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Article
on Syncronicity -
James
Redfield's ridiculous "The First Insight" concerns becoming
conscious of the coincidences in our lives and the fact
that these coincidences are happening more and more frequently.
We are instructed by the manuscript to take notice and act accordingly.
Every individual has experienced some sort of highly improbable
event that, most likely, has seemed meaningful to them and Redfield
uses this ubiquity to begin the manuscript, to stimulate interest.
As Poe observed in The Mystery of Marie Roget: There are few
persons, even among the calmest thinkers, who have not occasionally
been startled into a vague yet thrilling half-credence in the supernatural,
by coincidences of so seemingly marvellous a character that, as
mere coincidences, the intellect has been unable to receive them.
It
is indeed fascinating. The First Insight is an explanation and simplification
of what Carl Jung called synchronicity. Through his extensive experience
in analysis, he found coincidences, which were
connected so meaningfully that their chance concurrence
would represent a degree of improbability that would have to be
expressed by an astronomical figure." The most famous example
he gives is that of the golden scarab. As a patient detailed her
dream of an unusual image, a golden scarab, there was a tapping
at the window. Jung opened the window and a rose chafer, or Cetonia
aureate, flew in, the beetle which could be said to be the closest
to the golden scarab, Egyptian symbol of rebirth. The patient, needless
to say, made great progress with her problem of excessive rationality.
Jung dubbed
synchronicity the acausal connecting principle, dispensing
quite radically with the causality paradigm, stretching reason as
palpably as Redfield. In his introduction to the I Ching, referring
to the moment of throwing the coins, he writes: The matter
of interest seems to be the configuration formed by chance events
in the moment of observation, and not at all the hypothetical reasons
that seemingly account for the coincidence. While the Western mind
carefully sifts, weighs, selects, classifies, isolates, the Chinese
picture of the moment encompasses everything down to the minutest
nonsensical detail, because all of the ingredients make up the observed
moment.
This
assumption involves a certain curious principle that I have termed
synchronicity, a concept that formulates a point of view diametrically
opposed to that of causality. Since the latter is a merely statistical
truth and not absolute, it is a sort of working hypothesis of how
events evolve one out of another, whereas synchronicity takes the
coincidence of events in space and time as meaning something more
than mere chance. Namely, it is a peculiar interdependence of objective
events among themselves as well as with the subjective (psychic)
states of the observer or observers.
Koestler
dealt with this in his Roots of Coincidence, speaking
of the minds ability as a kind of cosmic resonator
as did Castaneda, albeit in a Shamanistic setting, when Don Juan
speaks of the world agreeing with him. Ken Wilber (in
Sex, Ecology, and Spirituality, 1995) uses the term "network
logic" and suggests that it is the first necessary stage in
the next phase of the evolution of our species. John Lilly uses
the metaphor of the Earth Coincidence Control Office, an extra-terrestrial
bureau of synchronicity who have engineered much of his life, as
detailed in his unique and unhinged autobiography.
In Jungs
studies, the experience of meaningful coincidence comes at a psychological
impasse and is a jolt to the psyche. As such, the numinous experiences
of many, interpreting them as signs from god, visions of the sympathy
of all things, are understandable. Synchronicities are part of a
self-correcting mechanism, much like dreams, part of the psyches
eternal search for equilibrium. These compensatory measures are
enacted unconsciously to act as a counter balance to the dominant
actions of the self. Rationality often overrides these experiences
beneficial effects by neutering them as chance. Since we cannot
conceive how this could be possible without recourse to positively
magical categories, we generally let it go at the bare impression,
leading to acausal connection - acausal order and archetypes: contingencies?
(The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche) Jung found that, by studying
dreams, fantasies, synchronicities over a period of time that there
existed, often, a meaningful pattern of unconscious compensations
resulting in a path, a trajectory, specific to that individual.
The First
Insight steers the willing reader towards an acceptance of these
realisations and of the trajectory, an acceptance that is natural
and empowering. Robert Graves, in The White Goddess
writes of more-than-coincidences occurring so
often in my life that, if I am forbidden to call them supernatural
hauntings, let me call them a habit. Not that I like the word 'supernatural';
I find these happenings natural enough, though superlatively unscientific.
As an understanding of something that goes beyond the laws of causality,
the Celestine Prophecys First Insight has come as a great
revelation and inspiration to many of the books avid fans.
The presentation is arbitrary, the purpose admirable. As Dr John
Lilly said in a recent interview on the subject: of course
the coincidences are in your own construction, your own language
construction of the events. So that's all a fake too. As I say at
the beginning of my workshops, "Everything I say here is a
lie -- bullshit, in other words -- because anything that you put
in words is not experience, is not the experiment. It's a representation
-- a misrepresentation."
Do you
have the patience to wait
Till the mud settles and the water is clear?
Can you remain unmoving
Till the right action arises by itself?
Tao Te Ching
You know.
:i
!"
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