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related 4.17 — strongly supporting 17 facts
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- Pauli and Jung define synchronistic events as a special case of relational deviations in mind-matter correlations.
- Quantum-inspired decompositional dual-aspect models have been proposed by Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung (Jung and Pauli 1955; Meier 2001), Arthur Eddington (1946), and David Bohm and Basil Hiley (Bohm 1990; Bohm and Hiley 1993; Hiley 2001).
- Atmanspacher H., Primas H., and Wertenschlag-Birkhäuser E. edited 'Der Pauli-Jung-Dialog', published by Springer in 1995.
- Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung defined synchronistic correlations as the ubiquitous correlations between conscious mental states and brain states, a concept also applied to psychosomatic relationships by C.A. Meier in 1975.
- Carl A. Meier edited 'Atom and Archetype: The Pauli/Jung Letters 1932-1958', a collection of correspondence between Wolfgang Pauli and Carl G. Jung.
- Atmanspacher and Fach (2013) proposed a typology of mind-matter correlations based on Pauli and Jung's dual-aspect monism.
- The dual-aspect approaches of Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, as well as David Bohm and Basil Hiley, are considered conceptually transparent but are essentially unsatisfactory regarding a sound formal basis and concrete empirical scenarios.
- Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung proposed that a causal relationship exists between a psychophysically neutral, monistic level and the mental and material domains, which they described as the ordering operation of archetypes in the collective unconscious.
- Carl Jung and Wolfgang Pauli (1955) suggested a dual-aspect theory of consciousness involving a psychophysically neutral, archetypal order.
- Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung proposed a dual-aspect approach that draws a parallel between the epistemic/ontic distinction in material reality (quantum theory) and the epistemic/ontic distinction in mental domains.
- The Pauli-Jung conjecture defines correlations between conscious mental states and physical brain states as "synchronistic" and extends them to psychosomatic relations, as noted by Meier (1975).
- The correspondence between Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung was published as 'Atom and Archetype: The Pauli/Jung Letters 1932–1958' in 2001, originally published in German as 'Wolfgang Pauli und C.G. Jung: ein Briefwechsel' in 1992.
- Quantum-theoretically inspired variations of dual-aspect theory have been proposed by Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, and by David Bohm and Basil Hiley, based on speculations that exceed the scope of contemporary quantum theory.
- Synchronistic events, as defined by Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, are a specific type of relational deviation within the taxonomy of mind-matter correlations.
- Carl G. Jung and Wolfgang Pauli published 'The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche' in 1955, which was a translation of their 1952 German original 'Naturerklärung und Psyche'.
- Carl G. Jung and Wolfgang Pauli collaborated on the book 'The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche', published in 1955, which explores the intersection of psychology and physics.
- Quantum-inspired dual-aspect frameworks, such as those proposed by Pauli and Jung, and by Bohm and Hiley, are based on speculations that exceed the scope of contemporary quantum theory.
Facts (17)
Sources
Quantum Approaches to Consciousness plato.stanford.edu 7 facts
referenceAtmanspacher H., Primas H., and Wertenschlag-Birkhäuser E. edited 'Der Pauli-Jung-Dialog', published by Springer in 1995.
claimWolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung defined synchronistic correlations as the ubiquitous correlations between conscious mental states and brain states, a concept also applied to psychosomatic relationships by C.A. Meier in 1975.
perspectiveThe dual-aspect approaches of Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, as well as David Bohm and Basil Hiley, are considered conceptually transparent but are essentially unsatisfactory regarding a sound formal basis and concrete empirical scenarios.
claimWolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung proposed that a causal relationship exists between a psychophysically neutral, monistic level and the mental and material domains, which they described as the ordering operation of archetypes in the collective unconscious.
claimCarl Jung and Wolfgang Pauli (1955) suggested a dual-aspect theory of consciousness involving a psychophysically neutral, archetypal order.
claimWolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung proposed a dual-aspect approach that draws a parallel between the epistemic/ontic distinction in material reality (quantum theory) and the epistemic/ontic distinction in mental domains.
claimQuantum-theoretically inspired variations of dual-aspect theory have been proposed by Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, and by David Bohm and Basil Hiley, based on speculations that exceed the scope of contemporary quantum theory.
Quantum Approaches to Consciousness plato.stanford.edu 5 facts
claimPauli and Jung define synchronistic events as a special case of relational deviations in mind-matter correlations.
claimAtmanspacher and Fach (2013) proposed a typology of mind-matter correlations based on Pauli and Jung's dual-aspect monism.
claimThe Pauli-Jung conjecture defines correlations between conscious mental states and physical brain states as "synchronistic" and extends them to psychosomatic relations, as noted by Meier (1975).
claimCarl G. Jung and Wolfgang Pauli collaborated on the book 'The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche', published in 1955, which explores the intersection of psychology and physics.
claimQuantum-inspired dual-aspect frameworks, such as those proposed by Pauli and Jung, and by Bohm and Hiley, are based on speculations that exceed the scope of contemporary quantum theory.
Quantum Approaches to Consciousness plato.stanford.edu 3 facts
claimQuantum-inspired decompositional dual-aspect models have been proposed by Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung (Jung and Pauli 1955; Meier 2001), Arthur Eddington (1946), and David Bohm and Basil Hiley (Bohm 1990; Bohm and Hiley 1993; Hiley 2001).
referenceThe correspondence between Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung was published as 'Atom and Archetype: The Pauli/Jung Letters 1932–1958' in 2001, originally published in German as 'Wolfgang Pauli und C.G. Jung: ein Briefwechsel' in 1992.
claimSynchronistic events, as defined by Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, are a specific type of relational deviation within the taxonomy of mind-matter correlations.
(PDF) Quantum Mechanics and Consciousness - Academia.edu academia.edu 2 facts
referenceCarl A. Meier edited 'Atom and Archetype: The Pauli/Jung Letters 1932-1958', a collection of correspondence between Wolfgang Pauli and Carl G. Jung.
referenceCarl G. Jung and Wolfgang Pauli published 'The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche' in 1955, which was a translation of their 1952 German original 'Naturerklärung und Psyche'.