Jung helps you understand the stories rising from within you; TST helps you decide how much truth those stories deserve.
Carl Jung’s idea of the shadow points to the parts of ourselves we would rather not see. These can include fear, anger, shame, selfishness, insecurity, resentment, and even hidden strengths we have pushed aside. Shadow work begins with a simple but difficult act:
Stop pretending your inner life is cleaner than it is.
That fits nicely within critical thinking and philosophy because both require self-honesty. If your hidden fears are steering your beliefs, you are not really following reason. If your resentment is choosing your facts, you are not seeking truth. These are mind traps in motion: biases, shortcuts, emotional reactions, and distorted stories quietly shaping what feels true. Jung gives us language for the inner fog; critical thinking gives us tools for testing what comes out of it.
But shadow work has limits. A dream, symbol, or emotional reaction can reveal something meaningful, but meaning is not the same as truth. Your feelings may point toward a real wound, a distorted memory, a useful insight, or a false story your mind has been repeating for years. Critical thinking asks us to slow down and sort the claim: What is empirical? What is rational? What is speculation?
So yes, Jung’s shadow work can help us think well—when we use it as a doorway, not a verdict. It can help us notice what we are avoiding, soften our ego, and see the mind traps shaping our inner story. Then critical thinking takes the next step: calibrate the story, test the belief, and bring the self back into better alignment with reality.