I guess the thing I wish we could get 'timely' about would be truth
and reconciliation.  I begin to believe the 'conspiracy' is to make
life meaningless.

On 22 Aug, 17:49, Molly Brogan <[email protected]> wrote:
> How synchronistic...I know that Pat recently had a bout of the flu
> also...
>
> On Aug 22, 12:33 pm, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > The microbes and the antibiotics - I sympathise with you, Neil. I
> > recently spent three weeks daily swallowing a not insignificant dose
> > of doxycycline to deal with an incipient borelliosis (Lyme disease) -
> > damned ticks! There's something quite stressful about feeling out of
> > sorts and not even being sure if its the illness itself or the
> > antibiotic treatment for it that's causing the discomfort. I wish you
> > a speedy recovery ...
>
> > Francis
>
> > On 22 Aug., 17:11, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > The concept of self, or more specifically the sense of unity of self,
> > > has both synchronic ('I seem to be a unified self at any given
> > > moment') and diachronic ('I seem to be the same self as I was a few
> > > minutes/hours/months/years ago') aspects.  Currently, I am feeling
> > > rather broken - like my watch with the dud battery, but with the added
> > > knowledge (Slip was right) that my kinetic watch was stolen.  I'd be
> > > intuiting Orn but am otherwise engaged in a war against a microbe
> > > horde in need of eviction from my glandular system and, unlike my
> > > watch, am on tickover until the antibiotics triumph.  Before Slip
> > > points out electronic watches don't tick, let me say that this watch
> > > has a very annoying, non-syncopating tick option, and my other
> > > (stolen) watch may well be ticking to someone else's tune.  I am so
> > > ill I have developed an interest in Willard Quine again and have
> > > somewhat naturalised my philosophy so as not to be too exposed to the
> > > risk of theoretical truth.  All this at a time I haven't had a drink
> > > for two weeks Francis! - no doubt causing my current delusive state in
> > > which England are regaining the Ashes.  Test Match Special will set
> > > you free ...
>
> > > On 22 Aug, 15:24, Molly Brogan <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > I am not expert of Jung, but have enjoyed his writing and work now and
> > > > then.  I think what this means is that there is something more than
> > > > what we think of as cause and effect at play here.  That while, as
> > > > Slip suggests, sychronistic events for us are responsive to our
> > > > individual thoughts and feelings, we do not cause them to come about
> > > > like we cause a stone to roll by kicking it.  Synchronicity is, I
> > > > think, always at play in our lives, but our awareness of it increases
> > > > as our perception of the more subtle levels of being changes.  We
> > > > don't cause it, we become aware of it by tuning into it.
>
> > > > On Aug 22, 7:37 am, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > I would wonder the same thing about it all being acausal.  I remember
> > > > > when my mother in law died my wife, a life long devout catholic,
> > > > > mentioned something about a sign, a butterfly that would appear.  I
> > > > > always thought that to be coincidence but at the cemetery, there it
> > > > > was, a large white butterfly that landed and stay for several minutes
> > > > > then casually flew off.   I guess there is some synchronicity there,
> > > > > in the death, the mention of and appearance of the butterfly.
>
> > > > > On Aug 22, 12:33 am, Alan Wostenberg <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > > Great question. As a believer I wonder why Jung calls synchronicity
> > > > > > 'acausal' in that essay "Synchronicity, An Acausal Connecting
> > > > > > Principle". Does he embrace a Humean notion of causality as constant
> > > > > > conjunction in which causes precede effects temporally?
>
> > > > > > Yet I do find myself reluctant to jump in with both feet and call
> > > > > > something a meaningful coincidence.  This is no doubt my inner 
> > > > > > atheist
> > > > > > whispering. As a believer I know synchronicity under a different 
> > > > > > name:
> > > > > > providence. God always meets our real needs. Sometimes I see the
> > > > > > pattern and call it providence.  Usually I do not, perhaps because 
> > > > > > it
> > > > > > is to bright for my minds eye.
>
> > > > > > On Aug 21, 5:08 am, Molly Brogan <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > > > > Synchronicity is a word that has come up now and then in these
> > > > > > > discussions and is, I think, becoming more a part of our 
> > > > > > > scientific
> > > > > > > and philosophic paradigms.  Webster defines it as:  the quality or
> > > > > > > state of being synchronous or simultaneous : concurrence of acts,
> > > > > > > events, or developments in time : coincident movement or 
> > > > > > > existence;
> > > > > > > chronological arrangement of historical events and personages so 
> > > > > > > as to
> > > > > > > indicate coincidence or coexistence;  a representation in the same
> > > > > > > picture of two or more events which occurred at different times.
>
> > > > > > > Jung required a larger framework for his idea of synchronicity, a
> > > > > > > framework that reveals an underlying pattern for what he called
> > > > > > > "temporally coincident occurrences of acausal events."
>
> > > > > > > What does synchronicity mean to you?  What role does it play in 
> > > > > > > your
> > > > > > > life?  What do YOU think?
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