Why do people dream? What does a dream mean? What is the relevance of your dream? Something, even if it is mere chemical activity during sleep, what is the correlation? A dream is mysterious information from a larger source. A dream is just a biological task. Why some dreams and fragments are remembered and some are forgotten. How to understand your dreams As long as there are humans on earth, people will ask these and more questions (Springett, 2000). Because the dream is still a big mystery, the program is only a partial list of questions people may ask today.
Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung: Similarities and Differences in Dream Analysis Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung are two famous psychoanalysts who have made a big contribution to the interpretation of dreams. Carl Jung was originally a student of Sigmund Freud, but during the initial dialogue he was suspected that the work of Freud was based on pure sexuality and led to his sexuality (McGowan, 1994). Jung is deeply influenced by Freud's dream job, including resistance to interpretation of dreams and helps to create the theory of interpretation of his own dream using this knowledge base.
This paper analyzes the differences and similarities between the various dream teachings disseminated by Sigmund Freud and Karl Jung. Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud have maintained personal relationship for many years, Jung is a junior partner of these relationships. This is because he spent too much time on the theory of unconscious learning disseminated by Sigmund Freud. This led him to develop his own psychological study method, he called it an analytic method. Both of these people can attract the concept of unconscious mind as a way to explain their dreams. However, Jung used more levels of subconscious thinking in his interpretation of his dreams (McGuire, 1974). The two scholars share a common background, but their view on their dreams is totally different. For example, two scholars opposed the problem of forming an unconscious mind.
For Freud, Jung believes that a dream is a representative of an unconscious mind. Jung does not agree with everything that appears in a dream associated with suppressed sexual desire. Jung focuses on symbols and images. He believes that dreams can have different meanings depending on the dreamer's association. Likewise, Jung agreed with Freud's view that dreams can be traced back to reflect the events of childhood, but believe that dreams can predict what will happen in the future. Jung argues that dreams can be an important source of creativity. Rather than digging down objective subjective content, Freud adheres strictly to the external aspects of his dream, so Jung expresses a disagreement with Freud 's intense opinion.