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15 Νοε 2021 · Carl Jung’s word association test is one of the most fascinating psychological assessments. It’s based on the idea that your subconscious is sometimes capable of controlling conscious will. As such, a single word can unleash past traumas or reveal unresolved internal conflicts.
Find your personality types with this free association quiz. Discover your traits and the 16 personality types. Faster than and different from an MBTI test.
In Jung’s worldview, there were the quick, and there were the neurotic: a drastic simplification, to be sure, but as he showed us, sometimes the simplest language goes straight to the heart of the matter. 1. head. 2. green. 3. water. 4. to sing.
Patients who, in ordinary conversation, would make no allusions to certain topics or concerns, would — in a word association session — quickly let slip critical aspects of their true selves. Jung grew interested in how long his patients paused after certain word prompts.
Free Association, Divergent Thinking, and Creativity: Cognitive and Neural Perspectives; By Tali R. Marron, Miriam Faust; Edited by Rex E. Jung, University of New Mexico, Oshin Vartanian, University of Toronto
The goal of free association is not to unearth specific answers or memories, but to instigate a journey of co-discovery which can enhance the patient's integration of thought, feeling, agency, and selfhood. Free association is contrasted with Freud's "Fundamental Rule" of psychoanalysis.
Jung’s word association test is one of the most interesting psychological tests, based on the idea that our unconscious can take control of the conscious will, in this way a word can evoke past trauma or give rise to the visibility of an unresolved internal conflict.