The concept of archetypes was popularized by Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, who believed these universal patterns existed in the collective unconscious of all humanity.
Tennessean: Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery delves into the collective unconscious in 'Symbols and Archetypes'
Vanderbilt Fine Arts Gallery delves into the collective unconscious in 'Symbols and Archetypes'
Carl Jung’s concept of archetypes refers to universal, recurring patterns or symbols found in the human unconscious. These archetypes are part of our collective unconscious, a layer of the unconscious ...
MSN: ‘Memecoins are archetypes of the collective unconscious’ — Ki Young Ju
CryptoQuant CEO and analyst Ki Young Ju recently said, “Memecoins are archetypes of the collective unconscious” — a concept coined by 20th-century psychologist Carl Jung to describe shared memories ...
Strong brands are consistent and enduring expressions based on a range of archetypes (that is, unconscious ideas and images of a collective nature). Strong brands are consistent and enduring ...
San Antonio Express-News: Poetry: 'Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious: A Book Report'
Popular Mechanics: Humans Tap Into a ‘Collective Unconscious’—And It May Be Shaping Brains Across Civilizations, Scientists Say
Humans Tap Into a ‘Collective Unconscious’—And It May Be Shaping Brains Across Civilizations, Scientists Say
Archetypes are what Carl Jung referred to as “primordial images” and the “fundamental units of the human mind.” Every character you see on television and in films represents an archetype. Virtually every response you give to your environment—the way you behave—is an expression of an archetype, too. Almost all human behavior is guided by archetypes.