Synchronicity  

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-'''Synchronicity''' is the experience of two or more [[event]]s which occur in a [[Meaning (non-linguistic)|meaningful]] manner, but which are [[Causality|causally]] [[unrelated]]. In order to be synchronous, the events must be related to one another conceptually, and the [[chance]] that they would occur together by random chance must be very small. In [[Jungian]] psychology, [[coincidence|Coincidence]]s that seem to be [[meaningfully]] [[related]]; supposedly the result of "[[universal]] [[force]]s".+ 
 +'''Synchronicity''' is a concept first introduced by [[Analytical psychology|analytical psychologist]] [[Carl G. Jung]] "to describe circumstances that appear [[meaning (psychology)|meaningfully related]] yet lack a [[causality|causal connection]]."
==See also== ==See also==
-* [[The Roots of Coincidence]] 
* [[Apophenia]] * [[Apophenia]]
 +* [[The Roots of Coincidence]]
 +* [[Multiple discovery]]
 +* [[Black box theory]]
 +* [[Correlation does not imply causation]]
 +* [[Emergence]]
 +* [[Ideas and delusions of reference]]
 +* [[Look-elsewhere effect]]
 +* [[Monadology#Controversy in rationalism|''Monadology'' by Gottfried Leibniz § Controversy in rationalism]]
* [[Multiple discovery]] * [[Multiple discovery]]
* [[Pareidolia]] * [[Pareidolia]]
 +* [[Post hoc ergo propter hoc|''Post hoc ergo propter hoc'']]
 +* [[Propinquity]]
 +* [[The Roots of Coincidence|''The Roots of Coincidence'' by Arthur Koestler]]
 +* [[Stigmergy]]
 +* [[Synchromysticism]]
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Synchronicity is a concept first introduced by analytical psychologist Carl G. Jung "to describe circumstances that appear meaningfully related yet lack a causal connection."

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