Hi Gregg,

Thanks for the response. I totally understand if your busy.

And I agree with your point that one has to look at the basic contours of these ideas. But you got to hand it to these early pioneers like Jung, Freud, etc. They may have been wrong about a lot of details, but they were going off into new territory. Applying evolutionary concepts would have been tricky, too, considering this was a time before the Modern Synthesis.

~ Jason 
    On Friday, May 17, 2019, 7:08:54 AM EDT, Henriques, Gregg - henriqgx <[log in to unmask]> wrote:  
 
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Hi Jason,
 
  
 
  I am sorry I did not reply to your comment about Jung and information/semiotics. Summer school has started and I am a bit slammed. The short answer is, “yes” evolutionary-information frames connect with Jungian archetypes if one “goes broad,” meaning one looks at the basic contours of the ideas and looks for overlap. That said, there is also lots of details that would be debated. In the UTUA Frame, the Influence Matrix would be the first place to look for making the connections. It maps the inherent “self-relative-to-other” relational matrix that guides the human relational system. It is where you find many of the key organizing motivational themes that characterize much of what Jung considered to be archetypes (e.g., animus, anima, etc).
 
  
 
Two books were helpful to me in linking psychodynamic theory and evolutionary theory:
 
Evolutionary Psychiatry emphasizes the connection between Jung and evo psychhttps://www.routledge.com/Evolutionary-Psychiatry-A-new-beginning/Stevens-Price/p/book/9781138824638
 
The Adaptive Design of the Human Psyche https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.goodreads.com_book_show_3681358-2Dthe-2Dadaptive-2Ddesign-2Dof-2Dthe-2Dhuman-2Dpsyche&d=DwIFaQ&c=eLbWYnpnzycBCgmb7vCI4uqNEB9RSjOdn_5nBEmmeq0&r=HPo1IXYDhKClogP-UOpybo6Cfxxz-jIYBgjO2gOz4-A&m=jR33GHRckYOkhC2o_nghIdDt4spWLeV12yTf7RgWx6U&s=Xsglm2J4L7OVRN4z1x9lL3TGcATG5wYhXT4AZxuoS_g&e=
 
Is excellent also.
 

Best,
Gregg
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