Causality Coincidence Synchronism Causality Coincidence Synchronism Causality  
 
constant connection, causal relationship through effect
 
Indestructible energy
 
To CCS-drawer Anima Mundi Back to Es wird...
 
Space-time continuum
 
inconstant connection through coincidence or meaning
 
Coincidence Causality Synchronism Causality Coincidence Synchronism Coincidence  
 
 
Anima Mundi
 
Supreme but powerless extending itself
the mountain cannot and will not bear
 
 
 
 
title
Causality • Coincidence • Synchronism
 
coincidence
Coincidence is the simultaneous occurrence of causal unrelated events. 
When each and every causal chain is considered to progress as a meridian on a globe then the simultaneous occurrence of causal unrelated events can be represented as the parallels of latitude.
 
constant <> inconstant connection
All events in the life of a human being would consequently be connected in two different relations:
 
constant: objective relation
1) The objective, causal relation of the natural process.
 
inconstant: subjective relation
2) A subjective relation, only existing and experienced on an individual basis and therefore as subjective as a dream from which the effloresce meaning inevitably is defined, but in the way the scenes of a play are defined by the intrigue of a dramatist.
 
illustration
 
harmonization
The simultaneous existence of both kinds of relations and one and the same event, a link in two different chains, which has its position in both, as such that the fate of one individual always joins the fate of the other, each the hero of his own drama and simultaneously appearing in a drama strange to him; this is something which rises above normal comprehension and could be considered possible only by virtue of the most fantastic previously established harmony.
 
dream states
It's a great dream, dreamed by a single entity: the Anima Mundi (vital force), but in such a way that all of its dramatis personae are foreordained to take part in the play.
 
tuning
Thus everything is mutually connected and attuned to each other. 
 
(to Jung and Schopenhauer)
 
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