The Seba library treats Prospective Function in 8 passages, across 4 authors (including Jung, Carl Gustav, Jung, C.G., Papadopoulos, Renos K.).
In the library
8 passages
the-under normal conditions-merely compensatory function of the unconscious becomes a guiding, prospective function capable of leading the conscious attitude in a quite different direction which is much better than the previous one
This is Jung's canonical definition of the prospective function, specifying that it emerges when the individual's conscious attitude is sufficiently unadapted, transforming the normally compensatory unconscious into a teleological guide.
Jung, Carl Gustav, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 1960thesis
we have unquestionably to consider its teleological or prospective significance as well... that would tell us nothing about its prospective function, that is, about the tasks it has to accomplish now and in the future.
Jung argues, by analogy with parliamentary history, that a purely causal-historical reading of dreams is insufficient and that the prospective function — what the psyche is moving toward — must be considered alongside historical determinants.
Jung, C.G., Collected Works Volume 4: Freud and Psychoanalysis, 1961thesis
the—under normal conditions—merely compensatory function of the unconscious becomes a guiding, prospective function [einer führenden, prospektiven Funktion]
This editorial commentary situates the 1916 emergence of the prospective function concept within Jung's intellectual biography, presenting it as the conceptual wedge that separated his psychology from Freudian historical determinism.
Jung, C.G., Dream Interpretation Ancient and Modern: Notes from the Seminar Given in 1936-1941, 2014thesis
prospective function of, 255ff; pure product of unconscious, 77
The index entry for the prospective function of dreams in The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche confirms its systematic status as a discrete and indexed theoretical category within Jung's corpus.
Jung, Carl Gustav, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 1960supporting
Nor should we regard dream-phenomena as merely compensatory and secondary to the contents of consciousness, even though it is
Jung cautions against reducing dream-life to a purely compensatory or secondary function, implicitly defending the need for a prospective reading that treats dreams as genuinely autonomous psychic productions.
Jung, Carl Gustav, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche, 1960supporting
The Handbook of Jungian Psychology registers the prospective function as institutionalized Jungian vocabulary, distinguishing prospective dreams as a recognized clinical and theoretical category.
Papadopoulos, Renos K., The Handbook of Jungian Psychology: Theory, Practice and Applications, 2006supporting
prefrontal systems perform, in addition to a retrospective function, a prospective, future related function involved in planning
Schore invokes a neurobiological prospective function of the prefrontal cortex — distinct from but structurally resonant with the Jungian usage — situating future-oriented mental planning within developmental neuroscience.
Schore, Allan N., Affect Regulation and the Origin of the Self: The Neurobiology of Emotional Development, 1994aside
the persistently hypothetical grasp of such coming into being in unconscious mental life in view of the rough-and-ready philosophical process terms that Jung brought to these matters
This passage contextualizes the theoretical challenge of articulating the prospective and purposive character of unconscious processes, noting that Jung's philosophical vocabulary for teleological emergence remained provisional throughout his career.
Jung, C.G., Dream Interpretation Ancient and Modern: Notes from the Seminar Given in 1936-1941, 2014aside