Unconscious
Несъзнавано
[un-KON-shuhs]
Latin: in- (not) + conscius (sharing knowledge). In depth psychology: the vast psychic substrate beneath waking awareness. Expanded by Jung from Freud's personal model into the personal + collective unconscious
Definition
The unconscious is the vast psychic substrate beneath waking awareness — the storage, the engine, and the ocean of the soul. Jung expanded Freud's personal repository into two strata: the personal unconscious (your forgotten and repressed material) and the collective unconscious (the inherited archetypal patterns of the entire human species).
Deep Understanding
Freud opened the door when he named the unconscious the hidden author of dreams, slips, and symptoms. Jung walked through it and discovered the room was vastly larger than Freud had mapped. Beneath the personal strata — the forgotten childhood, the repressed impulses, the unlived lives — he found a deeper floor: the collective unconscious, a species-wide reservoir of archetypes that appear in every mythology, every religion, every dream, across every culture. The shadow, the anima, the animus, the Self — these are not private possessions. They are structural features of being human.
The unconscious is not passive. It generates dreams, symptoms, images, synchronicities, complexes, and the uncanny sense that life is trying to tell you something. It is where the numinosum — the numinous, the holy, the mysterium tremendum — lives and speaks. Every encounter with what feels larger than your ordinary self is an encounter with this substrate.
In Gnostic reading, the unconscious is the territory where the divine spark is hidden and where the archontic conditioning is installed. Both live there, side by side. This is why spiritual work cannot skip psychology and why psychology without spirit reaches a ceiling. The great work is the slow, patient lowering of consciousness into the unconscious until the spark is found and the installed patterns are recognized as foreign.
In Practice
Keep a notebook by the bed. Each morning, before reaching for the phone, write down whatever fragment of dream or image remains — even one word is enough. Do not interpret. Just collect. Over weeks the unconscious, sensing it is being listened to, begins to speak more clearly. Active imagination is the next step. Paying attention is the first.
In Pleroma's Words
The unconscious is not dark because it is evil. It is dark because no light has been brought to it yet. The work is not to defeat it or escape it — it is to stop fleeing and begin the descent. Everything you have been looking for is waiting on the other side of that first honest turn inward.
Related Terms
Explore in the Pleroma
Coming soon — this mystery awaits deeper exploration.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Unconscious mean in Jungian?
Unconscious (Jungian): Latin: in- (not) + conscius (sharing knowledge). In depth psychology: the vast psychic substrate beneath waking awareness. Expanded by Jung from Freud's personal model into the personal + collective unconscious. A Shadow & Psyche term from the Pleroma Gnosis Lexicon.
What is the origin of Unconscious?
Latin: in- (not) + conscius (sharing knowledge). In depth psychology: the vast psychic substrate beneath waking awareness. Expanded by Jung from Freud's personal model into the personal + collective unconscious