I think "reallydown" is on to something.
What I found interesting about the essay, (of course this is just my interpretation of the interpretation!) is that Jung seems to base the theory on the fact that the collective conscience(which makes up the Shadow) has nothing to do with instinct, but with a set of ideals and beliefs to which we ascribe without a conscious effort. The theory seems to completely leave out instinct. And that's fine when dealing with projections based on those unconscious beliefs and how to fix them, but if we are discussing good/bad per Lisa's inquiry the effort must go beyond that.
Firstly, how are we defining good and bad and by whose standards?! I'd love to have the good/bad debate but I don't know what it is that I'm debating.
Personally, I subscribe to the evolutionary theory. I believe we do have instincts and that we are not created pure by any religious standards. I think we are descendents of hominids and by nature, we are born with animalistic tendencies and instincts. I don't believe we can remove those instincts. I think as humans, through the evolutionary process, we have more of an understanding how those instincts impact others. We developed a more complicated brain and therefore have complicated feelings and thoughts that stretch beyond what chimps have and that also creates tension between our natural instincts and our complicated thought process. Our communities have grown and therefore our social structures have been reorganized. Our instincts have to come to terms with that.
The terms "good" and "bad" were created in order to keep society under control. How do we interpret those terms now?
Best,
Rachel (who will eventually talk herself in circles!)