Journal of Analytical Psychology, 2011, 56, 471–491
Synchronicity
and the meaning-making psyche
Warren Colman, St. Albans, UK
Abstract: This paper contrasts Jung’s account of synchronicity as evidence of an
objective principle of meaning in Nature with a view that emphasizes human meaningmaking. All synchronicities generate indicative signs but only where this becomes
a ‘living symbol’ of a transcendent intentionality at work in a living universe does
synchronicity generate the kind of symbolic meaning that led Jung to posit the existence
of a Universal Mind. This is regarded as a form of personal, experiential knowledge
belonging to the ‘imaginal world of meaning’ characteristic of the ‘primordial mind’,
as opposed to the ‘rational world of knowledge’ in which Jung attempted to present
his experiences as if they were empirically and publicly verifiable. Whereas rational
knowledge depends on a form of meaning in which causal chains and logical links are
paramount, imaginal meaning is generated by forms of congruent correspondence—
a feature that synchronicity shares with metaphor and symbol—and the creation of
narratives by means of retroactive organization of its constituent elements.
Key words: congruent correspondence, imaginal meaning, primordial mind, psychoid,
retroactive narrative, transcendence
Introduction
Towards the end of Jung’s paper on synchronicity, there is a passage where
he cites several dreams as evidence for the existence of a psychoid archetype.
He concludes that the dreams ‘seem to point to the presence of a formal factor
in nature’ (Jung 1952, para. 946). This astonishing claim brought home to
me just what Jung means by ‘the objective psyche’. Jung does not regard the
dreams as the product of the dreamers’ own unconscious thought-processes
about synchronicity: they are not symbolic representations of a psychological
process of meaning-making. Jung takes the dreams as factual statements not
merely about Nature but by Nature. They are put forward as evidence for the
objective existence of a ‘self-subsistent meaning’1 . In this view, the psyche acts
independently of the person who happens to receive its messages—hence the
1
In a strikingly disingenuous footnote, Jung contrasts his interpretation with others who may
‘indulge in wishful thinking about dreams’. That is, others may be mistaken but Jung is not.
0021-8774/2011/5604/471
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2011, The Society of Analytical Psychology
Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148, USA.
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idea of a Self which has infinitely greater knowledge than the Ego. In this sense,
the Self is not a subject at all except insofar as Nature itself is a Greater Subject,
separate from the meaning-making processes of human subjectivity. The
unconscious mind is thus equivalent to the Universal Mind. In short, God. Hence
Jung’s claim that ‘synchronicity postulates a meaning which is a priori in relation
to human consciousness and apparently exists outside man’ (ibid., para. 942).
In this paper I want to forward the contrary view that the meaning in
synchronicity is a function of human meaning-making. Rather than seeing
synchronicity as a ‘principle of explanation’ or a phenomenon of ‘Nature’, I
regard it as a phenomenon of human being in the world in which meaning is
generated out of the interaction between mind and Nature.
I want to focus particularly on the role of congruent correspondence in
meaning-making; this occurs in particularly striking form in synchronicity
where there is always a congruent correspondence between the inner and
outer events. In Jung’s paradigmatic case of the scarab, for example, there is a
congruence between the scarab in the patient’s dream and the scarab Jung finds
tapping on the window2 . I see this congruence as a particular form of a more
general process, also occurring in the creation of metaphor and symbol, where
the meaning is generated out of the congruence between the two domains:
in symbol there is a congruence between the symbol and the symbolized; in
metaphor this is expressed as a congruence between the domain from which the
metaphor is drawn (‘source’) and the domain to which it is applied (‘target’)3 .
In synchronicity, however, it is not merely images of the external world which
manifest this correspondence but actual objects and events—hence the sense of
a meaning that transcends human subjectivity.
Such experiences can generate what Murray Stein (2008) refers to as ‘strong
transcendence’ where there is a sudden shift into a different way of being
in the world in which meaning is generated via congruent correspondence
rather than logical chains of thought. This ‘imaginal world of meaning’ may be
contrasted with the ‘rational world of knowledge’ which is the dominant state
of consciousness in Western post-scientific cultures. The world of imaginal
meaning derives from what is sometimes called ‘the primordial mind’ in which
the categories of space, time and causality become relativized (Robbins 2011).
This can reveal profoundly different experiences of the world from rational
thought but, at least in post-scientific cultures, such experiences, however
‘absolute’ or ‘transcendental’, cannot be considered objective knowledge. In
2
While a patient was telling a dream in which she was given a golden scarab, Jung noticed an
insect knocking against the window pane. He opened the window, caught the insect, which was
a scarabaeid beetle and handed it to the patient saying ‘Here is your scarab’. Jung comments
‘This experience punctured the desired hole in her rationalism and broke the ice of her intellectual
resistance’ (Jung 1951, para 982; 1952, para 843).
3 For example, in metaphors of ‘explosive’ rage (e.g. he ‘blew up’), explosions are the source
domain and rage is the target domain.
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
473
the rational world of knowledge, only knowledge which is publicly verifiable
according to scientific criteria of evidence and proof may be regarded as valid.
Thus imaginal experience may yield personal knowledge but cannot yield
publically verifiable so-called ‘objective’ knowledge.
For this reason I consider that Jung’s attempt to situate synchronicity within
the ‘objective’ domain of publically verifiable knowledge was bound to fail. In
order to do so he needed to claim ‘objectivity’ for phenomenological realities
that abrogate such rational distinctions as subjective/objective or mind/matter,
thus creating a paradoxical situation where demonstrating the ‘objectivity’ of
synchronicity would rob it of the very features he wished to claim for it, namely
a transcendence of these categories into an entirely different world view. It’s
no use appealing to science for something which necessarily falls outside the
scientific domain; rather we need to assert the validity of the imaginal domain
as equal but different.
Types of synchronicity—internal and external signs
First, though, I want to offer some kind of classification for the confusingly
heterogeneous situations which Jung offers as examples of synchronicity. Other
commentators such as Aziz (1990) and Main (2004) have pointed to the
inconsistency of Jung’s definitions and the numerous intellectual difficulties
which his discussion presents. Here I want simply to distinguish two main
classes of synchronicity. The first kind, which is the more ‘classic’ kind of
synchronicity, involves a coincidental external event occurring simultaneously
with or shortly after an internal event such as a thought, an image or a dream.
