RT Article T1 Carl Gustav Jung and Granville Stanley Hall on Religious Experience JF Journal of religion and health VO 55 IS 4 SP 1246 OP 1260 A1 Kim, Chae Young LA English PB Springer Science + Business Media B. V. YR 2016 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/156659880X AB Granville Stanley Hall (1844-1924) with William James (1842-1910) is the key founder of psychology of religion movement and the first American experimental or genetic psychologist, and Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) is the founder of the analytical psychology concerned sympathetically about the religious dimension rooted in the human subject. Their fundamental works are mutually connected. Among other things, both Hall and Jung were deeply interested in how the study of religious experience is indispensable for the depth understanding of human subject. Nevertheless, except for the slight indication, this common interest between them has not yet been examined in academic research paper. So this paper aims to articulate preliminary evidence of affinities focusing on the locus and its function of the inner deep psychic dimension as the religious in the work of Hall and Jung. K1 Individuation K1 Carl Gustav Jung K1 Clark University K1 Collective Unconscious K1 Cultural symbol K1 Granville Stanley Hall K1 Inwardization K1 Natural symbol K1 Numinosum K1 psychology of religion K1 Racial soul K1 Religious Experience K1 Sensus numinis DO 10.1007/s10943-016-0237-4