Jung Was Never a Lamarckian, and the Failure to Recognize This Has Distorted Analytical Psychology for Decades

Hogenson’s 2001 paper performs a precise act of intellectual genealogy that should have permanently altered how Jungians discuss the biological foundations of archetypal theory. The standard narrative — repeated by Anthony Stevens, weaponized by Ernest Jones, and passively accepted across the field — holds that Jung’s language of archetypes “engraved” on the psyche through “endless repetition” betrays a Lamarckian commitment to the inheritance of acquired characteristics. Hogenson dismantles this by tracking Jung’s actual citations. Jung references James Mark Baldwin’s Thought and Things in Wandlungen und Symbole der Libido and draws repeatedly on C. Lloyd Morgan’s Habit and Instinct in both “Instinct and the Unconscious” (1919) and “On the Nature of the Psyche.” Baldwin and Morgan were not peripheral figures; they were the most forceful opponents of neo-Lamarckism operating from within a neo-Darwinian framework. Their shared innovation — what came to be called the Baldwin effect — held that behavioral plasticity and consciousness could shape the environment of natural selection without requiring the direct transmission of acquired traits. That Jung drew on these thinkers, rather than on Romanes (whom Freud read avidly), is not incidental coloring but a structural fact about the architecture of his theory. As Hogenson demonstrates, Jung’s 1919 arguments — the distinction between species-wide instinctual fear of snakes and individual chicken phobias, the analysis of the yucca moth’s single-day reproductive cycle that precludes any learning-to-instinct Lamarckian pathway — are not merely compatible with anti-Lamarckism but constitute explicit rejections of it. Meanwhile, as Patricia Kitcher and Frank Sulloway exhaustively documented, Freud’s system required Lamarckism at its core; without the inheritance of the primal father-murder, the entire apparatus of Totem and Taboo collapses. The irony that Freudians blamed Jung for Freud’s Lamarckism is not just historically unjust — it inverted the actual intellectual positions of both men.

The Chomsky Analogy That Jungians Adopted Is the Wrong Bridge to Science

Hogenson’s second critical intervention targets the widespread Jungian habit of invoking Noam Chomsky’s generative grammar as scientific validation for archetypal theory. Stevens declares categorically that “the acquisition of speech is archetypally determined,” riding on Chomsky’s claim that innate brain structures encode a universal deep grammar. Hogenson, drawing on Terrence Deacon’s The Symbolic Species, shows why this analogy is not merely imprecise but fatally flawed on evolutionary grounds. Deacon’s argument is devastating in its simplicity: for a trait to become genetically assimilated under natural selection, the environmental pressure driving selection must remain stable over evolutionary time. But the surface features of language — the actual phonological, syntactic, and morphological structures organisms encounter — are wildly variable across cultures and change rapidly relative to evolutionary timescales. The universal attributes of grammar that Chomsky posits as innate are precisely the features least localizable in the brain and most variable in surface representation. They are, as Deacon puts it, “ineligible to participate in Baldwinian evolution” as genetically encoded modules. If Jungians hitch their theoretical wagon to Chomskian innatism, they inherit this fatal vulnerability. The archetypes cannot be neurological modules any more than universal grammar can be a brain organ. Hogenson here anticipates a broader crisis in cognitive science — the movement away from modular, computational models of mind toward dynamic systems approaches represented by Esther Thelen, Linda Smith, and Horst Hendriks-Jansen. This is not a minor updating of metaphor; it is a paradigm shift in what kind of scientific framework can legitimately support archetypal theory.

Archetypes as Emergent Properties: The Dissolution of the Location Problem

The paper’s culminating argument is its most provocative. Hogenson states it with deliberate boldness: “the archetypes of the collective unconscious, as either modular entities in the brain or as neo-Platonic abstractions in some alternative ontological universe, do not exist, in the sense that there is no place where the archetypes can be said to be.” This is not a denial of archetypes but a radical reconceptualization of their ontological status. They exist — the cross-cultural resonance of myth, the recognizable patterning of human narrative, the clinical reality of archetypal amplification all confirm their functional reality — but they exist as emergent properties of the dynamic developmental system comprising brain, environment, and narrative. Hogenson draws on Hendriks-Jansen’s formulation: the emergent pattern “cannot be paralleled in a corresponding synthesis of neurological correlates or mathematical characterizations” yet remains “clearly recognizable within the context of the creature’s environment.” This reframes the archetype as something that arises in the interaction, not something stored prior to it. The lactose absorption example Hogenson develops at length is the paper’s master illustration: Northern European adult lactose tolerance is a biologically evolved trait, but it presupposes a cascade of cultural innovations — animal husbandry, migration patterns, raw milk consumption — that created the selective environment. Natural selection still operates, but under conditions shaped by the human psyche. This is the Baldwin effect in action, and it provides a template for understanding how archetypal patterns could emerge without requiring either Lamarckian transmission or preformed neural modules.

Why This Paper Remains Indispensable for Contemporary Jungian Thought

Wolfgang Giegerich’s critique of Neumann’s recapitulationism, Saunders and Skar’s work on archetypes and self-organization, and Warren Colman’s models of the self all orbit the same problem Hogenson addresses head-on: how to ground archetypal theory in defensible science without collapsing it into either genetic determinism or mystical Platonism. Hogenson alone identifies the specific historical lineage — Baldwin and Lloyd Morgan, through Janet and Flournoy, to Jung — that makes this grounding possible. For anyone working at the intersection of depth psychology and contemporary cognitive science, this paper is not background reading but the essential bridge text. It specifies exactly where analytical psychology went wrong in its borrowings from evolutionary psychology, names the alternative framework (dynamic systems, situated cognition, Baldwinian co-evolution), and demonstrates that Jung’s own sources already pointed in this direction. No other single paper in the Journal of Analytical Psychology performs this particular act of recovery with this degree of precision.