The scarab beetle at the window is such an example, as are the cluster of six
references to ‘fish’ that occurred to Jung on April 1st 1949 when he was working
on fish symbolism in Aion (Jung 1952, para. 826). The second kind refers to
various ‘parapsychological’ experiences such as pre-cognition and clairvoyance.
In these, the internal event is predictive of the external event. Swedenborg’s
vision of the Great Fire of Stockholm in 1759 is a spectacular example of this.
While in Gothenburg, Swedenborg reported to several witnesses that a fire was
at that moment raging in Stockholm. His report was confirmed in every detail
when the news from Stockholm arrived later the following day (as reported by
Kant in a letter of 10th August 1963, cited in Bishop 2000, pp. 18–19).
In both kinds of synchronicity there is a confirmation of the internal event
which gives it ‘meaning’ in a way it did not have before but there are significant
differences which can most clearly be brought out by recognizing that all
synchronicities include an element which functions as a ‘sign’. In the first kind of
synchronicity, the external event provides the sign in a way that ‘points towards’
the internal event and gives it new meaning. That is, the external event provides
the synchronistic and unexpected coincidence. In the second kind, it is the
internal event, especially ‘pre-cognition’, which constitutes the sign pointing
towards the occurrence of an outer event occurring in a different space-time.
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In this case, the internal event is the unexpected coincidence which generates
the surprise of something apparently inexplicable. The first kind involves an
‘answer’ from the external world whereas the second kind involves a psychic
knowledge of something that could not possibly be known within the bounds
of space, time and causality. So in the first kind, there is an uncanny event in the
world, as if the world ‘knows’ something it could not possibly know whereas
in the second kind, there is an uncanny event in the psyche as if the person
experiencing the synchronicity knows something they could not possibly know.
Synchronicities can also be tracked according to two further axes—
remarkability and significance. Given that synchronicity is defined as meaningful
coincidence, both features are required to distinguish synchronicity from
ordinary, expectable coincidence. So we might ask how remarkable is the
coincidence and how significant is the meaning? When we look at synchronicity
this way, it becomes apparent that remarkability and significance are not
directly correlated. Notably, it appears that ‘pre-cognitive’ synchronicities of
the second kind are frequently highly remarkable but rarely generate much
significance beyond the fact of their occurrence. Swedenborg’s vision of the
Stockholm Fire is meaningful only in the sense that the vision was verified. It
provided a ‘sign’ but the sign did not become a symbol—it did not point to any
meaning beyond itself. Furthermore, although these kinds of synchronicities
appear to offer ‘proof’ of a factor operating beyond space and time, they rarely
convince anyone beyond the person to whom they occur. For example, Jung
probably learned of Swedenborg’s vision via Kant (Bishop, ibid.) for whom
Swedenborg’s mystical writings were typical of the kind of metaphysical claims
Kant’s theory of knowledge was designed to squash. Kant concluded that since
proof of Swedenborg’s claims were beyond what could be known, they did
not deserve any further consideration (ibid., pp. 241–47). Similarly, when Jung
attempted to convince Freud of the power of occult forces by twice predicting
a loud report in Freud’s bookcase, Freud was shaken but not stirred from his
rationalist convictions (Jung 1963, pp. 178–9)4 . So while synchronicity may
generate meaning for those involved, it does not generate publically verifiable
knowledge and therefore is unable to convince those who are sceptical by virtue
of operating from a different mind-set.
In what follows, I will refer only to the first kind of synchronicity since it
is these experiences which are more likely to generate ‘strong transcendence’
and a shift into non-rational states of mind. The second kind seem to depend
more on already operating within the ‘primordial mind’ (for want of a better
phrase); it is apparent that some people, of whom Jung was one, have such
4
Arguably, Jung was using the same approach, with more success, when he produced the scarab
beetle for his sceptical patient. Freud was a harder nut to crack. A few days later he wrote to Jung
‘The phenomenon was soon deprived of all significance for me by something else. My credulity, or
at least my readiness to believe, vanished along with the spell of your personal presence (Freud to
Jung, April 16th 1909, quoted in Jung 1963, p. 395; ital added)
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
475
experiences quite frequently while others never have them at all. The reasons
for this remain mysterious: there seems to be a cultural component in that prescientific cultures are more likely to accept the possibility of such experiences
and may offer training for those who show a natural aptitude for them.
This in turn suggests that there is also a personal component (sometimes
called ‘second sight’), possibly connected with some forms of early trauma
(Merchant 2006).
My own experience is restricted entirely to the first kind, of which I will now
give an example. In these cases of ‘strong synchronicity’, the significance of the
coincidence can be extremely high, even life-changing, but the remarkability
factor may be much smaller. Such experiences generate an uncanny sense of
what I can best describe as a feeling that the universe is alive. I think that this
is what Jung was attempting to prove by constructing a theory that aimed to
argue an empirically demonstrable case for it.
Strong synchronicity: an experience of transcendent meaning
At the time of this particularly significant coincidence, I was much impressed
by the idea that all actions were unconsciously motivated and that anything
that happened to a person had a hidden significance for them, as if it was
‘meant to be’ in some way. These ideas, derived from a heady mixture of both
Freud and Jung, were much in vogue in the humanistic psychology world with
which I was then involved. In fact, I had been looking forward to going on
a week-long residential course of humanistic therapy that was taking place in
a small town in Kent called Headcorn. Unfortunately, I had had two wisdom
teeth extracted the previous week and the wound had become infected so, to my
great disappointment, I was unable to go. After several days in bed, I got the bus
from my home in Brixton to see my dentist in Thornton Heath. On the way, I
was racking my brains trying to understand what the significance of this illness
was—why had I become ill and had to miss this exciting residential course from
which I had hoped to learn so much about myself? What was it trying to tell
me? What did it mean? Eventually, I became exhausted by this fruitless search
for meaning and thought to myself ‘God knows what the meaning is!’ Struck
by this, I considered whether this might actually be true— that is, if there was a
meaning, only God could know it since it was beyond my own limited human
understanding. At that point, the bus stopped and I looked up to see where we
were. The first thing I saw was a street sign saying ‘Headcorn Road’.
I now knew that this moment was the ‘purpose’ of my illness. I had arrived at
Headcorn after all and this was the experience I had been looking for: something
that taught me far more than I could ever have dreamed I might get from my
residential week in Kent. Headcorn was here and now and so, it seemed, was
God, speaking to me out of this unfathomable coincidence.
