Description
Ashok Bedi, MD. 2 hours 35 minutes. Video. Topics: Archetypes, Religion and Spirituality.
Healing Archetypes of the East: A Jungian and Neuroscientific Perspective
The medicine of the 20th century was about the treatment of illness. The medicine of the 21st century is about wellness. As medical science has made strides in the detection and treatment of illness, we have reached a tipping point where the emphasis is upon wellness and living a fuller life to our personal best potential. There is a renewed respect for an interest in ancient healing systems, which are being reconfigured to create the integrative medicine of the future. The presentation will explore the wisdom of India’s ancient healing archetypes within the modern neuroscientific context within the fabric of Jungian analytical psychology.
PowerPoint: PowerPoint slides are edited into the video.
Audio: This download includes an audio MP3 that can be played on smartphones, tablets, and laptops for listening on the go.
Sample
Learning Objectives
This video will help you:
- Summarize the myths of the Lion Man, Aditi, Ganesha, Hermes (Krishna) and Bardo.
- Utilize the Neuroscience research paradigms to explore these myths.
- Observe the clinical manifestations of these myths in cases presented.
- Apply the analytical prescriptions of these archetypes in the individuation process.
Ashok Bedi, MD is a Jungian psychoanalyst and a board certified psychiatrist. He is a member of the Royal College of psychiatrists of Great Britain, a diplomat in Psychological Medicine at the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of England, a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. He is a Clinical Professor in Psychiatry at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee and faculty member at Carl G. Jung Institute of Chicago. He is in private practice in Milwaukee.
Audio Included: All video purchases will also include a free audio MP3 of each seminar.
PowerPoint: The PowerPoint from this presentation is edited into the video.
© 2013 Ashok Bedi
Ⓟ 2013 C.G. Jung Institute of Chicago