By Ryan Smith, Eva Gregersen, and Sigurd Arild
Earlier in 2015 the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association (JPA) hosted a seminar dedicated to Jungian typology. The following article is a short commentary on the two most substantial lectures given at that seminar, namely Ernst Falzeder’s Types of Truth: Jung’s Philosophical Roots and John Beebe’s Individuating the Types. The present review will leave out the remaining lectures, which were not of the same general importance to the theory of psychological types.
Review of Falzeder – ‘Types of Truth’
Falzeder then quotes Jung on the matter of how Jung’s engagement with philosophy supposedly distinguished his epistemological stance from Freud’s:
“Every psychology – my own included – has the character of a subjective confession.” – Jung: Freud and Psychoanalysis §774
“I consider my contribution to psychology to be my subjective confession.” – Jung: Analytical Psychology (Routledge 2014) p. 102
An interesting dictum, to be sure, if it wasn’t for the fact that it was not Jung who came up with it at all, but rather Nietzsche:
“Gradually it has become clear to me what every great philosophy so far has been … the confession of its author and a kind of involuntary and unconscious memoir.” – Nietzsche: Beyond Good and Evil §6
On neither of the occasions quoted above did Jung credit or even reference Nietzsche (whom he had certainly read) as the source of this aphorism. Like the way Jung refurbished ideas from Indian philosophy without duly crediting the origins of these ideas (Coward 1985), Jung merely paraphrases Nietzsche and then passes the insight off as his own. What is annoying about the state of Jung scholarship and licensed Jungians in general is that one so often sees this kind of fawning over a supposedly Jungian idea that was quite plainly appropriated from other sources without due credit given (not that we propose to hold Falzeder responsible for this state of affairs). For example, it is quite unlikely that such intellectual appropriation would be allowed to stand unchallenged in an auditorium full of Kant scholars, Nietzsche scholars, or even orthodox Freudians. And yet this type of thing happens again and again in seminars and books on Jung. As the historian of psychology Richard Noll (as well as other scholars) have hinted, many Jungians are not interested in philosophy, critical thought, or anything “intellectual,” but in a sort of modern-day mythos to which Jung is their entry point (and their only entry point). As a result, the history of thought and science tends to get “mythologized” as well – a procedure that comes at the expense of clear-minded scrutiny.
Falzeder then seizes upon the problem of the lack of an ”Archimedean point” in psychology: Since every appraisal of psychic phenomena involves the psyche itself, there is no objective “ground zero,” but only the psyche analyzing itself from various perspectives. Falzeder correctly traces the source of this conundrum (and Jung’s proposed solutions to it) back to his fondness for Schopenhauer (and ultimately Kant), but unfortunately Falzeder does not then use the genealogy to engage with the question of whether Jung was effectively a relativist and/or solipsist, as other scholars have claimed (Nagy 1991). Instead, Falzeder makes a point of juxtaposing Schopenhauer’s idea about gaining an ineffable type of access to the thing-in-itself with the Jungian idea of making extra-empirical contact with the archetype of the self. However, the source of this idea is not traced back to its ultimate Indian roots, which Jung can again be demonstrated to have read (Psychological Types §329).
Falzeder also engages with the question of Jung’s personal type, to which end he produces a quote from Jung, describing the Introverted Intuitive type. By altering the quote so as to make Jung speak in the first person pronoun (“I am…” instead of “the Introverted Intuitive type is…”) Falzeder proposes to make us see how close Jung’s own words about the Introverted Intuitive type come to describing his own psychology. The conjecture that Jung was an Introverted Intuitive type will of course encounter no resistance from us, but Falzeder then proceeds to say: “Jung so often portrayed himself as an Introverted Intuitive type, whether he was one or not, that I think we are justified in applying this description to himself.” And in our opinion, this type of reasoning is problematic for several reasons:
- If Jung “so often” described himself as an Introverted Intuitive type, then why are there no documented episodes of him actually doing so? Why does one need to purposefully alter his words in order to produce a supporting quote?
- If Jung thought of himself as an Introverted Intuitive, then why did he always – again and again – say that he was an Introverted Thinking type?
In our opinions at least, the justification for assessing someone’s type is not whether that person refers to himself as a given type, but whether analysis actually points to the person being that type. Quite conversely, it is not because Jung said he was an Introverted Intuitive type that we are justified in concluding that he was one, but because the vast majority of experts, all working on the basis of vastly different approaches to type, have ended up concluded that Introverted Intuition fits Jung better than Introverted Thinking (and besides – Jung never said he was an Introverted Intuitive type anyway). In our opinions, Jung was simply wrong about his own type, and it is vexing to see Jungians attempting to skirt around that fact.
