Attitude is one of Jung's 57 definitions in Chapter XI of Cerebral Types. Jung's analogue of attitude is a "readiness of the anima to act or acknowledge in a assertive way" (Jung, 1921 1971:par. 687). Attitudes actual generally appear in pairs, one acquainted and the added unconscious. Within this ample analogue Jung defines several attitudes.
The capital (but not only) attitude dualities that Jung defines are the following.
Alertness and the unconscious. The "presence of two attitudes is acutely frequent, one acquainted and the added unconscious. This agency that alertness has a afterlife of capacity altered from that of the unconscious, a duality decidedly axiomatic in neurosis" (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 687).
Extraversion and introversion. This brace is so elementary to Jung's approach of types that he labeled them the "attitude-types".
Rational and aberrant attitudes. "I accept acumen as an attitude" (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 785).
The rational attitude subdivides into the cerebration and activity cerebral functions, anniversary with its attitude.
The aberrant attitude subdivides into the analysis and intuition cerebral functions, anniversary with its attitude. "There is appropriately a archetypal thinking, feeling, sensation, and automatic attitude" (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 691).
Individual and amusing attitudes. Many of the closing are "isms".
In addition, Jung discusses the abstruse attitude. “When I yield an abstruse attitude...” (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 679). Abstraction is assorted with concretism. “CONCRETISM. By this I beggarly a abnormality of cerebration and activity which is the antipode of abstraction” (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 696). For example: "I abhorrence his attitude for getting Sarcastic."
The capital (but not only) attitude dualities that Jung defines are the following.
Alertness and the unconscious. The "presence of two attitudes is acutely frequent, one acquainted and the added unconscious. This agency that alertness has a afterlife of capacity altered from that of the unconscious, a duality decidedly axiomatic in neurosis" (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 687).
Extraversion and introversion. This brace is so elementary to Jung's approach of types that he labeled them the "attitude-types".
Rational and aberrant attitudes. "I accept acumen as an attitude" (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 785).
The rational attitude subdivides into the cerebration and activity cerebral functions, anniversary with its attitude.
The aberrant attitude subdivides into the analysis and intuition cerebral functions, anniversary with its attitude. "There is appropriately a archetypal thinking, feeling, sensation, and automatic attitude" (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 691).
Individual and amusing attitudes. Many of the closing are "isms".
In addition, Jung discusses the abstruse attitude. “When I yield an abstruse attitude...” (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 679). Abstraction is assorted with concretism. “CONCRETISM. By this I beggarly a abnormality of cerebration and activity which is the antipode of abstraction” (Jung, 1921 1971: par. 696). For example: "I abhorrence his attitude for getting Sarcastic."
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