Introduction
The impetus for this book arose out of clinical work. Analytic explorations have the potential to activate, energize, and focus unconscious processes, which often lead to experiences that are perceived as extraordinary from the perspective of ego consciousness. As I began to notice clusterings of such activations around certain themes and clinical situations, with some similarity to what Jung discussed in formulating his concept of synchronicity, I felt the need to reexamine his notion in light of new models of the mind and changes in scientific understanding. The challenge was to formulate my thoughts about it from both clinical and theoretical perspectives against the backdrop of Jung’s profound reflections on the topic. Fortunately this coincided in time with the emergence of the field of complexity studies, allowing me to bring my background in the sciences into dialogue with my work as an analyst in a way that felt fresh and fruitful.
Then the very act of working on this material in which I sought to describe and analyze these experiences seemed to become embedded in and a part of the experiences themselves, forcefully impressing me with the interconnectedness of our world.
Synchronicity as “a meaningful coincidence” and “an acausal connecting principle”1 was a provocative hypothesis when it first was published and has remained so up to the present. In it C. G. Jung aimed at expanding the Western world’s core conceptions of nature and the psyche. By requiring that we include and make room for unique individual experiences of life in our most fundamental philosophical and scientific views of the world, Jung challenged the status quo, urging us to go beyond the readily explainable, beyond the restrictions of a cause-effect reductive description of the world, to seeing the psyche as embedded into the substance of the world…