2 Answers

  1. Synchronicity is most easily understood as a critique of the causality principle.

    The causality principle says that if you kick a ball, it can roll forward, or fall into a hole, but it can't turn into a pink pony or cause a hurricane the day before yesterday.

    Synchronicity says, uh, dudes, the universe can't do that yet.

    The principle of synchronicity doesn't really explain how the kick of the ball and the hurricane the day before yesterday are connected, but it does say that these events can be connected. And not as a cause and effect.

    And most importantly, we cannot understand the nature of this connection. But we can detect this connection.

  2. Synchronicity is a term coined by the Swiss psychologist and thinker C. G. Jung in an article of the same name. Jung contrasts synchronicity with the fundamental physical principle of causality and describes synchronicity as a creative principle constantly operating in nature, ordering events in a “non-physical” (non-causal) way, only on the basis of their meaning.

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