This was a classic synchronicity where an internal psychic state is closely
correlated with a highly unlikely coincidence in a way that produces a strong
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sense of meaningful significance. (There are only two Headcorn Roads in the
whole of London). As Hogenson defines it, it was
a juxtaposition of a psychic state and a state in the material world that resulted in the
emergence of meaning and a transition in the individual’s state or understanding of
the world.
(Hogenson 2005, p. 280)
Transcendent meaning and the ‘objectively’ real
The crucial element of this experience is the occurrence of an event in the
external material world that is synchronous with my internal state of mind. The
‘sign’ in this case is literally a street-sign, the appearance of the Headcorn Road
street-sign that is directly congruent with Headcorn in Kent. This is just the
kind of substitution by congruent analogy that occurs frequently in dreams—
hence Bolen’s description of synchronicity as a ‘waking dream’ (Bolen 1979,
p. 37ff, cited in Aziz 1990, p. 82). When, as in this case, such signs point beyond
themselves to an unknown reality they may also be considered symbols, in Jung’s
sense of symbols as representations of something unknown. Here, the symbol
represents the unknown meaning which only ‘God’ knows. I might well have
regarded the street-sign as ‘a sign from God’ (and therefore a symbol of God’s
presence) but since my internal state concerned the unknowability of God, that
would have been a contradiction in terms. Nevertheless, it certainly evoked a
sense of awe and wonder that I described earlier as the feeling that ‘the universe
is alive’. I regard this as a quintessential element of synchronistic experience
that is self-validating and therefore true but entirely beyond any kind of proof.
The importance of the external object in evoking this experience is brought
out with great depth and clarity in Murray Stein’s remarkable paper on
‘Transcendence: The Hidden Fourth’, presented at a conference on ‘The Self
and the Sacred’ in 2008. Stein emphasizes that
this type of object is a symbol that transcends the psyche in that it introduces a factor
that stands on its own outside or beyond the realm of subjectivity . . . It is radically and
completely independent of the psychic matrix . . . It reaches out beyond the psyche,
and through its synchronistically orchestrated presence it implies the movement of a
transcendent factor breaking into the time-space-causality framework. It brings one
to a belief in objective meaning.
Now Stein goes slightly further here than I would myself in that, for him, such
experiences ‘are in the hands of something else, and its timing is orchestrated by
a power or principle that is beyond human control or knowing’. To my mind,
this begins to substantialize and hypostatize a transcendent factor that I do
not think ‘exists’ in any objective way, albeit the experience of there being one
is nevertheless overwhelming and incontrovertible. My own experience had a
quality to it that was, as Stein says, ‘absolutely, utterly and unquestionably real,
not only something seeming real’. And I agree that this is the impact created by
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
477
the experience of the external world ‘contributing in’ to what had seemed to be
a purely psychic state. So if, for Stein, such experiences bring him to beliefs that
I do not entirely share, I would certainly not want to argue about it. Indeed I
would regard such arguments as futile, irrelevant and potentially disrespectful
unless he were to claim that his experience of such synchronistic events proved
the existence of ‘objective meaning’. For then he would be transgressing the
boundaries between personal meaning and public knowledge. The confusion
here is around the meaning of ‘objective’. In this context, ‘objective’ refers to
a sense of intentionality in the world that is ‘other’ than personal or subjective
and cannot be reduced to anything else—hence the emphasis on the causal inexplicability of the events. In that sense the experience is ‘objectively’ real but not
in a way that can be subject to the ‘objective’ verification of public knowledge.
Prior to developing his theory of synchronicity, Jung had relied on the makeshift that such experiences were psychically real but the psychologist could not
say anything about their ‘objective’ reality. This was precisely what he was
trying to get beyond with the theory of synchronicity and the postulation of a
psychoid archetype that was more than psychic. However, rather than taking
either of these paths, I would prefer to say that the transcendent experience of
something ‘outside or beyond the realm of subjectivity’ is phenomenologically
real in a way that includes the external world, not just the psyche. But this
requires a shift in epistemological perspective away from a rigid subject/object,
mind/matter perspective towards a phenomenological view that regards such
distinctions as limited at best and profoundly misleading at worst (see Brooke
2009). This enables us to escape the imprisoning argument over whether such
experiences are ‘objective’ by defining reality in a way that is neither subjective
nor objective. Real does not therefore have to be objective but nor is it confined
to the terrain of ‘merely subjective’ (psychic). ‘Strong synchronicities’ of this
kind create a shift into a different way of relating to the world and therefore a
different way of being in the world.
Questioning remarkability
Accounts of synchronicity frequently emphasize the factor of remarkability in
order to demonstrate the inexplicable acausality of the events. For example, in
his account of the scarab beetle at the window, Jung asserts that ‘nothing like
it ever happened to me before or since’. The attentive listener will have noticed
that I slipped one of these assertions into the account of my own synchronicity:
There are only two Headcorn Roads in the whole of London. But what if there
were five or ten or thirty? How many Headcorn Roads would there need to be
for the event to cease to be a meaningful coincidence? Here the psychological
factor is indeed the primary one—I experienced it as unlikely and surprising
and only years later looked up the London A-Z to see how many Headcorn
Roads there were. Had I discovered there were many of them, it could have
made no difference to what I experienced at the time. I think this goes some
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way to showing that the apparent impossibility of the external event is merely
the pretext for the shift in consciousness that accompanies it. Similarly, it was
not the scarab beetle itself but Jung’s use of it with his patient that convinced
her of the limitations of her rationalistic view of the world. In this perspective,
the meaning arises out of the interaction between a subjective inner event and
an outer objective one. So it is only the event that is objective, not the meaning.
Acausality is actually not the sine qua non of the meaning and, in turn, this
means that being able to explain coincidences as ‘not really remarkable’ only
detracts from the theory of synchronicity as publically verifiable knowledge, not
from the experience of such events as having transcendent meaning. The key
element here is the factor of surprise which Martin-Vallas (2009) has linked
to the concept of Kairos as ‘a sudden emergence, most often coming as a
surprise . . . that breaks into the bubble or the spiral of objective temporality’
(p. 451).5
Selective attention
Many coincidences that are put forward as examples of synchronicity can also
be explained in terms of selective attention, notably the virtually ubiquitous
phenomenon that coincidences seem to increase whenever one is thinking about
synchronicity. For example, while preparing this paper, I was glad to have the
opportunity to edit a paper on the time factor in synchronicity that had been
submitted to the Journal of Analytical Psychology. By chance, my monthly
book group had chosen to read The Time-Traveller’s Wife at a meeting where
I had not been present so I found myself reading it at the same time as I was
editing the paper. I then watched the first episode of Brian Cox’s series on The
Wonders of the Universe which turned out to be all about time. And when I
mentioned this to the author of the paper, she added that The Time Traveller’s
Wife was one of her favourite books and she had only just bought a copy for a
friend6 . . .
