Difference between revisions of "Talk:Synchronicity"

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'''Carl G. Jung''' got the message...
'''Carl G. Jung''' got the message...


"The realization that a number of his fantasies and dreams did not pertain to his personal psychology, but were connected with collective events that were about to take place in the world, led Jung to write the first manuscript of Liber Novus. He attempted to ascertain to what extent the material in the rest of his fantasies was also bound up with what was to happen in the world, and what this interdependence of the individual and the collective meant. Likewise, Jung’s work on Liber Novus ended with the fateful arrival of the text of The Secret of the Golden Flower from Richard Wilhelm. For Jung, the pressing question was, how are such meaningful events—not linked by any apparent causal chains—possible? (Jung, 2010)."
<blockquote>The realization that a number of his fantasies and dreams did not pertain to his personal psychology, but were connected with collective events that were about to take place in the world, led Jung to write the first manuscript of Liber Novus. He attempted to ascertain to what extent the material in the rest of his fantasies was also bound up with what was to happen in the world, and what this interdependence of the individual and the collective meant. Likewise, Jung’s work on Liber Novus ended with the fateful arrival of the text of The Secret of the Golden Flower from Richard Wilhelm. For Jung, the pressing question was, how are such meaningful events—not linked by any apparent causal chains—possible? (Jung, 2010).</blockquote>

Revision as of 15:49, 2 December 2018

Carl G. Jung got the message...

The realization that a number of his fantasies and dreams did not pertain to his personal psychology, but were connected with collective events that were about to take place in the world, led Jung to write the first manuscript of Liber Novus. He attempted to ascertain to what extent the material in the rest of his fantasies was also bound up with what was to happen in the world, and what this interdependence of the individual and the collective meant. Likewise, Jung’s work on Liber Novus ended with the fateful arrival of the text of The Secret of the Golden Flower from Richard Wilhelm. For Jung, the pressing question was, how are such meaningful events—not linked by any apparent causal chains—possible? (Jung, 2010).