Jung and Pauli
Jung and Pauli
Jung and Pauli
Readers of the Swiss psychiatrist C. G. Jung are more familiar with Wolfgang Paulis unconscious than with his waking life and achievement. Through Jungs Psychology and Alchemyan exposition of the problem of individuation and normal development . . . in a highly intelligent persondepth psychologists have known the Nobel laureates dreams, not his professional genius. Meanwhile, the scientists who continue Paulis pursuit of the nature and composition of the material universe know little of the quantum physicists depth exploration of his unconscious, his fascination with the interface of matter with psyche, and his collaboration with Jung in probing connections that appear to be acausal. In turn, many who know Jungs studies of psychic phenomena are not so at ease with his development of the parallels between psychic process and the material matrix in which the mental is embedded. For those who lack Jungs scientic background and grasp, his claim of an empirical method, his pursuit of the metaphors of alchemy, and his evocation of analogies in physics to psychic mechanisms have seemed far-fetched, tangential, difcult, or unnecessarily encumbering. Yet Jung persisted in pursuing the physical and meditative experiments of the alchemists and in perusing the ndings of contemporary scientists. Throughout his career, Jung argued that his work would carry the gravitas of the relevant and enduring only if it had both a place in the history of thought and a context in the modern disciplines. This collection of letters between Jung and Pauli offers insightful information about a relationship that was valuable for both analytical psychology and quantum physics, two realms of investigation that at rst seem to have no point of contact. Historically, physical science and religion have focused, from different perspectives, on the sources of the universe and its inhabitants. Religion and psychology, in a similar fashion, have had overlapping concerns about the nature of existence. Science traditionally seeks the most fundamental, objective, and universal facts by conrming and measuring external reality through experiments. Psychology, however, while presuming both norms and anomalies in its dynamic descriptions and differential
Revised from the original, Jung and Pauli: A Subtle Asymmetry, The Journal of Analytical Psychology 40 (1995): 53153.
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diagnoses, is concerned primarily with subjective experience and individual apprehension. As psychology describes psychic contents with psychic means, psyche is subject and object, medium and message, source and goal; there is no point of observation outside the human psyche. Physics, by contrast, pursues material reality both via and, to the greatest degree possible, beyond the human experience, but it also uses the mental medium in both its conceptions and inventions. While it utilizes impersonal and unvalenced measures, the questions and thus the proofs originate in and are dependent on the human mind. In this sense, our grasp of the universe is essentially anthropic. Also, as a contemporary Nobel laureate, the particle physicist Steven Weinberg, reminds us, we cannot require that all experiments should give sensible results, because by denition there is no observer outside the universe who can experiment on it.1 The letters between Pauli and Jung reveal two large minds in a twenty-sixyear correspondence about elds of expertise that, it could be argued, saw the most extensive developments in the Western intellect in the twentieth century. Each scholar was intent on moving the boundaries between the known and unknown in his own tradition. Each had the imagination to cross the lines within, beyond, and between their disciplines in order to search for the links between the observable and the unknowable. Each, too, had the humility essential to look for precedents in the past, as well as the arrogance necessary to risk speculation about the future. Each thinker was concerned with the effect of the particular and specic on the universal. Jungs concern was individual experience: the psyches perception and conception, emotion, and imagination regarding inner and outer realities. He focused on the individuals psychic development as it interrelated with recurring, and thus collective, predispositions and representations of human experience. He was especially curious about the ways in which images produced by the psyche become unprovable but assumed beliefs. Pauli sought to prove theories about the nature of the tiniest particles in the ever-extending energy patterns of the material universe and to nd the formulas and means of measurement that would reveal the universes past, present, and future. While focusing on the most fundamental elements in the worlds makeup, as a quantum theorist Pauli was also alert to the effect of the particular presence of the observer on what is observed. COMPLEMENTARITIES Jung (18751961) and Pauli (19001958) met in 1930, when Pauli, in life distress and psychic despair, sought out Jung for direction in attending to his emotional and psychological pain. While never Paulis analyst, Jung re1
