Archetypes
Mental forms of individual and collective consciousness archetypal patterns are magnetically imprinted upon the Soul before it is born into the material world. These Collective Consciousness Archetypes will influence the individual for positive or negative depending on their level of Self Awareness and Consciousness. The artificial technologies of Mind Control being pulsed into planet are to influence these archetypes in negative ways to advance and accelerate fear based thoughts of the Predator Mind or Negative Ego in the human population. When we develop our spiritual consciousness we can access the knowledge of archetypal Blueprint that influence our thoughts and mental energies in order to utilize them to master our internal spiritual forces. When technology is used to direct mental patterns through archetypes into the minds of the collective consciousness, these are called "Forced Identities" and are inorganic consciousness or AI consciousness. As we become more spiritually developed beings that expand our consciousness, we want to discern what thought patterns are programmed automatically that are inorganic and artificial to us, in order to free our mind to allow our inner spirit to recode our thoughts into patterns of Universal Love. This is the eternal nature of source and the substance of our inner God spirit.
Concept
The concept of an archetype is found in areas relating to human behavior, modern psychological theory, and literary analysis.
An archetype can be:
- a statement, pattern of behavior, or prototype which other statements, patterns of behavior, and objects copy or emulate;
- a Platonic philosophical idea referring to pure forms which embody the fundamental characteristics of a thing;
- a collectively-inherited unconscious idea, pattern of thought, image, etc., that is universally present in individual psyches, as in Jungian psychology;
- or a constantly recurring symbol or motif in literature, painting, or mythology (this usage of the term draws from both comparative anthropology and Jungian archetypal theory).
In the first sense, many more informal terms are frequently used instead, such as "standard example" or "basic example", and the longer form "archetypal example" is also found. In mathematics, an archetype is often called a "canonical example".[1]