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We feel cultural foundations we have relied upon are upended: polarization, violent projections, anxiety abound. Have we access now to truth? Gifts psyche offers are creative gestures, found in energy from recalling projections, from exploring integrative projections, from locality and naming, and in new forms of communication and of liberation from destructive complexes.
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
This presentation will begin with a brief history of the origins and development of Jung’s notions of synchronicity and the psychoid. Complexity and field theories will then be used to contemporize these ideas. Examples of synchronistic phenomena from the presenter’s practice will be explored using this approach. Further selected examples from the history of culture (especially where artisans or artists were able to represent profound knowledge of highly-complex natural phenomena well ahead of any scientific understanding) indicating the reality of psychoid fields will be offered.
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
Cultural identities and narratives have an essential impact on the self concepts of nations and their political behavior. In times of social media with mass manipulation, with reactivated enemy projections and digital anesthesia regarding war or ecocide, we see a revival of archaic archetypal patterns threatening the basics of democracy. Analytical Psychology can contribute to a better understanding of these dynamics and become a resource for inner balance.
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
As Jungian analysts from Japan and the Philippines, we aim to highlight that the individuation process in East Asian cultures occurs differently and appears differently from what Jung suggested. In East Asia, individuation does not necessarily mean becoming an individual who differentiates him/herself from others. Rather, becoming conscious of being both an individual and a part of the collective, as well as striving for both individual and collective growth, is a more central concern. This lecture seeks to enrich the imaginative and creative space surrounding what the individuation process could be.
The lecture will be followed by a 15-minute Q&A session. Suggested reading for the lecture is the soon-to-be- published volume, The Self, Individuation, Communitas: Reflections on Fundamental Values in Analytical Psychology, edited by Murray Stein and Emilija Kiehl (Chiron Publications).
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
This presentation highlights and explores in depth two themes: the role of the productive imagination and the particularly analytical concepts of relationship – for the unconscious, between analyst and analysand, and for the individual in society. Jungian psychology, uniquely, initiates a dialogue between the reproductive and the productive imagination modeled in alchemy. Similarly, a creative dialogic relationship with the unconscious is fostered through the analytical process. Both imagination and relationship form healing modalities for the individual and for their role in society.
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
This lecture will describe how an inner authoritarian system of dissociative defenses, typical of traumatized individuals, compromises the democratic nature of the psyche and tyrannizes it with fearful authoritarian “voices.” When a culture suffers traumatic anxiety, the same authoritarian system structures its cultural narrative and leads to the extremism and polarization we see today in the West.
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
The psyche is a self-regulating system. So, too, is nature. What happens to the psyche when nature is no longer self-regulating? What happens to the natural world when the psyche is no longer self-regulating? What does the possible demise of the natural world constellate in the psyche, and what role might analytical psychology play when considering this outcome?
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
Jung said dreams are symbolic communications from the Self, compensating for the conscious attitude, arising from the collective unconscious, the place where the Unus Mundus – the world soul – speaks, as seen in Wolfgang Pauli’s dream of the world clock (which developed his thinking about the structure of the atom).
Our minds form symbols using the executive network, the salience network, and the default mode network. Dreams develop empathy, memory and creativity, and connect us to the spiritual life of our planet through the transcendent function.
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
This course explores how Babylonian and Norse creation myths reveal deep psychological truths about trauma, consciousness, and the human struggle for order. Drawing from modern neuroscience and depth psychology, we examine how these ancient narratives foreshadow the brain’s response to crisis and power dynamics. With rising global autocracy, we analyze why societies turn to authoritarian figures, repeating mythic cycles of destruction and renewal in history and politics. We will also explore individuation as a counterforce, fostering awareness and resilience against collective regression.
We will look at the reflections of the pioneers of Art Brut. We will discuss the art works, the lives and personalities of some Art Brut/Outsider Art artists and examine how their art expresses their suffering and the existential meaning their art had in their lives.
