The mind beyond our immediate awareness: Freudian, Jungian, and cognitive models of the unconscious

Author: Soren R. Ekstrom1

Source: Journal of Analytical Psychology, Volume 49, Number 5, November 2004 , pp. 657-682(26)

Publisher: Blackwell Publishing

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Abstract:

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Several branches of cognitive science now focus on the nature of the unconscious. This paper explores some of the findings and models from this research. By introducing formulations based on non-clinical data, the cognitive scientists—in neural linguistics, computational modelling, and neuroscience—may depart from the older psychoanalytic formulations. An understanding of unconscious neural processes is nevertheless emerging showing how synapses are modified by experience and how learning, conscious and unconscious, is due to this important aspect of brain plasticity. Freud and Jung's formulations about the unconscious psyche, representing the main tenets of depth psychology, are also based on a conception of the mind as extending beyond immediate awareness. However, their models are more hypothetical in that their data, almost exclusively, come from treatments of psychotherapy patients and their verbal accounts. So how do these two conceptions of the unconscious match, where do they differ? And how does the neural understanding in the present research support theories and practices of analytic treatments?

Keywords: cognitive science; computational modelling; depth psychology; learning; metaphor; narratives; neural linguistics; neural integration; synaptic plasticity; unconscious

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1111/j.0021-8774.2004.00494.x

Affiliations: 1: Watertown, MA, USA

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