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James also perceived and named the complementarity between physical and depth-psychological elds, and drew attention to the correspondence of the concept of eld in physics with the newly formulated psychological concept of the subconscious. It is thought that physicist Niels Bohr also borrowed from James the term complementarity, with which Bohr formulated the Principle of Complementarity that characterized his philosophy of nature.5 As a professor at Zurichs Eidgenossische Technische Hochschole (ETH), a leading university in the sciences, Jung was exposed to current theory. He saw psychology as an empirical science of observation, exploration, and ongoing reformulation. Throughout his life, he remained convinced that just as matter is in a constant process of redenition, so too must psyche and spirit be continuously redened. The development of Jungs thought and that of physics in the rst half of the twentieth century are both complementary and symmetrical. In the studies on the association experiment that Jung published in 1904 to 1906 with Franz Riklin, he described psychological complexes as knots of psychic energy, each with its own agenda, charge, and resonance. The existence of these elds in the personal unconscious relativized the consciousness and autonomy of the ego. In 1905, Albert Einsteins annus mirabilis, while also working out the quantum theory of light and a theory of the motion of small particles in uid, Einstein developed a new theory of space and time, now called the special theory of relativity.6 Jung recalled that he had met Einstein in the very early days when [he] was developing his rst theory of relativity. . . . His genius as a thinker . . . exerted a lasting inuence on my own intellectual work.7 In the Tavistock lectures, Jung remembered, I pumped him about his relativity theory. I am not gifted in mathematics. . . . I went fourteen feet deep into the oor and felt quite small.8 In 1928, when Jung received the German translation of a Chinese alchemical treatise called The Secret of the Golden Flower from Richard Wilhelm, he felt immediate sympathy with the Chinese notion of time as a continuum in which certain qualities manifest relatively simultaneously in different places. In his 1929 essay on the Golden Flower and his 1930 Wilhelm memorial, Jung made reference to what he would call synchronicity as a parallelism of events that cannot be explained causally. Jungs reading of alchemy took him into a deep study of all kinds of opposites and, as he wrote twentyve years later, led eventually to his understanding of the unconscious as a process. In Dreams of a Final Theory, Weinberg observes that Einsteins 1915 special theory of relativity t in well with a dualistic view of nature: there are
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In physics, too, we speak of energy and its various manifestations. . . . The situation in psychology is precisely the same. . . . We are dealing primarily with energy, with measures of intensity, with greater or lesser quantities . . . in various guises. If we conceive of libido as energy, we can take a comprehensive and unied view . . . such as is provided in the physical sciences by the theory of energetics. . . . I see mans drives as various manifestations of energic processes . . . forces analogous to heat, light, etc.14 Jungs notion of the archetypes of the collective unconscious implied, so to speak, a supercharge, an overplus, of energy emerging from those elds of interrelated experience that the human psyche is predisposed to nd signicant. For Jung, archetypes are not structures but habitual currents of psychic energy, systems of readiness for action. Pauli refers to them as statistical laws with primary probabilities. These exist before and beyond the only personal data of the individual time-and-space-bound ego and so further relativize it. Late in his life, Jung remarked in a lmed interview that Einstein rst started me off thinking about a possible relativity of time as well as space and their psychic conditionality. More than thirty years later, this stimulus led to my relation with the physicist Professor W. Pauli and to my thesis of psychic synchronicity.15 PAULI AND JUNGIAN ANALYSIS In his physics, Pauli sought a unied eld. But his personal life was one of fragmentation and dissociation. Within one year, his mother poisoned herself in reaction to his fathers involvement in an affair, and Pauli plunged into a brief marriage with a cabaret performer. At thirty, he turned to Jung for help. Jung, in his 1935 lectures at the Tavistock, offered the following example of dreams effecting change: I had a case, a university man, a very one-sided intellectual. His unconscious had become troubled and activated; so it projected itself into other men who appeared to be his enemies, and he felt terribly lonely because everybody seemed to be against him. Then he began to drink in order to forget his troubles, but he got exceedingly irritable and in these moods he began to quarrel with other men. . . and once he was thrown out of a restaurant and got beaten up.16 Jung saw that he was chock-full of archaic material, and I said to myself: Now I am going to make an interesting experiment to get that material absolutely pure, without any inuence from myself, and therefore I wont touch it. He referred Pauli to Dr. Erna Rosenbaum, who was then just a