These clusters are interesting because they show the way we selectively attend
to features of the environment that have congruent correspondence for us. They
also show similarities with the organization of complexes around a central
core or ‘hub’, suggesting that such network clusters create a field of congruent
meaning which ‘attracts’ analogous events (Cambray 2009, pp. 41–42). Yet,
rather than involving any acausal factor operating in Nature, they suggest
5
See also Cambray (2009), pp. 88–90.
The author is Angeliki Yiassemides whose paper appears elsewhere in this edition of the JAP.
Jung’s experiences with ‘fish’ references on April 1st involve a similar cluster, more notable only for
including 6 events as against the 3 or 4 in the cluster I’ve mentioned and because the fish symbol was
more significant to him than time is to me, although I gather that time has a similar significance for
Yiassemides. This again points to the subjective (personal) element in the creation and attribution
of meaning.
6
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
479
that many synchronicities arise through unconscious selective processes that
highlight the myriad potential coincidences that may occur below the level of
our conscious attention. Our environment is so complex and multi-faceted that,
in a sense, coincidences are there waiting to happen for those who attend to
them.
Scanning the environment for congruent correspondences occurs even more
strongly in the states of high affective intensity commented on by Jung for
which Hogenson has coined the term ‘symbolic density’ (Hogenson 2005). To
be honest, I’d been looking for some such synchronistic sign for months when I
happened on Headcorn Road. All the previous ones were trivial by comparison
and have slipped back into unconscious forgetfulness.
Colliding trajectories in complex human systems
I now want to describe a kind of coincidence which is both remarkable and
striking enough to cause goose-bumps and a sense of ‘spookiness’ but does not
produce a further level of symbolic meaning or transcendence. Although not
strictly speaking an example of synchronicity, my favourite example of this kind
was told by Bono, the lead singer of U2 (see Hall 1999).
Bono had gone to sleep listening to a Roy Orbison song called ‘In Dreams’
and woken up with a song in his head that he was convinced must also be
on the same album. In fact, it was a melody of his own. He spent the day
working on the song and, after a concert that night, was still playing it to the
rest of the band who remarked on how Orbison-like it was. At that point, their
tour manager arrived to tell them that Roy Orbison, whom none of them had
ever met, was at the stage door and would like to meet them. Likewise Roy
Orbison had never seen the band before and, after complimenting them on their
performance, he turned to Bono and said, ‘You wouldn’t happen to have a song
for me, would you?’ The song became ‘Mystery Girl’ and was the title track of
Orbison’s last album before his early death, a year or so later. Remarkable, yes,
and the collaboration between Bono and Orbison was clearly ‘meant’ to be—
but, as far as I could tell from Bono’s account, that was the end of it. There did
not seem to be any inner meaning or significance—it was merely a remarkable
coincidence.
This story, while having synchronistic elements, is not actually synchronicity
in my view because it lacks the all-important element where one element is a sign
of the other. Had Bono dreamed of meeting Roy Orbison or had Roy Orbison
had a premonition that Bono would have a song for him, it would have qualified
as one of the many examples of pre-cognition which Jung includes in synchronicity. In that case the dream or the premonition would have been retrospectively
recognized as a ‘sign’ of the meeting. Nevertheless, the effect of the coincidence
(even if not fully synchronistic) is to create the sense that the two elements were
already linked before they occurred. Now in one sense this is true in that the
two events are indeed interconnected but the chain of connection is exceedingly
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complicated with a multitude of elements which would go back over two
decades to the original composition of Roy Orbison’s song. Unbeknownst to
either of them, Bono and Roy Orbison were each on a trajectory which would
lead towards their meeting and working together which, once it had happened,
would not seem that unlikely an eventuality. That is to say that all our lives
involve a great multitude of interconnected events whose consequences are far
more numerous and complex than we can possibly comprehend. That’s enough
on its own for the goose-bumps, even if there’s nothing spooky about it.
(The band ribbed Bono for having conjured Roy Orbison up with his magical
powers).
Colliding trajectories like this might well be subject to explanation in terms
of complex adaptive systems but this might actually be an argument for
excluding incidents of this kind from synchronicity on the basis that both events
involve the interconnected intentionality of human actors. By contrast, those
synchronistic events where the ‘sign’ comes from material objects or events
(scarab, road-sign, fish etc) include no possible intentionality in relation to the
human participants. It is this ‘contributing in’ of the material world that creates
the sense of non-human intentionality at work in the universe characteristic
of ‘strong synchronicity’. And, in turn, it is much more difficult to see (at
least for me) how such coincidences might be connected in any conceivably
measurable system, no matter how complex. Unlike, say, a weather system
which provides at least some definition of the relevant events in the system, how
would one define and measure the relevant (and irrelevant) events in a system
that includes, say, dentists, bus-drivers and the names of roads in London on
the one hand and philosophical questioning amongst participants in humanistic
psychology courses in the 1970s on the other? Clearly the only system that
really links all these things together is me. This might well be an argument for
‘symbolic density’ conceived as a state of mind which increases the likelihood
of experiencing this kind of transformative symbolic meaning in the world
(Hogenson 2005). Hogenson has recently confirmed that this is indeed his view
and that he is ‘skeptical of synchronicity as an actual phenomenon’ (2011) by
which he means (in my words) that he is sceptical of Jung’s claims that meaning
exists in the world at large independently of human consciousness (personal
communication, 2011). Even so, it remains to be seen how such qualitative states
of mind could be rendered in terms of the mathematical quantities required to
demonstrate their obedience to a power law distribution (see Hogenson 2005)
and it is to be hoped that Hogenson may be able to clarify this in subsequent
publications.
Retroactive narratives
However coincidences may or may not be connected in ‘fact’, they become
connected by being organized into a retrospective narrative that creates the
meaning as an emergent phenomenon, the whole process being stimulated by the
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
481
need to ‘make sense’ of what has happened7 . It is, as they say, no coincidence that
synchronicities make good stories—the better the story, the more convincing
the impact.
