The Seba library treats Autonomous Complex in 7 passages, across 5 authors (including Jung, Carl Gustav, Kalsched, Donald, Peterson, Cody).
In the library
7 passages
These peculiarities plainly reveal the qualities of the autonomous complex. It creates a disturbance in the readiness to react, either inhibiting the answer or causing an undue delay or it produces an unsuitable reaction
Jung defines the autonomous complex through its observable behavioral signatures in the word-association experiment — delayed, distorted, or suppressed reactions — and identifies these same disturbances as constitutive of neurotic and psychotic symptoms.
Jung, Carl Gustav, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 1960thesis
His reactions will be delayed, altered, suppressed, or replaced by autonomous intruders... It is just as if the complex were an autonomous being capable of in
Jung frames the autonomous complex as a quasi-personal entity capable of displacing the conscious ego's responses, using the association experiment to demonstrate that the subject is 'not master in his own house.'
Jung, Carl Gustav, Psychology and Religion: West and East, 1958thesis
Complexes constitute the 'persons' of our dreams, the 'voices' in our heads, the visionary figures that appear at times of stress, the 'secondary personalities' of neurosis, the daimons, ghosts and spirits
Kalsched synthesizes the Jungian position by arguing that every complex is an indissoluble unity of affect and image, and that autonomous complexes are the psychic substrate behind all personified inner figures — from dream characters to dissociative secondary personalities.
Kalsched, Donald, The Inner World of Trauma: Archetypal Defences of the Personal Spirit, 1996thesis
when one looks beyond the outwardly projected God-image, the 'shape' slinks back into the unconscious, and '[it] becomes an autonomous psychic complex.'
Peterson, drawing on Jung, argues that the withdrawal of projected religious imagery does not dissolve its energy but instead converts it into an autonomous psychic complex operating from within the unconscious.
Peterson, Cody, The Shadow of a Figure of Light, 2024supporting
We may believe as much as we please in the doctrine of the 'unity of the ego,' according to which there can be no such things as autonomous complexes, but Nature herself does not bother in the least about our abstract theories.
Jung polemically asserts the empirical reality of autonomous complexes against rationalist ego-unity doctrine, grounding the claim in the same cross-cultural phenomena that impel both primitive soul-beliefs and modern psychiatric symptoms.
Jung, Carl Gustav, Psychological Types, 1921supporting
The personification enables us to see the relative reality of the autonomous system, and not only makes its assimilation possible but also depotentiates the daemonic forces of life.
Hillman, citing Jung, argues that personifying the autonomous system — treating it as a real psychic entity rather than an illusion — is the therapeutic operation that allows its integration and the reduction of its compulsive power.
Hillman, James, Anima: An Anatomy of a Personified Notion, 1985supporting
Since it is therapeutically important to induce the patient to self-recognition, i.e., to a recognition of his 'repressed' complexes, one must take this fact into careful consideration
In his earliest systematic presentation, Jung links the complex — identifiable through the association experiment — to the etiology of neurosis, establishing the therapeutic necessity of bringing its contents to conscious recognition.
Jung, C. G., Experimental Researches, 1904supporting