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position and presence of the observer changes the perception and reality of what is observed. To that thesisthat one cannot measure the wave and the particle at the same timehe added a psychological dimension, observing that insofar as the scientist must opt to know which aspect of nature we want to make visible . . . we simultaneously make a sacrice, . . . [a] coupling of choice and sacrice.23 Pauli demonstrated the value of intuition to sciences empiricism. As Weinberg recounted, physicists in the early 1930s were worried about an apparent violation of the law of conservation of energy when a radioactive nucleus undergoes the process known as beta decay. In 1932, Wolfgang Pauli proposed the existence of a convenient particle he called the neutrino, in order to account for the energy that was observed to be lost in this process. The elusive neutrino was eventually discovered experimentally over two decades later. Proposing the existence of something that has not yet been observed is a risky business, but it sometimes works.24 In a metaphysical leap, Pauli referred as well to forms belonging to the unconscious region of the human soul and stated that the relation between a sense perception and Idea remains a consequence of the fact that both the soul and what is known in perception are subject to an order objectively conceived.25 He acknowledged that he had realized in a dream that the quantum-mechanical conception of nature lacked the second dimension, which he found provided by the archetypes of the unconscious. It seems, however, that he could not nd his way to the uncertainty, the choice and sacrice that allows for reparation within analysis. While Pauli knew that a truly unied view must include the feeling function, since without feeling there is no meaning or value in life, and no proper acknowledgment of the phenomenon of synchronicity, M.-L. von Franz said that he later sought only a philosophical discussion of dreams: He wrote to me . . . [and] made it clear that he did not want analysis; there was to be no payment. I saw that he was in despair, so I said we could try. The difculties began when I asked him for the associations which referred to physics. He said, Do you think Im going to give you unpaid lessons in physics? . . . He wanted something, but he didnt want to commit himself. He was split.26 Van Erkelens speculates that Pauli would have had to submit to a transference and to a deeper Eros than his inner urge to develop a unied view of matter and spirit. For whatever reasons, von Franz and Pauli were not able
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periodic table of chemical elements. This in its turn informs sciences realization of the alchemical goal. It was not until the Twentieth Century and the atomic age that men were enabled to change the elements into one another. Such processes of metallic transmutation consist in changing the number of protons in the atomic nucleus of the basic elements. If iron is to be changed into gold, 53 protons must be added to its nucleus of 26 protons, if it is to be transformed into the element of gold which carries 79 protons in its nucleus.30 SYMMETRY There is another subtle and profound link between the intuitive if clumsy probings of alchemy and Paulis work, based on his use of symmetry and its effects. Symmetry is a roving and variable concept, used and applied differently to objects, categories, and laws in various elds, including aesthetics, mathematics, and physics. It may describe symmetries of thingsfaces, crystals, cubes of saltas well as internal symmetry principles that impose a kind of family structure on the menu of possible particles,31 and the symmetries that are really important in nature . . . the symmetries of laws which state that when we make certain changes in the point of view from which we observe natural phenomena, the laws of nature we discover do not change. So the symmetry principle is simply a statement that something looks the same from certain different points of view.32 But in the mathematics relevant to Pauli, a symmetry isnt a thing; its a transformation. Not any old transformation, though, a symmetry of an object is a transformation that leaves it apparently unchanged.33 Symmetry also states that all elements of a system can undergo transformationsrotation or reection in a mirrorwithout being fundamentally altered and so has become the epitome of truth and beauty.34 Symmetry is implicit in such alchemical dictums as For there is one stone, one medicine, to which nothing from outside is added, nor is it diminished, save that the superuities are removed. It is more explicit in the motto as above, so below; as within, so without. The alchemists imaginally and physically aimed toward succeeding stages of conjunctions between pairs, couplings, and asymmetric symmetries, both in physical experiments and in psychic attempts to achieve inner balance. Their intent was to provide the purest, perfect, most inclusive physical substances, as well as internal integration. Their motive was to replicate or imitate the original oneness, when all was potential in the mind of the creator, before it dispersed into the four directions, four elements, and discrete forms.
Fabricius 1989, p. 8. Ibid., pp. 13637. 34 Horgan 1994, p. 99.
