1 440; and diversity, 16 400; d iv in e , 1 2 3 1 ; i n G o d , 13 2 0 9 7 7; o f God and man, 11 177 ; and w o r l d , 11 2 0 1 ; of individual, and release o f in­

33* 36 , 43; longing for, 17 334; mandala as symbol of, 12 32; o f mankind, 10 568; mystical, in Mass, 11 378; o f nature, 8 865; original/primordial, 11 445; 13 334* 456; and quaternity, as opposites, 10 774; self as archetype of, 12 30; symbol of, 9 ii 59; mandala as, 1 2 3 2 (see also uniting symbol); as symbol o f the self, 9 ii 358; synthesis o f four as, 12 165, 2 10

universal, 7 241/462; association-chain, see association-chain(s) s.v.; being, 13 59; and individual, 16 2-4; man, 16 2; midpoint, 13 349; myth-motifs, see myth(s) s.v. motifs

universality o f collective psyche, 7 240

Universal Mind, 11 759-60, 768, 782-4

universals/universalia, 6 4 0 - 1, 6872, 473* 508; 7 5 °6 ; 8 4w; 149; 13 378; 14 63077;

t i t l e : “ The Problem o f Uni­ versal,” 6 40-95; and “clash o f temperaments” in philosophy, 6 508; Plato and, 6 56-9; 11 770; see also Abelard; flatus vocis

universe: fantasies o f antiquity re, 5 24;

opus a model of, 12 214 ; threefold and fourfold, 1 2 fig. 1; unobstructed, 18 753; see also world

0 0

S —

10 1070

unjust steward, parable of, 13 292 unknowable, the, 1 1 4 17 unknown: ego and, 9 ii 2;

fear of, 17 146; methods o f investigating, 17

173" 4;two groups o f objects in, 9 ii 2; woman, see woman s.v.