Bringing forth the notion of synchronicity was a bold and heretical act by Jung that was a radical departure from and challenged one of the most inviolable, sacrosanct, and seemingly unassailable foundations of the modern scientific materialistic worldview. In his idea of synchronicity Jung was proposing a completely different kind of organizing principle at play in the universe that was quite alien to the widely accepted western worldview of how the universe worked.
In order to break free from and distinguish synchronicity from the limiting logic of linear causality, Jung chose the word “acausal” (calling synchronicities an “acausal connecting principle”) in order to characterize how synchronicities didn’t have to do with causality as it had been generally understood.
There was an unforeseen problem, however, that had
to do with Jung’s choice of the word “acausal”—and what he meant by
this—that has caused a rift and created conflict among a number of
theorists, researchers, scientists and psychologists in their accepting
Jung’s idea of synchronicity. Some people have even dismissed Jung’s
work on synchronicity, thinking his conception of synchronicity is
incoherent or flawed....<<<Read More>>>....