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In his domain, Jung came to see the psyche as one force containing multiple perspectives, a multiplicity within unity. He increasingly saw psychic energy as a large eld from one source, with two complementary but not incompatible conduits, the conscious and the unconscious. These exist between the subjective and objective, emerging from a mind-matter continuum that can only partially observe itself, which Jung came to call psychoid. Just as Pauli perceived physical knowledge as the meeting place of inner psychological images and outer facts, Jung extended from his psychic end into the spectrum of matter. The inclusion of subjectivity in quantum observation was seen as complementary to Jungs assertion of the objective reality of the archetypes.41 Jung credits C. A. Meier for the insight regarding the parallelism of psychological and physical explanations through which relations of complementarity are seen to exist not only within psychology and physics but also between them in a genuine and authentic relationship of complementarity as well.42 From 1946 onward, Jung further differentiated his concept of the archetype as transconsciousthat is, as beyond psychic integration and thus psychoid. It is also transpsychic insofar as not purely psychic but just as much physical in nature. As the unknowable structuring element in the collective unconscious, it also arranges the registering of acausal events.43 Matter and mind are both objective and subjective, complementary in their structure and, at the psychoid level, reective of each other. Further, as he wrote in his last major work, we do not know whether what we on the empirical plane regard as physical may not, in the Unknown beyond our experience, be identical with what on this side of the border we distinguish from the physical as psychic. . . . They may be identical somewhere beyond our present experience. He also anticipated further research: Microphysics is feeling its way into the unknown side of matter, just as complex psychology is pushing forward into the unknown side of psyche. Both . . . have yielded ndings . . . and both have developed concepts which display remarkable analogies.44 SYNCHRONICITY In their joint volume, Jung and Pauli presented the synchronicity principle. It presumes that indestructible energy has a dual relationship to the spacetime continuum: on the one hand, there is the constant connection through effectthat is, causality; and on the other, there is an inconstant connection through contigence, equivalence, or meaning that is itself synchronicity.45 For a physicist, equations are not objectively accurate reections of
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Jaff 1968, p. 7.
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are consonant with a Newtonian world of cause and effect. When the unconscious is perceived as preceding and antedating the ego and capable of compensatory comment on what is experienced consciously, the ego exists in space-time relativity. When the complexes are vital stimuli in compulsive instinct, overwhelming emotion, archetypal identication, we can conceptualize elds of quantum bundles. But are these analogies valid beyond use as fanciful metaphors? A psychological theorist, Julian Jaynes, questions the relevance of psychologys use of scientic metaphor. He refers to a delusion in our reasoning and a huge historical neurosis. Psychology has many of them. And one of the reasons that the history of science is essential to the study of psychology is that it is the only way to get out of and above such intellectual disorders.49 He argues that each age has described consciousness in terms of the images of its external gestalt. In the golden age of Greece, when men traveled about in freedom while slaves did the work, consciousness was as free as that . . . an enormous space whose boundaries . . . could never be found out. . . . Augustine among the caverned hills of Carthage was astonished at the mountains and hills of my high imaginations, the plains and caverns of my memory.50 Jaynes refers to the rst half of the nineteenth century as the age of the great geological discoveries. . . . This led to the popularization of the idea of consciousness as being in layers. Then, in the middle of the nineteenth century, chemistry succeeded geology as the fashionable science, and consciousness . . . was a compound structure that could be analyzed in the laboratory. . . . As the steam locomotives chugged their way, . . . the subconscious becomes a boiler of straining energy. He then notes that when the astonishing successes of particle physics were being talked of everywhere, when the solidity of matter was being dissolved into mere mathematical relationships in space, this seemed to psychologists like the same unphysical duality as the relationship of individuals conscious of each other.51 In contrast to Jayness critique, Arthur Koestler sees that all decisive advances in the history of scientic thought can be described in terms of mental cross-fertilization between different disciplines.52 (And for the cultural critic George Steiner, even the illicit metaphor, the term borrowed though misunderstood, may be an essential part of a process of reunication. It is very probable that the sciences will furnish an increasing part of our mythologies and imaginative reference.53 Even Jaynes admits that the
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interactions right-and left-symmetric?58 Twelve years after Paulis Nobel Prize, the 1957 award went to Tsung-Dao Lee and Chen Ning Yang for demonstrating that if the universe were reected in a mirror, the behavior of weak interaction would not be the same. Pauli was also disappointed when his symmetry-based unied theory of elementary particles was not well received. Pauli withdrew, perhaps because of his disappointment or perhaps because of illness, and in 1958, this man who spoke of the radioactivity of the self died of rapidly advancing cancer. Despite the fundamental difference between physics and psychology, in their meeting of the minds Jung and Pauli reconnected the meditative and scientic strands in serious alchemy, as well as the complementarities that emerged from William Jamess philosophy. They linked ancient questions and modern theories and experiments, the interior search of reective depth psychology and the outward gaze of scientic inquiry. Von Franz believes that if we try all the same to meet, it is for the reason that in its fringes, where psychology reaches over to other elds of science, there should existif possibleno fundamental contradictions. A psychology which does not keep pace with the ndings of other sciences seems to me no good.59 We may easily be carried away by broad