Falzeder then proceeds to speak about Jung’s ambiguous writing style, which has led many writers and thinkers to conclude that Jung tended to contradict himself and muddle his arguments to the point of incomprehensibility. However, Falzeder does not give us much in the way of his personal opinion on the matter, but mostly concerns himself with reporting the predicament from Jung’s point of view. Because he does not offer much of an appraisal of his own, Falzeder’s presentation comes across as quite obliging or non-committal. On the other hand, Falzeder quotes Jung’s associate Marie-Louise von Franz to say that Jung’s ambiguity was like the Buddha’s, in that many of the things he said were true on two levels. Likewise, Falzeder also quotes von Franz to say that Jung’s writings had to be ambiguous because Jung was writing about paradoxical, unconscious matters. In both cases, however, it seems that von Franz was not quite aware of how unfavorable this comparison with the Buddha really is to Jung. The Buddha did indeed speak on two levels through the facility of skillful means, with the result being that both sages and laypeople thought he spoke clearly. With Jung, it is possible that he also spoke on two levels, but in any case the verifiable result was that both scholars and ordinary people tend to feel that he is being long-winded and opaque. Even von Franz herself is quoted to say that “he does not write very clearly.” In the same way, anyone who claims that it is not possible to write clearly and in a logically coherent manner on paradoxical and ineffable matters has clearly not read such classics of Buddhist thought as Nagarjuna’s Fundamental Verses on the Middle Way or Stcherbatsky’s Buddhist Logic.
Finally, in what is perhaps the lecture’s most novel contribution, Falzeder explores Jung’s unpublished notes on typology from the ETH Lectures. On the basis of these notes, Falzeder draws up a new typology that Jung supposedly drew on the blackboard during one of these lectures. Falzeder then contends that there are really four typologies that can all be grouped under the heading of Jungian typology:
- Association experiments in normal people, conducted with Franz Riklin (1903-1904): Findings reveal that some people react with internal-subjective associations to stimuli and others with external-objective ones, leading to two easily recognizable types.
- The two-functions-two-orientations scheme, which Jung explored with Hans Schmid-Guisan (1913-1916): Introversion is linked with Thinking and Extroversion is linked with Feeling. The possibility that there is such a thing as an Introverted Feeling function as well as talk of an Intuitive function are explicitly (and sometimes angrily) rejected by Jung.
- The two orientations (Extroversion and Introversion) and four functions (Sensation, Intuition, Thinking, and Feeling) scheme, which we all know from Psychological Types (1921): Much of the book (and/or the insights featured therein) were supposedly contributed by unnamed collaborators (Bair 2003, Shamdasani 2003).
- A fourth, much later “Schopenhauerian“ typology dealing with the archetypical influences on the individual’s psyche (1944): Some individuals are more naturally attuned to the world of external-noumenal ideas, such as state, church, party, time, space, and causality. Other individuals are more naturally attuned towards the internal-noumenal world of spirits, ghosts, angels, and the mystical Godhead.
From Falzeder’s cursory verbal presentation it is not quite clear what the full implications of this new typology will be – a full evaluation will have to wait and see until the matter is published in book form. However, as far as we can tell on the basis of Falzeder’s presentation, the typology appears to be similar in spirit to V.W. Odajnyk’s archetype addition to Jung’s typology, as published in the book Archetype and Character and discussed here. As Falzeder himself notes, that kind of typology does not replace but rather complements Jung’s existing typology.
For our part we would contend that there are not four typologies in Jung’s typology (as Falzeder claims) but rather two: The personality typology at various stages of its evolution (corresponding to Falzeder’s 1, 2, and 3) and the archetype typology (corresponding to Falzeder’s 4).
Overall, Falzeder’s lecture is clearly laid out and produces a series of central and weighty quotes that help to put Jung in his proper context (incidentally, many of the same quotes are found around our site as well). Jung’s connection to Schopenhauer is duly noted, though one could have wished for some further elaboration on Jung’s unacknowledged borrowing from Nietzsche and Indian philosophy. As noted, Falzeder’s stance is mostly neutral and objective, and as such his criticism and appraisal of Jung is much more elegant and understated than ours. In the end, however, Falzeder does seem to arrive at an appraisal of Jung that is similar to our own, politely ending his lecture by voicing doubt as to whether Jung was “really such a good thinker as he thought he was.”
REFERENCES
Bair: Jung Little, Brown & Company 2003
Coward: Jung and Eastern Thought SUNY Press 1985
Jones: Jung and the Question of Science Routledge 2014
Nagy: Philosophical Issues in the Psychology of C. G. Jung SUNY Press 1991
Noll: The Aryan Christ Random House 1997
Noll: The Jung Cult Touchstone 1997
Odajnyk: Archetype and Character Palgrave Macmillan 2012
Paris: Wisdom of the Psyche Routledge 2007
Shamdasani: Jung and the Making of Modern Psychology Cambridge University Press 2003
Stcherbatsky: Buddhist Logic Motilal Banarsidass 2008