The tendency to notice coincidences in one’s life, and to attribute meaning to those coincidences, is stronger in some people than in others.
Some statisticians say all coincidences are just due to random chance, and they are meaningless. Others disagree.
Philosopher and psychologist Dr. Richard Tarnas looks at why synchronicity entered the Western consciousness when it did and why it’s important.
The tendency to notice coincidences in one’s life, and to attribute meaning to those coincidences, is stronger in some people than in others.
Some statisticians say all coincidences are just due to random chance, and they are meaningless. Others disagree.
Philosopher and psychologist Dr. Richard Tarnas looks at why synchronicity entered the Western consciousness when it did and why it’s important.