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  1. Synchronicity (German: Synchronizität) is a concept introduced by analytical psychologist Carl Jung "to describe circumstances that appear meaningfully related yet lack a causal connection". Synchronicity experiences refer to one's subjective experience whereby coincidences between events in one's mind and the outside world may be ...

  2. 17 de mai. de 2024 · The book also features Jung's most lucid account of his theory in the form of his short essay "On Synchronicity," and a number of Jung's less-known writings on parapsychology, his astrological experiment, and the relationship between mind and body.

    • Mark Kelly
    • 2020
  3. Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle. A key signature concept in Jung’s vision of the world, synchronicity was defined by Jung as an acausal connecting principle, whereby internal, psychological events are linked to external world events by meaningful coincidences rather than causal chains.

  4. Synchronicity, as an explicative theory, applies to phenomena from the area of parapsychology - premonition, telepathy, dreams and so forth - to I Ching (the specific method of consulting and the functioning of the Oracle), astrology and many other borderline fields.

  5. Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle. (From Vol. 8. of the Collected Works of C. G. Jung) on JSTOR. C. G. Jung. With a new foreword by Sonu Shamdasani. Translated by R.F.C. Hull. Series: Copyright Date: 1960. Edition: REV - Revised. Published by: Princeton University Press. Pages: 152. https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt7s94k. Select all.

    • REV-Revised
  6. Synchronicity and Emergence. Introduction. Scientific reconsideration of C. G. Jung's difficult, fasci nating, and peculiar idea of synchronicity, which he believed. to represent an acausal connecting principle, has become possible with the advent of recent developments in under standing the self-organizing features of complex adaptive systems ...

  7. Jung published his principal essay on synchronicity in a co-authored volume alongside an essay by the Nobel prize-winning physicist Wolfgang Pauli (Jung & Pauli 1952), and this alliance is reflected in the predominantly scientific framing of Jung’s essay (Main 2004: 104-5).