Why this word is great
JUNGISM — [Noun] The doctrines and philosophy of Swiss psychologist C. G. Jung, emphasizing the collective unconscious, archetypes, synchronicity, and the process of individuation. From the surname Jung (of Carl Gustav Jung) + the suffix -ism, denoting a distinctive doctrine, theory, or system. Unlike Freudianism (which maps the psyche as a hydraulic drama of repressed infantile desire) or the formal discipline of Analytical Psychology, Jungism is the broader cultural efflorescence—a secular mysticism that apprehends the psyche as a vast, mythic landscape. It is the dream interpreted as a telegram from the mythic past, the shadow glimpsed in a colleague's irritation, the eerie meaning found in a coincidence; a quiet faith that our deepest loneliness is a shared inheritance, and the psyche tends not toward pathology, but toward story.