Morin defines emergent properties as
superior qualities emanating from the organizing complexity. They can influence the
constituents retroactively thereby conferring on them the qualities of the whole.
(Morin 2004, p. 234)8
That is, once the narrative is constructed, the individual elements all fall
into place as elements of the whole and assume a significance they did not
have before. This seems very similar to the process of ‘Nachträglichkeit’ or
‘afterwardsness’ described by Freud and known in French as après-coup. The
point here is that, in synchronistic coincidence, this process occurs extremely
rapidly in direct response to the element of surprise. As Roy Orbison walks
in the door and asks for the song, Bono is in the process of re-organizing the
preceding events—hearing the song, waking up with his own melody, the band’s
comment on its Orbison-like qualities—into a narrative which now includes
the subsequent events and gives them a meaning they did not have before. This
process of retroactive narrative organization is characteristic of all synchronistic
experiences but occurs so rapidly that it is difficult to discern. So, for example,
as soon as I see the Headcorn Road street-sign, my preceding thoughts about
God and meaning become interconnected with it, changing the meaning of both
by including them in a supervening context. The largely unconscious process by
which this generates a symbolic interpretation—‘ah, this is Headcorn and so that
was the meaning of my illness’—follows on afterwards and gives the narrative
a lasting significance, strengthened by the transcendent ‘kick’ of surprise and
inexplicability it now incorporates.
It is not that retroactive organization ‘appears’ to gives the synchronistic
events a meaning—it does give them a meaning because that’s what meaning is
and does—it’s a way of relating events together to create an emergent property
called ‘meaning’. Thus causality is also a form of meaning since it too relates
events together in a meaningful way—but Jung did not see it that way. He
seemed to see meaning as an alternative explanatory factor to causality but this
is deeply connected with his need to establish some kind of external objectivity
for the psyche, lest the psyche be regarded as ‘merely subjective’.
Universal mind and the psychoid archetype
This quest is apparent in the convoluted efforts Jung makes to establish the
existence of a psychoid level in which mind and matter are conjoined in
7
Cambray refers to the ‘self-organizing features that only manifest as the human narrative capacity
is brought into play’ although this leaves an ambiguity with regard to whether it is the narrative
that has the self-organizing features (as I believe) or that these already exist in the events themselves
and are merely made manifest by the narrative.
8 I am grateful to Claire Raguet for bringing this reference to my attention.
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a postulated third which constitutes an underlying unitary reality or unus
mundus. With this proposal, Jung aimed to re-animate the material world that
had been de-souled by Descartes, a division that remains fundamental in Kant’s
division between (spiritual) noumena and (material) phenomena with which
Jung remained so preoccupied (De Voogd 1984). Hence the implication that
the unconscious mind is a Universal Mind. In this sense, the guiding spirit behind
Jung’s project is God Himself—not any longer as a transcendental cause but as
a transcendent meaning. The theory of synchronicity can thus be understood as
an attempt to provide a scientific argument for the necessary existence of God.
The trouble here is that Jung remains caught in a dualist Cartesian way
of thinking about mind and matter while at the same time attempting to
describe a phenomenological reality that is non-dualist. As a result, he is led
to posit a hypothetical psychoid layer which unites matter and mind but then,
paradoxically, has to declare it beyond the bounds of knowledge (as defined
by Kant) and therefore a ‘transcendent factor’. Numerous commentators have
pointed out the resulting confusion in Jung’s approach (De Voogd 1984; Bishop
2000; Giegerich 1987; Brooks 2011). Perhaps the most pithy critique comes
from Pietikainen (1998) who points out that Jung’s argument ‘amounts to
saying that even though the realm of the noumena is inaccessible to us, it
is nevertheless accessible to us’ (p. 382). Thus the supposedly unknowable
‘archetype in itself’ can nevertheless be known via its manifestations in
archetypal imagery and the ‘objective’ phenomenon of synchronicity, both of
which are claimed as evidence of a psychoid unus mundus.
Jung introduces the concept of the psychoid in On the Nature of the Psyche
in 1947. At first he attempts to pass off the idea as if it refers merely to the
border area between the psyche and the physiological body, despite its vitalist
pedigree, deriving from Hans Driesch who coined the term (Addison 2009)9 .
Jung subsequently introduces the notion of psychoid processes occurring ‘at
both ends of the psychic scale’:
Psychic processes therefore behave like a scale along which consciousness ‘slides’. At
one moment it finds itself in the vicinity of instinct and falls under its influence; at
another, it slides along to the other end where spirit predominates . . .
(Jung 1947, para. 408)
Furthermore Jung seems to equate the archetype with spirit for two paragraphs
earlier he writes
Archetype and instinct are the most polar opposites imaginable as can easily be seen
when one compares a man who is ruled by his instinctual drives with a man who is
seized by the spirit.
(ibid., para. 406)
9
Vitalism asserts the existence of some kind of independent life-force in organisms, in contrast to
materialism which asserts that life is fully explicable in terms of biochemical processes.
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
483
Here Jung seems to be using the old theological (and vitalist) distinction
between ‘flesh’ and ‘spirit’ in which spirit was regarded as separate from
the material realm and certainly something that exists on a different plane
from the materiality of the body. Jung makes this plain when he refers
to ‘the [archetypal] image which signifies and at the same time evokes the
instinct, although in a form quite different from the one we meet on the
biological level’ (ibid., para. 414; italics added) thus implying that the archetypal
image is not only spiritual but ‘non-biological’. Gone then is the notion
of archetypes as part of our biological inheritance. They now have become
harbingers of the spirit which has a ‘non-psychic’ aspect: ‘there is probably
no alternative now but to describe their nature, in accordance with their
chiefest effect, as “spirit’’’ (ibid., para. 420). By resorting to this dualism
between matter and spirit, Jung has become trapped in a Cartesian problem
that he then has to solve by pushing the spirit back into the material world
via the postulate of an unknowable psychoid layer that combines matter and
spirit.
This suggests that the fundamental purpose behind the introduction of the
psychoid was to use its link with the materiality of the physiological body as a
way of crossing the Cartesian divide between mind and matter. It is a Trojan
Horse for the re-spiritualization of Nature. Thus Jung continues (ibid.):
If so, the position of the archetype would be located beyond the psychic sphere,
analogous to the position of physiological instinct, which is immediately rooted in
the stuff of the organism and, with its psychoid nature, forms the bridge to matter in
general.
