Your personality [Elektronische Ressource] : introvert or extravert? / by Virginia Case.
2015
BF831
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Details
Title
Your personality [Elektronische Ressource] : introvert or extravert? / by Virginia Case.
Author
Imprint
New York : Macmillan, 2015.
Language
English
Description
Online-Ressource (ix, 277 Seiten) : Illustrationen
Call Number
BF831
System Control No.
(OCoLC)944078468
Summary
The two types of people -- How the types look to the world : four portrait sketches -- How the types look to the world, continued : traits -- Your self -- How the world looks to the types : the two contexts -- How the types deal with experience : the two accomplishments -- Self-expression and the spoken word -- Self-expression. The quick and the deliberate types -- The more and the less sensitive person -- Two viewpoints. How the types judge and misjudge each other -- Everyday dealings. What to expect and not to expect of the two types -- Relationships : marriage -- Relationships : groups -- Developing the opposite side of the self : ambiversion -- Diagrams -- The two contexts -- Expression and incorporation -- Ambiversion.
"Since the publication of "Psychological Types" by the Swiss psychiatrist, Carl Gustav Jung, the terms "introvert" and "extravert" which he was the first to apply to types of temperament, have become familiar. Yet Dr. Jung's students are amazed to discover that not only the public but psychologists often make careless use of Jungian terms with only the vaguest idea, or in some cases an erroneous idea, of their fundamental meaning. It is with the hope of correcting current misunderstanding and of making available to the general public the helpful practical knowledge of human nature which Jung's work supplies in abundance, that this book is offered. Dr. Jung has read it in manuscript form and has consented to its publication"--Book. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).
"Since the publication of "Psychological Types" by the Swiss psychiatrist, Carl Gustav Jung, the terms "introvert" and "extravert" which he was the first to apply to types of temperament, have become familiar. Yet Dr. Jung's students are amazed to discover that not only the public but psychologists often make careless use of Jungian terms with only the vaguest idea, or in some cases an erroneous idea, of their fundamental meaning. It is with the hope of correcting current misunderstanding and of making available to the general public the helpful practical knowledge of human nature which Jung's work supplies in abundance, that this book is offered. Dr. Jung has read it in manuscript form and has consented to its publication"--Book. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2015 APA, all rights reserved).
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.-Electronic reproduction; Washington, D.C; American Psychological Association; 2015; Available via World Wide Web; Access limited by licensing agreement; s2015 dcunns.
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