analogy, but despite the seemingly magical in mythologies and the peculiarities of the alchemical opus, their intuitions about the origins and potential of matter for transmutation have been realized with elaborate technology. The scorn of late nineteenth century scientists for the alchemists was noticeably absent after the discovery that transmutation of elements does take place in nature.60 But even a nonscientic mind, sunk like Jungs, by the mathematics of contemporary science, may nd resonance with the uidity of process described in modern biology, brain research, chemistry, astronomy, and theoretical physics. What are some of the ndings with which to keep pace? The alchemists imagined progressive integration through conjunctions between pairs that were both like and unlike; a current thesis holds that matter and antimatter are not mirror images of each other but instead exhibit a subtle asymmetry.61 Scientists posit that without asymmetry, the universe would not exist: Had the big bang spawned precisely the same amounts of matter and antimatter, they would have annihilated each other on contact. Aristotle and western alchemists posited four elements: earth, air, re, and water: today, scientists refer to four forces: gravity, electromagnetism, the strong force that keeps protons and neutrons gripped, and the weak force from which comes nuclear decay (electromagnetism and the weak force join in the electro-weak force). The alchemists mused on feminine salts and masculine sulphurs connected by mercurial sparks; modern
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ordinary particles; through multiple colliding particles, the Higgs mechanism might explain the specic masses of individual particles. From 1946 on, Jung called the transconscious archetype psychoidthat is, transpsychic insofar as not purely psychic but just as much physical in nature.64 They contain all the collective patterns for conceptualizing human experience, including those phenomenological contents of the mind that Jung recognized as exhibiting certain apparently lawful archetypal patterns. In his thesis of frozen accidents, the complexity theorist and Nobel physicist Murray Gell-Mann, discoverer of quarks, the elementary particles of the atomic nucleus, approaches in the physical world what Jung broached through his apparently lawful psychic archetypes. The effective complexity of the universe is . . . a concise description of its regularities. . . . [It] receives only a small contribution from the fundamental laws. The rest comes from the numerous regularities resulting from frozen accidents. Those are chance events of which the particular outcomes have a multiplicity of long-term consequences, all related by their common ancestry.65 Gell-Mann argues: The consequences of some such accidents can be far-reaching. The character of the whole universe was affected by accidents occurring near the beginning of its expansion. . . . The long-term consequences of such an event may take on the character of a law, at any but the most fundamental level. A law of geology, biology, or human psychology may stem from one or more amplied quantum events, each of which could have turned out differently.66 Jungians see archetypes as contaminated by and inseparable from one another. Nonsymmetry physicists speak of cellular automata, in which the state of each cell is determined by the state of its immediate neighbors, or of loop-space theory.67 The physicist David Bohm speaks of an unknowable holomovement or ow of an explicate and implicate order, in which wave functions are physical, like classical force elds, guiding particles. In his theory, the positions of all particles and the quantum-mechanical wave function can be calculated with certainty, whereas the older theory is nondeterministic.68 Some theorists nd Bohms scheme more approachable than the superpositions of quantum mechanics, which deal with mysteries as nonfacts and in which the wave functions that represent the states of physical systems are mathematical objects.69 The nonlinear dynamics of
Ibid., p. 102, and Jaff 1972, p. 7. Ibid. 68 von Franz 1992, pp. 25152.
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Gell-Mann 1995, p. 134. Horgan 1994, p. 104. 69 Albert 1994, pp. 5867.
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consider the ambition of overcoming opposites, including also a synthesis embracing both rational understanding and the mystical experience of unity, to be the mythos, spoken or unspoken, of our present day and age.72 CONNECTION AND DIVERGENCE Pauli was concerned with science, philosophy, and religion throughout his life. Speaking from his doubt that human societies could live with sharp disinctions between science and faith, the young Pauli believed that its all bound to end in tears. . . . The central order is part of the subjective as well as the objective realm, and this strikes me as being a far better starting point.73 A few months before he died, Pauli told the Gnostic scholar Gilles Quispel that while he could accept the God of the Gnostics. . . . I could never accept the existence of a personal God. No such Being could possibly endure the suffering of humanity. According to Quispel, Pauli, in searching for a meaning to his life while confronting his death, came to reassert his Jewish tradition.74 Perhaps Paulis need for symmetry did not allow him to embrace a reality of subtle asymmetry or broken symmetries. But Pauli still stands as a central gure in the history of science and, through his partnership with Jung, in the history of psychology. As a modern poet writes: I drag myself too often to those whose work it is to calm those devastations of the surface which are, like coincidences, the visible traces of untraceable principles. A physicist said that, not a medium.75 Jung did not repudiate the wisdom accumulated before the Age of Enlightenment, nor see psychology as a eld unto itself, derived only from the observation of personal symptom and behavior. He looked back to tribal myth, to classical mythology, to gnosticism, to alchemy, for intuitive theories of everything. He looked out to physiology and chemistry, mathematics and physics. He found a place where his psyche was at rest, in the grand unied theory of the unus mundus. Pauli was also drawn to this unity but seemed not to have found psychic peace. Pauli did not expect that the concepts of the unconscious would go on developing within the narrow frame of their therapeutic applications, but that their merging with the general current of science in investigating the phenomena of life is of paramount importance for them.76
Heisenberg 1974, pp. 3738. Heisenberg 1971, pp. 8384. 74 Pagels 1988, p. 326, as cited in Rossi 1989, pp. 78. 75 Levine 1994, p. 70. 76 Jaff 1972, p. 43.
