| Question 1: The snake in the dream does not become something else: it is none of the things Hillman mentioned, and neither is it a penis, as Hillman says Freud might have maintained, nor the serpent from the ________, as Hillman thinks Jung might have mentioned. | |||
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| Question 2: biological psychology, ________, cognitive psychology) that have adopted a natural scientific philosophy and praxis. | |||
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| Question 3: Influential artists, poets, philosophers, alchemists, and psychologists include: Nietzsche, ________, Keats, Shelley, Petrarch, and Paracelsus. | |||
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Question 4: Psychosocial
development ________ Preconscious Unconscious Psychic apparatus Id, ego, and super-ego Libido Drive Transference Countertransference Ego defenses Resistance Projection |
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| Question 5: He replaces the notion of growing up, with the myth of growing down from the ________ into a messy, confusing earthy world. | |||
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| Question 6: Instead the book suggests for a reconnection with what is invisible within us, our ________ or soul or acorn and the acorn's calling to the wider world of nature. | |||
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| Question 7: The main influence on the development of archetypal psychology is ________'s analytical psychology. | |||
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Question 8: Lacanian ________ Interpersonal Relational |
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| Question 9: Hillman's archetypal psychology is, along with the classical and developmental schools, one of the three schools of post-Jungian psychology outlined by ________ (see Samuels, 1995). | |||
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| Question 10: Jung and his followers, as well as ________, imagined the psychology of the archetypes from studying anthropology and archeology reports of their times, and weaving it into their understandings of the psyche. | |||
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