So while Jung still insists that the ultimate nature of mind, meaning and matter
remain forever unknowable beyond the phenomenal world, this is a Kantian
fig-leaf for the real achievement which is to have put spirit back into matter—as
if they were divided in the first place. Yet Jung knew only too well that there
was more in heaven and earth than in any rationalist philosophy based on the
division between subject/object or mind and matter.
Archaic mind and scientific mind
As well as his own profound experiences of the creative potential of fantasy,
Jung was deeply interested and invested in the very different ways of thinking
manifested by non-Western peoples who clearly thought and related to the
world in a very different way. In his talk on ‘The Archaic’ in 1930, Jung
outlined his views about these differences; views which, as Paul Bishop has
shown, strikingly anticipate his later theory of synchronicity. Bishop glosses
Jung’s argument as follows:
human beings today distinguish sharply between inner and outer reality, between what
happens ‘inside’, in the mind, and what happens ‘out there’, in the world. In ‘primitive’
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thought, which is a mode of thought to which today we still have access, however,
the objective and the psychic coalesce, so that the (artificial) distinction between the
inner (the psyche) and the outer (the object) disappears.
(Bishop 2008, p. 507)
And he later concludes that for Jung,
Underneath (or behind, or somewhere obscured by) the ‘contemporary’, the ‘modern’,
the ‘civilized’, lies the ‘primal’, the ‘primordial’, the ‘archaic’. And sometimes the
latter . . . suddenly intrudes, rhizome-like, into the world of the former.
(ibid., p. 517)
This strongly echoes both Jung’s visionary experiences in 1913–14 and the
Kairos moment in which synchronicity breaks into the ordinary schemata
of rational thought. It is not merely an alternative way of thinking, it is
an alternative way of experiencing our being in the world. Seen from this
perspective, there is no need to posit some obscure psychoid realm in which
mind and matter are united since for those who occupy this way of being,
mind and matter are already united in an experiential reality rather than as a
quasi-scientific, semi-metaphysical proposition. Bishop again:
The mana-inhabited world of the primitive mind is decidedly immanent: ‘invisible,
arbitrary forces’ (Jung 1931, para. 113) may be at work in it, yet these forces are
(conceived as being) very much in and of this world.
(ibid., p. 513)
Jung’s own frequent experiences of synchronicity and other paranormal
phenomena such as clairvoyance, precognition and telekinesis gave him
powerful evidence for these forces but it was not the kind of evidence that
could hold sway within the court of empirical science. Jung was not content to
allow this duality (as opposed to dualism) to co-exist but sought to prove the
validity of a pre-dualist way of being in the world from within the dictates of a
Cartesian/Kantian dualism. This is why the attempt was bound to fail and this
remains the case, despite recent advances in science such as complexity theory
since science is necessarily based on different principles—i.e., rational thought
rather than imaginal congruence, mathematics rather than poetry. Especially
where synchronicity is concerned with transcendent experience, it inevitably
falls outside the domain of science.
It may be a different matter in relation to the meaning-making aspects of
synchronicity: much of Hogenson and Cambray’s work on linking synchronicity
with emergence, complexity and dynamic systems theory refers to states of
mind and interactive processes occurring in synchronicity rather than offering,
as Jung does, explanations which postulate some structural arrangement in
the external world that produce the coincidental events themselves (Hogenson
2005, 2009; Cambray 2002, 2006, 2009). In that sense, I do not read their
work as supporting Jung’s claim for a connecting principle in Nature, acausal
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
485
or otherwise, albeit Cambray believes that synchronistic events are emergent
phenomena in themselves and that to distinguish between the external event
(coincidence) and its meaning as I seek to do here is to maintain a subject/object
division which he eschews (personal communication 2011).
It is also possible to use scientific knowledge in a metaphorical way,
commensurate with Walter Kaufmann’s designation of psychoanalysis as a
‘poetic science’ (Kaufmann, 1982, p. 109) although this distinction is not always
made clear. Wolfgang Pauli suspected that this was what Jung was doing with
quantum physics:
When you use physical terms in order to explain psychological terms or findings, I often
have the impression that with you they are dreamlike images of the imagination . . .
[Such statements that you make] cannot be understood by any physicist.
(Meier 2001, p. 57)
Furthermore, Hogenson suggests that, for Pauli
religion and science represent epistemic sates, not unlike the wave and particle
descriptions of light. Each is a description based on a point of view.
(Hogenson 2008, p.130)
And, from another perspective, de Voogd argues that Jung’s notion of esse in
anima constituted a much greater challenge to Kant than he seemed to realize
(or perhaps was prepared to acknowledge).
The ontology that goes with esse in anima . . . requires a descriptive model that puts
metaphor before concept.
(de Voogd 1984, p. 225)
Congruent correspondence and the primordial mind
Such differentiations imply a necessary distinction between an imaginal world
of non-verifiable personal meaning and a rational world of publicly verifiable
rational knowledge. My suggestion is that the essential difference between
these two ways of seeing turns on the means by which associations are
made. In the rational world, association is made by means of causal chains of
connection and logical sequences epitomized by mathematics; in the imaginal
world, association is made by congruent correspondence, epitomized by poetic
metaphor. Metaphor works by recognition of congruent elements between the
source domain and the target domain which enables the target to be expressed
in terms of the source. So, for example, in the metaphor ‘sunshine of your love’,
the congruence between sunshine and love is warmth or, more specifically,
the pleasure of feeling warm. This might become a symbol in which the sun
is symbolic of love or, perhaps more strongly, where the sun symbolizes the
source of love through congruent correspondence with the sun as the source of
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light and heat where both symbol and symbolized have a common underlying
theme of ‘what is needed for life’.
However, congruent correspondence, while closely connected to metaphor,
has a broader definition and would include such features as synaesthesia
and cross-modal perception which have been linked to the development of
archetypal imagination and spiritual intelligence (Hunt 2003). And, as I’ve
pointed out earlier in this paper, congruent correspondence is also the very
essence of coincidence. So it may well be that we are primed to highlight
coincidental features of our environment just because they do involve congruent
correspondence and this alerts us to the possibility of meaningful connection.