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Mathematicians ask whether symmetries are intrinsic patterns of nature or artifacts of human perception. And they answer that the human brain, as part of nature, obeys natures laws and thus may have evolved to detect the patterns that are really present.82 One physicist believes that everyday we need new approaches to build new images of nature. Yet another states, Converting science into liturgy would be depressing. Meanwhile, the study of the history of science does not require a moral justication, but if it did, it might be to teach humility.83 And a contemporary Nobel laureate notes that even quantum eld theory is not secure. . . . We are not likely to know the right answers until we are close to knowing the answers.84 Jung adds his prognosis, What demands psychology will make on the other natural sciences, and on physics in particular, only the future can tell.85 The mathematical way out of the obstacles to Paulis symmetry-based theory, which the disparity among the four forces presents[,] has to do with interactions taking place at higher energies which change the strength and ranges of the forces. The way out of the dilemma about the interactions between matter and psyche at higher energies requires the persistence, the awareness, and the wonder about invisible patterns shared by Jung and Pauli with the alchemists of old and the scientists at the frontier. Jung once wrote that when future generations read our psychology, they would wonder if we knew what we meant. He and Pauli both gloried in the possibilities of the human mind and also remained aware that all human understanding must remain open to question. They might well speak the lines from a contemporary English play, Copenhagen, in which the character of Niels Bohr says to the character of Werner Heisenberg: We put man back at the centre of the universe. . . . It starts with Einstein. He shows that measurement, on which the whole impossibility of science dependsmeasurement . . . [is] a human act, carried out from a specic point of view in time and space, from the one particular viewpoint of a possible observer. Then, here in Copenhagen in those three years in the mid-twenties we discover that there is no precisely determinable objective universe. That the universe exists only as a series of approximations. Only within the limits determined by our relationship with it. Only through the understanding lodged inside the human head.86
Stewart and Golubitsky 1992, p. 259. Weinberg 1994, p. 173. 86 Frayn 1998, pp. 7374.
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Peat, F. D. 1987. Synchronicity: The Bridge Between Matter and Mind. New York. Bantam. ______. 1988. Divine Contenders: Wolfgang Pauli and the Symmetry of the World. Psychological Perspectives 19, 1423. ______. 1991. Introduction to Pauli, Physics, and Psychology. Psychological Perspectives 24, 1718. Rossi, E. L. 1989. Archetypes as Strange Attractors. Psychological Perspectives. 20, 414. ______. 1994. A Quantum Psychology for the Future? Psychological Perspectives 30, 611. Sieg, C. 1991. Love, War, and Transformation: An Interview with Marie-Louise von Franz. Psychological Perspectives 24, 5463. Speyer, E. 1994. Six Roads from Newton. New York: John Wiley and Sons. Steiner, G. 1969. Language and Silence. Middlesex: Penguin Books. Stewart, I., and M. Golubitsky. 1992. Fearful Symmetry: Is God a Geometer? London: Penguin Books. Taylor, Eugene. 1996. William James on Consciousness beyond the Margin. Princeton: Princeton University Press. van Erkelens, H. 1991. Wolfgang Paulis Dialogue with the Spirit of Matter. Psychological Perspectives 24, 3453. von Franz, M.-L. 1992. Psyche and Matter. Boston and London: Shambala. Weinberg, S. 1994. Dreams of a Final Theory. New York: Vintage Books. ______. 1994a. Life in the Universe. Scientic American (October).