What are the attitudes and skills required of the Jungian psychotherapist when working with drawings and paintings in the analytic setting?
Through the symbolism of a strange animal and one of the seven sins, this lecture explores the nature of regression, depression, introversion, and their role in the ego’s relationship with the Self.
Tarantismo was an archaic ritual practice involving music, dance, colors, and a variety of symbols, used to heal women of a mythical spider bite. It was a mythical spider because only in rare cases had these women been bitten by an actual arachnid, even if most insisted that they had. The lecture will examine the symbolic meaning of the bite and its ritual healing, and explore the power of the ecstatic dance and its ancient Greek and Christian roots.
In this lecture the motif of the false bride will be explored through fairy tale and legend. How do we recognize and address the true and false brides within our clients and ourselves? Are these constructs still pertinent to us in a world of expanding sex and gender roles and freedom of expression? And if so, what implications might they offer for a richer and more integrated inner and outer marriage?
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
I will illustrate how complexes function using the example of giants in fairy tales. I will include a thorough review of the Word Association Experiment (if needed) and the dynamic structures of the psyche as they are involved in complexes and their activation. For me complex theory is one of the most practical and useful of Jung’s insights. I will give many clinical examples of how complexes work and how to deal with them. As a couples therapist for 15 years, I found this approach one of the most powerful tools for the couples themselves. I will also look at neuroscience as a central aspect of psychiatry that substantiates Jung’s theories.
I explain how the autonomous animus ‘function’ is both the drive to spiritual development as well as a requirement for mental health in order to create and be active/recognized in the world. The larger issue of how to work in the analytic process with gender is also important here. I will be looking at the question of understanding why gender is so central in our biological psyche and essential for our work on the dynamics of psychic energy. It promotes psychological health as well as individuation.
ISAP was given the original pictures made by David Blum when he faced terminal illness. David sought guidance and solace from his dreams and visions by painting them and engaging with the images through active imagination. The pictures speak to the joys, struggles, emotional turmoil, suffering, and wisdom David experienced. What insights and inspiration can this case study offer on healing and transformation in the journey unto death?
This lecture is the culmination of an extensive collaboration between an architect and an analyst. I will present the story of Jung’s tower as it is represented in Jungian literature along with an architectural understanding of the place. This lecture will review the history of the tower, its meaning to Jung and its meaning as Jung’s “confession of faith in stone.”
A panel of four analysts (Dariane Pictet, Deborah Egger, Paul Brutsche and Bernard Sartorius) speak to the question from their own perspective and from their experience and interests. This will be followed by a time for discussion among the panelists and with the audience. The discussion is moderated by Murray Stein.
Location: Psychology Club Zürich, Gemeindestrasse 27
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
At the end of the Septem Sermones ad Mortuos, we find a beautiful hymn, a poignant prayer to the one single Star in the zenith, to the one guiding God. “To this one God man shall pray... To him all love and worship is due.” It is your God, the true origin of life. This lecture will explore various passages in the Black Books and The Red Book which actually herald the dawn of a new stellar consciousness. The sun is no longer the primary symbol of the Self; rather it is the star. The sun has entered the underworld, the nocturnal world of the unconscious. This is the place of renewal.
Location: Psychology Club Zürich, Gemeindestrasse 27
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
The astrological sign of Aquarius represents a human figure pouring water from a jug into the mouth of a fish. C.G. Jung calls this figure Anthropos, an image of the greater human being in us, or, we might say, the collective unconscious or “everything human” in us. The Anthropos embraces the opposites of the human psyche and is the origin of the human capacity for empathy and relatedness as well as the emotional brutality and fanaticism of mass man in our time. For Jung the union of opposites was a lifelong concern.
