Jung described the pairing or clustering of events through meaningful coincidence as an “acausal” phenomenon. Certainly, we do not observe causation in the play of coincidence in the way that we can say the kettle boiled because we turned on the burner. A characteristic of coincidence is that it does not have a visible cause.
But this does not
mean that there is no cause for coincidence. " Beyond the accidental surface effects of this world sit - as
of yore - the gods," Joseph Campbell declared.
Most human
cultures, across most of recorded history, have believed that there is indeed a
hidden hand at work in coincidence: that it is through the play of unusual or
unexpected conjunctions, and natural phenomena, that gods or angels or animate
forces of nature or other dimensions send messages to humans or actively
intervene in our world. Let’s not shrug this off as a “primitive” idea — it has worked, and continues to
work, in highly practical ways. And let’s not classify this idea as a
“metaphysical” belief.
The forces that
cause meaningful coincidence may be quite physical. We miss this because we
cannot observe their workings with our ordinary senses and our regular
assumptions. These forces include our own thoughts and feelings, and those of
others connected to us. They may include the powers that Jung called “archetypes”
— as long as we remember that
in Jung’s mature thought the archetypes are not structures but “habitual
currents of psychic energy” and “systems of readiness for action,” and that
they are as much physical as psychic. The physical forces that play with us
through coincidence may include our parallel selves in parallel universes,
interacting with our world in constant and complex weavings through what
quantum physics has taught us to call “interference” patterns, forever shifting
the balance of probabilities for any specific outcome.
Quantum physics shows us the universe as a
dynamic web of connection. Subatomic particles are not separate “things”; they
have meaning and identity only through their connections with everything else.
Those connections do not depend on physical proximity or causation. Particles
that have once been in contact with each other remain connected through all
space and time.
Quantum physics also confirms that when we go
to the heart of physical reality, there is no separation between mind and
matter. Subatomic particles exist in all possible states until they are
observed — at which point
something definite emerges from the soup of possibilities.
Inner and outer, subjective and objective,
interweave and move together at quantum levels, on a human scale, and no doubt
everywhere in the universe. We live in an energy field where everything
resonates — to a greater or
lesser degree — with
everything else. The world we inhabit mirrors our thoughts and feelings, and
vice versa.
In the hidden order of reality, there is no
distinction between mind and matter. The split between inner and outer — subjective and objective — that we experience in ordinary
life is unknown in the deeper reality.
Richard Wilhelm’s
account of the Chinese rainmaker
contains the essence of a worldview in which the human mind and the external
world form a whole. A village has been without rain for weeks. The desperate
villagers send for a rainmaker. When the old man arrives, he shuts himself up
in the house provided for him, performing no ceremonies until the rains come.
When asked how he brought the rain, he explains that when he arrived he noted a
state of disharmony in himself, so he retired to compose himself. When he
restored his own equilibrium, the rain came according to its natural pattern.
As we become more
awake to what is going on, we may become personal magnets for coincidence,
“strange attractors” that draw more and more interesting and unexpected
encounters and events toward us. The brilliant analyst and classicist
Marie-Louise von Franz, who knew both Jung and Pauli well, alluded to this:
“The larger our consciousness is, and the more it develops, the more we get
hold of certain aspects of the spirit of the unconscious, draw it into our own
subjective sphere, and then call it our own psychic activity or our own
spirit.”
Text adapted from The Three "Only" Things: Tapping the Power of Dreams, Coincidence and Imagination by Robert Moss.Published by New World Library
"The Houses Are Watching". Photo of house in Sibiu, Romania by Robert Moss
"The Houses Are Watching". Photo of house in Sibiu, Romania by Robert Moss
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