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  1. t. e. Synchronicity ( German: Synchronizität) is a concept introduced by analytical psychologist Carl Jung "to describe circumstances that appear meaningfully related yet lack a causal connection ". [1]

  2. Jung didn't coin the word (the "simultaneousness" sense of synchronicity was already in use), but he gave it special importance in his writings. Jung believed that such "meaningful coincidences" play an important role in our lives.

  3. Sep 3, 2016 · What is synchronicity? The term synchronicity (syn = with, chronos = time) was chosen by the psychotherapist Jung to describe the simultaneous occurrence of events (or coincidences) which apparently have no clear cause, but are deeply meaningful.

  4. Dec 19, 2017 · A synchronicity is a coincidence where an external event mirrors an internal one. Carl Jung believed that synchronicities mirror deep psychological processes and carry messages the way dreams...

  5. Synchronicity is a phenomenon in which people interpret two separate—and seemingly unrelated—experiences as being meaningfully intertwined, even though there is no evidence that one led to the ...

  6. Jan 18, 2021 · Synchronicity, as an acausal connecting principle, suggests that the shared meaning between two low-probability events had something to do with explaining why they happened.

  7. Jan 17, 2023 · A professional intuitive gives a primer on what synchronicity really is, how it differs from coincidence, and how to be more open to it in your daily life. Plus, how to call in more synchronicity in your life.

  8. Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle A key signature concept in Jung’s vision of the world, synchronicity was defined by Jung as an acausal connecting principle, whereby internal, psychological events are linked to external world events by meaningful coincidences rather than causal chains.

  9. Synchronicity is a concept introduced by Swiss psychologist Carl Jung, referring to the simultaneous occurrence of events that are meaningfully related but have no discernible causal connection.

  10. Synchronicity has several domain-based relationships with the concept of creativity – through psychology, through biology, through chaos theory mathematics, and through the new physics. In psychology, synchronicity is defined as the occurrence of meaningful coincidences that seem to have no cause; that is, the coincidences are acausal.

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