Location: Psychology Club Zürich, Gemeindestrasse 27
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
This lecture provides a comprehensive review of Jung’s theory of autonomous complexes, exploring their structure, function, and impact on the psyche. Complexes operate independently of the ego, influencing perception, behavior, and emotional states. Using Rumi’s “Guest House” as a metaphor, we will examine how these psychic entities shape experience and how awareness of them can lead to greater psychological differentiation. Through a detailed exploration of Jung’s writings, this lecture offers a deeper understanding of the complex as a fundamental mechanism of the psyche.
30 years ago, Zürich suffered a collective trauma: “The Needle Park.” In a short historical overview, we will look at the challenges and changes on the collective level as well as my experiences as an addiction therapist.
Sexuality remains a sensitive topic that is often avoided in psychotherapy. Many individuals feel uncertain or fearful about their sexual attractions. In this workshop we confront this avoidance by addressing various paraphilias including the delicate issue of paedophilia (that can especially lead to harmful situations). We will look at the development of paraphilias, explore their Jungian symbolism, and learn how to work with clients (of every gender) suffering from these attractions in a non- judgmental manner. Join us as we tackle this challenging yet crucial aspect of therapeutic practice.
Is moral development falling into the collective shadow? In light of what Jung had to say about the development of conscience, we will examine the work of Lawrence Kohlberg (1927–1987) on moral development and education; this work was influenced by Piaget and critiqued by Carol Gilligan. I will supplement the topic with findings from neuroscience.
Despite all the gifts of our intellectual education, many of us have become profoundly disconnected from our bodies. Have you ever wondered why the term “vulva energy” is not as commonly used in psychoanalytic discourse as “phallic energy”? How can we navigate both our inner and outer worlds simultaneously—and truly expand?
Longing played a crucial role for Jung: “Yearning is the way of life. If you do not acknowledge your yearning, then [...] you do not live your life.” (Red Book, pp. 249–250). Longing was also essential for many medieval mystics, e.g. John of the Cross, Teresa of Ávila, Meister Eckhart and Rumi. The lecture will explore the nature of longing and its significance for individuation and spiritual development, through the writings of various mystics as well as of Jung.
This lecture offers an introduction to mysticism, with examples from Christianity and other world religions. Evelyn Underhill’s classical definition of mysticism implies a “surrender... to ultimate Reality... from an instinct of love” (Mysticism, 1911).
Jung wrote his major work Mysterium Coniunctionis about the alchemical union, the “central mystical experience of enlightenment ... aptly symbolized by Light in most of the numerous forms of mysticism” (CW XI, §828). A second lecture, which follows in spring 2026, will study the relationship between Jungian psychology and mysticism and its relevance in analysis.
This myth of the Bush People tells how their deity Mantis creates the eland antelope—the most important food source to satisfy the basic hunger instinct. Yet Mantis is cast out by his family, causing him utmost anger, even suicidal melancholy. But a crucial moment forces him out of his solitude toward what Jung calls an archetypal image: he creates the Moon—the eternal symbol of death and rebirth—bringing light into darkness, consciousness into unconsciousness. His reflected light becomes an expression of what Jung calls “the instinct of reflection,” “the cultural instinct par excellence.”
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)
The lectures take a Jungian look at the Germanic cosmology, the main gods and the end of time. We will speak about neglected Germanic female and male archetypes and the consequences of cultural repression and mythological illiteracy. I will explain how the old Germanic culture created an unrecognised precondition of the modern world. I will develop the concept of cultural ecology, emphasizing Germanic female archetypes. And I will show how Odin’s self-sacrifice designates him to become the wounded healer par excellence and the archetypal image for the Analytical Psychologist.
This lecture will present some important aspects and examples of the traditional shamanic worldview from cultures around the globe. What do they have in common with Analytical Psychology? According to C.G. Jung, “shamanistic symbolism [...] is a projection of the individuation process.” Citing Mircea Eliade, Jung held that during the shamanic trance, shamans find their true self. The shamanic trance is similar to Jung’s Active Imagination.
(priority is given to questions from the live audience)