This book seeks to integrate the sociology of Emile  Durkheim with the psychology of Carl Jung.  The  purpose of this goal is to develop a sociological  definition of "wholeness" or "integration" that can  be developed further in theory and research. Historically, the concept of the unconscious  is not the exclusive domain of psychology.  The fact  that Durkheim advocated the need for sociologists to  study the unconscious has been overlooked until  recently. This text takes the position that from  within a social context, conceptual classifications  or distinctions can be made between groups and the  individual, as well as between consciousness and the  unconscious.  Further, I suggest that the human  experience includes a personal and a collective  consciousness, as well as a personal and collective  consciousness. My intention is to integrate all of the  conceptual categories that these dualisms entail,  and thereby contribute a new social psychology of  Durkheim and Jung.