This does not mean that the meaning we discover is necessarily an illusion
(although it could be) any more than the congruence in metaphor between
the source and target domains makes metaphor an illusion. Rather I am
suggesting that synchronicity works by the same process by which metaphor
operates—the use of congruence between two or more factors to produce a
meta-meaning that might be described as ‘emergent’ or even ‘transcendent’10 .
This could also be defined as the emergence of a symbol out of its congruent
constituents.
Here I want to make a further link between the so-called archaic or primordial
mind and a recent development of Freud’s notion of the primary process
by the psychoanalyst, Michael Robbins (2011). Robbins suggests that there
is a primary mental activity (PMA) distinct from rational thought that can
be seen in fields as diverse as infancy, dreaming, schizophrenia, shamanism,
visionary states (he specifically mentions Jung’s Red Book) and the creative
arts, especially those associated with states of possession. PMA differs from
rational thought in many ways such as the non-differentiation of opposites, the
absence of negation and, particularly significant in relation to Jung’s theory of
synchronicity, the relativization of time and space. In PMA, as in our dreams,
many different times and places can coalesce and separate without contradiction
and without the ‘secondary process’ awareness that requires their division.
However, rather than regarding this form of thinking as either primitive or
inferior—i.e., looking at it from the perspective of secondary process rational,
differentiated thought—Robbins argues that PMA can be developed in very
sophisticated ways, just as rational thought can be and that it is only a Western
post-Renaissance bias that regards rational thought as ‘superior’, let alone the
only way of relating to the world. In fact, PMA is a characteristic feature of all
archaic pre-scientific cultures and is particularly developed in religious ritual and
shamanism.
10
In ‘strong transcendence’ Stein argues that the mediation of a third in the transcendent function
shifts into a further dimension that he calls ‘the hidden fourth’. In this further dimension there is
an experience of transcendence.
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
487
Jung as shaman: living in the primordial mind
The case of shamanism is particularly interesting in relation to Jung. Aziz cites
several examples of the way that Jung integrated synchronicity into his ordinary
way of living so that it became a consistent resource. When analysing, Jung
would take every natural event such as insects flying in, the lake lapping more
audibly than usual and so on as belonging synchronistically to what was being
said in the analysis (Hannah 1977, p. 202; cited in Aziz 1990, p. 85); the
scarab, it seems, was not such an isolated incident. Similarly, in the course of a
disagreement with Henry Fierz, Jung noticed that his watch had unaccountably
stopped. Checking the correct time with Fierz, Jung concluded ‘You have the
right time and I the wrong one. Let us discuss the thing again’ (Jensen 1982,
p. 21, cited in Aziz 1990, p. 86). These examples show the very creative and
imaginative way that Jung was able to make metaphorical associations between
different domains, seeing the congruence where others might not. That is, he
was a highly skilled adept in the art of congruent correspondence or PMA. So
it is not so surprising that when Von Franz remarked to Jung
that his psychological insights and his attitude to the unconscious seemed to me to
be in many respects the same as those of the most archaic religions – for example
shamanism . . . Jung answered with a laugh ‘Well, that’s nothing to be ashamed of.
It’s an honour’.
(von Franz 1975, p. 13, cited in Aziz 1990, p. 220)
Nevertheless, this leads to very different conclusions about synchronicity from
the ones Jung made himself. Far from being an abstract principle of Nature,
it suggests that synchronicity requires a sort of mental skill that creates an
openness to the associative thinking of the primordial mind. And, as Jung
claimed in relation to synchronicity, in the primordial mode of thought, the laws
of time, space and causality do not apply. Jung might have been more successful
had he restricted himself to arguing that Kant’s categories were too limited—
that time, space and causality were definitive only of one way of being in the
world that relied entirely on rational thinking. They did not take into account
other ways of thinking which, by highlighting congruent correspondence, create
an imaginal world of meaning in contrast to the rational world of knowledge.
Conclusion
As analysts, we value this alternative mind-state very highly and make great
use of it, through the recognition of ‘congruent correspondences’ of many
kinds, including the interpretation of dreams and fantasy material, the links
we make between the present and past and the very notion of ‘transference’
itself. While most of us do not make as much use of synchronistic congruence
with the environment as Jung evidently did, we do use the same kind of thinking
whenever we make a symbolic interpretation about an apparently non-symbolic
occurrence; we see symbolic meaning where the non-psychologically minded see
Warren Colman
488
only quotidian ‘facts’11 . We regularly draw as much of the patient’s experience
as possible into a symbolic frame, for which the congruent correspondence
of metaphor and symbol is a sine qua non. Often we do so by immersing
ourselves in ‘reverie’ which is very much like Jung’s adaptation of Janet’s
abaissement du niveau mental and may be regarded as a way of fostering
the primary mental activity of the primordial mind. However, at the same time,
we are always consistently evaluating these congruent links, shuttling back and
forth between this ‘primary mental activity’ and a more rational consciousness,
always subjecting the primordial mind to the rational mind (and sometimes
vice versa). In this way scepticism becomes the guarantor of primordial mind
rather than its destroyer. So while it is possible to think scientifically about the
differences between these two incommensurable ways of relating to the world
and while it is also possible to use scientific thought within an imaginal, poetic
perspective, it is ultimately neither possible nor desirable to attempt to re-unite
them. We need both.
For this reason, I feel strongly that rather than making scientific knowledge
claims for the products of this state of mind, we should be arguing for its intrinsic
value as a different way of relating to the world. It won’t get us to the moon
but it’s what fills the moon with symbolic meaning and value—and enriches us
in a way that literal space travel could never do. Let me conclude then with the
remarkable paean to imagination written by Julien Offray de la Mettrie, the first
thinker to propose that man, like everything else in the universe, can be understood in purely mechanical terms. Here is what this thorough-going atheist and
materialist had to say about imagination in his book Man a Machine in 1748:
Thanks to the imagination, to its flattering touch, the cold skeleton of reason acquires
living, rosy flesh; thanks to it, the sciences flourish, the arts are embellished, woods
speak, echoes sigh, rocks weep, marble breathes and all inanimate objects come to life.
