The Physiology of Psychological Type, Part III: Falsification of Type

Human beings are perhaps healthiest, happiest, and most successful when they can use and be rewarded for using their own innate giftedness, or what Dr. Carl Jung and Dr. Katherine Benziger call their natural lead function.

The Physiology of Psychological Type, Part II

So much has been discovered in the past ten to twenty years that it is now possible to be relatively certain about the physiological bases for Dr. Jung's Typology. To start with, one can begin to understand the physiology of Jung's four functions, by developing a working familiarity with the following physiological terms.

The Metarealism of Nancy Witt: An introduction to the work of Nancy Witt

Since 1970 Nancy Witt has lived and worked in Hanover County, Virginia, in a historic grist mill which she and her family renovated and now operate as a gallery. She was a co-founder of Jungian Venture, the Jungian society in Richmond.


 

The Physiology of Jung's 4 Psychological Functions

This is an essay on the physiolgy of Type. For Jung, the word Type was a convenient short hand which allowed him to identify with one label, both a person's preference for either Introversion or Extraversion, and as well their Natural Lead Function: Thinking, Sensing, Feeling, Intuition.

The End of the World as a Crisis in Consciousness: Abstract

This P.D.E. is concerned with the spreading fears of the end of the world as we near the end of the second millennium (CE). As fears of a disaster mount, more people are beginning to take concrete action based only on their fear of the end of the world.