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Generational Attention: Remembering How to Be a People
Author(s) -
Peter T. Dunlap
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of jungian scholarly studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1920-986X
DOI - 10.29173/jjs51s
Subject(s) - humanity , politics , naturalism , feeling , psychology , analytical psychology , function (biology) , sociology , environmental ethics , aesthetics , social psychology , psychoanalysis , epistemology , political science , art , law , philosophy , evolutionary biology , biology
In the aftermath of World War I C. G. Jung responded to the destruction wrought by humankind by imagining humanity as a single, semi-conscious being. Jung imagines a naturalistic God capable of helping us remember how to be a people by using an awareness of all of human history to guide the species’ decision-making. As a psychologist I use Jung’s image to cultivate this “generational attention” in progressive political groups, particularly helping them cultivate the “public emotional intelligence” necessary to bind themselves to one another as a human community. Today the Jungian community can contribute to the articulation of a uniquely Jungian political psychology by following this image and by integrating a more differentiated feeling function in our organizations as we go.

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