TRANSLATIONS OF ABSTRACT
Cet article oppose la conception de Jung de la synchronicité comme étant la preuve d’un
principe objectif de sens dans la Nature, à une vision mettant l’accent sur la production
humaine du sens. Toute synchronicité génère des signes indicatifs, mais c’est uniquement
lorsqu’elle devient le « symbole vivant » d’une intentionnalité transcendante, à l’œuvre
dans un univers vivant, que la synchronicité génère le genre de signification symbolique
qui amena Jung à postuler l’existence d’un Esprit Universel. Ceci est considéré comme
une forme de savoir personnel tiré de l’expérience, appartenant au « monde imaginal
du sens », caractéristique de l’ « esprit primordial » opposé au « monde rationnel
du savoir », à travers lequel Jung tenta de présenter ses expériences comme si elles
étaient empiriquement et publiquement vérifiables. Tandis que le savoir rationnel dépend
11
This is another indication of the unfortunate way in which Jung tried to argue for the existence
of parapsychological phenomena by insisting that they were ‘facts’, thus missing the essential point
that they depend on meaning.
Synchronicity and the meaning-making psyche
489
d’une modalité du sens où les chaines causales et les liens logiques sont prédominants,
la modalité imaginale du sens, elle, est générée par des formes de correspondances
congruentes—caractéristique que la synchronicité partage avec la métaphore et le
symbole—et la création de narrations au moyen d’une organisation rétroactive de ses
éléments constitutifs.
Dieser Beitrag kontrastiert Jungs Erklärung der Synchronizität als Beleg für ein
objektives Prinzip der Bedeutungshaftigkeit in der Natur mit einer Ansicht, die den
Aspekt der Bedeutungsverleihung durch den Menschen betont. Alle Synchronizitäten
erzeugen hinweisende Zeichen. Aber nur dort, wo jene zum ‘lebendigen Symbol’ einer
in einem lebendigen Universum am Werk befindlichen transzendenten Intentionalität
werden, erzeugt die Synchronizität die Art von symbolischer Bedeutung die Jung dazu
brachte, die Existenz einer Objektiven Psyche zu postulieren. Diese wird als eine Art
personalen, auf Erfahrung beruhenden Wissens angesehen, welches zur ‘imaginativen
Welt der Bedeutung’-Charakteristik des ‘ursprünglichen Geistes’ gehört, welche der
‘rationalen Welt des Wissens’ gegenübersteht, in der Jung versuchte seine Erfahrungen
zu präsentieren als seien sie empirisch und öffentlich verifizierbar. Während rationales
Wissen von einer Form der Bedeutung abhängt, die von Kausalketten und logischen
Verknüpfungen bestimmt ist, wird imaginatives Wissen von Formen von kongruenter
Entsprechung—ein Merkmal welches die Synchronizität mit der Metapher und dem
Symbol gemeinsam hat—und der Schaffung von Erzählungen per rückwirkender
Organisation ihrer konstituierenden Elemente erzeugt.
In questo lavoro viene confrontato il resoconto di Jung della sincronicità come
evidenza di un principio oggettivo di significato nella Natura da un punto di vista
che generano segni significativi, ma solo quando ciò diviene un ‘simbolo vivente’ di una
intenzionalità trascendente al lavoro in un universo vivente accade che la sincronicità
generi quel tipo di significato simbolico che spinse Jung a ipotizzare l’esistenza di una
Mente Universale. Ciò viene considerato come una forma di conoscenza esperenziale
personale che appartiene al “mondo immaginale dei significati” caratteristico di una
‘mente primordiale’, come opposta al ‘mondo razionale della conoscenza’ nel quale Jung
tentò di presentare le sue esperienze come se fossero pubblicamente ed esperenzialmente
verificabili. Laddove la conoscenza razionale dipende da una forma di significato in
cui molto importanti sono le catene causali e i legami logici, il significato immaginale
viene generato da forme di corrispondenza congrua—un aspetto che la sincronicità
condivide con la metafora e il simbolo—e dalla creazione di narrazioni attraverso una
organizzazione retroattiva dei suoi elementi costitutivi.
Зta statь rashodits s mneniem nga o sinhronistiqnosti kak svidetelьstve obъektivnogo principa osmyslennosti v Prirode—vo vzglde avtora akcent delaec na qeloveqesko sposobnosti tvoritь smysl. Vse sinhronistiqnosti poroжda t ukazu wie znaki, no tolьko kogda зto stanovits
«жivym simvolom» transcendentno namerennosti v жivo vselenno,
sinhronistiqnostь poroжdaet tot simvoliqeski smysl, kotory privel
nga k postulirovani
suwestvovani Universalьnogo Razuma. Зto
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Warren Colman
sqitaec formo liqnogo зmpiriqeskogo znani, prinadleжawego
«voobraжaemomu miru smysla», harakternomu dl «primordialьnogo
mira» i protivopostavlemogo «racionalьnomu miru znani», kotoromu
ng pytals predstavitь svoi pereжivani, kak esli by oni poddavalisь
зmiriqeskomu i obwestvennomu kontrol . Esli racionalьnoe znanie zavisit
ot formy znaqeni, v kotoro kauzalьnye cepoqki i logiqeskie svzki
pervostepenny, to imaginativny smysl poroжdaec formami kongruзntnogo
sootvetstvi—зto qerta, obwa dl sinhronistiqnosti, metafory i
simvola—i sozdaniem povestvovani s pomowь retroaktivno organizacii
ih sostavnyh зlementov.
En este trabajo compara el concepto de Jung de la sincronicidad como evidencia de
un principio objetivo significante en la Naturaleza con una vision que enfatiza el
significar-haciendo humano. Todas las sincronicidades producen signos indicativos pero
sólo donde esto llega a ser un ‘ sı́mbolo viviente’ de una intencionalidad trascendente
en el trabajo en un universo vivo la sincronicidad engendra la clase de significado
simbólico que orientó a Jung para postular la existencia de una Mente Universal. Esto es
considerado como una forma personal y de experiencia del conocimiento dell ‘mundo de
imaginal significante’ caracterı́stica de la ‘mente primordial’, en contraste con el ‘mundo
racional del conocimiento’ en que Jung procuró presentar sus experiencias como si
estuvieran empı́ricamente y públicamente verificables. Mientras que el conocimiento
racional depende de una forma de significar en el que cadenas causales y lazos lógicos
son supremos, el significar del imaginal es engendrado por formas de correspondencia
congruente—una caracterı́stica que la sincronicidad comparte con la metáfora y el
sı́mbolo—y la creación de narrativas por medio de organización retroactiva de sus
elementos constituyente.
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[Ms first received May 2010; final version June 2011]