67th
Annual Conference
Thursday, February 25
Afternoon
Workshops
2:30 - 5:00 P.M.
Workshop
27
Analytical Psychology
and Spirituality: Finding Meaning in Group Experience
Chair:
Stephanie Fariss, JD, LCSW, CGP,
Co-Director, Clinical Training Program
in Analytical Psychology, C.G. Jung Institute of Chicago, Chicago,
Illinois
Jung’s
“sense of the sacred” in his model of the psyche is the idea that
powerful spiritual energies exist in the unconscious that are beyond
ego awareness and control. This workshop will explore how an
experience of these energies in group therapy may lead to an
expansion of consciousness and a meaningful perspective on life.
didactic-experiential-demonstration-sharing of work
experiences
Learning
Objectives:
The attendee will
be able to:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of how
spirituality, as conceptualized by Analytical Psychology, can lead
to an expansion of consciousness in both the individual and group.
2. Describe how
Jung’s concept of the “religious function” of the psyche and the
experience of the “numinous” is critical to the process of
individuation.
3. Understand how
the belief in “the unbroken wholeness of the universe” as espoused
by David Bohm, Wolfgang Goethe and Carl Jung is related to group
experience.
Course References:
Casement, A. &
Tacey, D. (Eds.) (2006).
The idea of the numinous: Contemporary
Jungian and psychoanalytic perspectives. New York: Routledge.
Fariss, S. (in
press). The social unconscious and the collective unconscious: The
Jungian perspective. In Hopper, E. & Weinberg, H. (Eds.) The
social unconscious: Persons, small and large groups, families,
organizations and societies. London: Karnac.
Ulanov, A.B. (2007).
The unshuttered heart:
Opening aliveness/deadness in the Self. Nashville, TN: Abingdon
Press. |