Interiority is a methodological approach to psychological inquiry that draws upon the tradition of Carl G. Jung. Emphasis rests upon recursive reflection, and Wolfgang Giegerich's dialectical approach to interpreting the logical life of the soul/world relation.
The discipline seeks to enter the situation (dream, anxiety - whatever has taken hold of the student) from its interior.
The methodological stance gives full self-character to the situation, dream, etc., turning full dialectical and interpretative attention to its self-nature as soulful, self-referential display.
This rich and rigorous undertaking follows Giegerich’s dictum, "psychology begins where any phenomenon (whether physical or mental, 'real' or fantasy image) is interiorized absolute-negatively into itself, and I find myself in its internal infinity. This is what it takes; psychology cannot be had for less” (Wolfgang Giegerich, The Soul Always Thinks 2010).