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The Innermost Kernel by Suzanne Gieser – Quotations

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The Innermost Kernel by Suzanne Gieser

I would like to thank Markus Fierz, Res Jost, Marie-Louise von Franz, C.A. Meier and Franz Jung for taking the time to answer my questions concerning the relationship between Pauli and Jung. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page VIII

The publication of Pauli’s scientific correspondence is a project that has been in progress since the 1970s.

Pauli’s widow Franca Pauli was very anxious to preserve the image of Wolfgang Pauli as that of the brilliant physicist, and nothing else.

For this reason she did everything in her power to consign the ‘Jungian’ part of Pauli’s thinking to oblivion.5 She opposed any publication of letters dealing with such matters. ~Susanne Geiser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 4

Karl von Meyenn told me that she burnt all the letters from Marie-Louise von Franz that were found in his office on the occasion of his death. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 4, fn 5

I must also be one of the first ‘outsiders’ to have read the correspondence between Pauli and Jung’s secretary Aniela Jaffé and Pauli’s correspondence with Marie-Louise von Franz. ~Susanne Geiser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 5

I have also consulted Pauli’s correspondence with his former assistant, the physicist Markus Fierz, and with Jung’s colleague Marie-Louise von Franz.

The core material in my work consists therefore primarily of some 400 letters which concern Pauli’s interest in Jung’s psychology. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 7

For a while, Pauli seems to have been very close to Marie-Louise von Franz.

They got to know each other in 1947 while Pauli was working on his essay on Johannes Kepler. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 7

Von Franz was one of the few in the circle surrounding Jung who knew Latin well enough to be able to help Jung and others with the translation of Latin texts.

She also helped Pauli with the translation of Kepler and Fludd. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 7

Unfortunately only Pauli’s letters to von Franz have been preserved (except for one), von Franz’ letters to Pauli were burned by Pauli’s widow when she discovered them in a box in his room at ETH, the institute of technology in Zürich.

It has been implied that they had a sexual relationship, but this is firmly denied by von Franz.

Relations between them were problematic and seem to have terminated in the autumn of 1955. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 8

See Herbert van Erkelens, ‘Wolfgang Pauli’s Dialogue with the Spirit of Matter’, Psychological Perspectives 24 (1991). ~The Innermost Kernel, Page , fn 21

Marie-Louise von Franz states that Pauli always kept his various interests and relationships in watertight compartments and that she had no idea that Pauli had corresponded with Jung and Jaffé. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 8

Pauli refers to several discussions he has had in his correspondence with Jung.

Sometimes he quotes long passages and in one case he even encloses a copy of his letter to Jung and asks for her comments on it.   ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 8

He particularly discussed his correspondence with Jung and its contents with Fierz, Jaffé, and von Franz.

Naturally this does not mean that Pauli regarded his correspondence with Jung as public property, but nor did he treat it as strictly private.

He saw the letters as a basis for discussion, in which he could allow himself to speculate and wonder freely, without needing to worry about having to defend every word. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 9-10

According to Jung’s colleague Marie-Louise von Franz, Pauli suffered a further period of depression towards the end of his life, together with a blockage of his scientific creativity. She says that he then began drinking again, which led to his premature death in 1958. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 25

Pauli later explicitly drew parallels between the works of Schopenhauer and Jung’s and Bohr’s ideas.

Most clearly he expresses these in a letter to Marie-Louise von Franz: ‘›The world as will and representation means nothing else to me than ›the world as a complementary pair of opposites‹ . . . ’. ~The Innermost Kernel, Page 41, fn 131

Note: Susanne Geiser herself in The Innermost Kernel states that Ms. Von Franz’s assertion that “Pauli was never analysed by Jung himself” was “not at all consistent with certain known facts. Marie-Louise Von Franz later confirmed this fact with Ms. Geiser as may be read as follows:

According to Jung’s colleague Marie-Louise von Franz, Pauli was never analysed by Jung himself.

She says:

. . . he did have a few interviews with Jung. Pauli was in analysis with an English woman, Dr. Rosenbaum. His dreams during that analysis were dreams of psychology and alchemy. This was several years prior to his time in Zürich. When he married and moved to Zürich to assume a professorship, he did not re-enter analysis. But, as I said, he occasionally had an interview with Jung.

This statement is not at all consistent with certain known facts. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 146

In an interview which I had with Marie-Louise von Franz on 13 March 1993, she [Von Franz] admitted that she did not know that Pauli and Jung had met regularly.   ~The Innermost Kernel, Page 146, fn 479

The evaluations of Pauli’s analytical treatment also diverge. Jung considers that he became ‘perfectly normal and reasonable’, while von Franz and others claim that he soon began drinking again. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 147

One aspect of Pauli’s ‘anima problem’ was his relationship with Jung’s pupil Marie-Louise von Franz.

They got to know each other in 1947 and she helped Pauli with the translation of Kepler and Fludd.

Their relationship changed character around 1951 and developed into a more personal and passionate one, at least on Pauli’s side.

The intensification of their relationship seems to have started in 1951 in connection with von Franz’ ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 148

Relations between them were problematic and seem to have culminated in the autumn of 1955.

Von Franz describes him as preoccupied with himself and unwilling to engage in a real dialogue.

He wanted a free analysis of his dreams, he even thought of his dreams as fabulous gifts from him to her.

After all he was the special dreamer that had been elected by Jung for his studies in Psychology and Alchemy.

He wanted them analysed, not as part of a therapy but as a form of ‘philosophical dialogue’.

He therefore refused to supply von Franz with associations and other important material to make an interpretation possible. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 149

The reference in this last passage to leaving with his hat and coat is interpreted by von Franz as signifying Pauli’s refusing to leave his role as famous

physicist, refusing to let go of his ‘persona’ (in Jungian terms) preferring to desert his anima, his soul, instead.

After this Pauli became harsh and brutal towards her, making various impossible demands.

Pauli’s dreams became shallow and negative and he completely turned away from Jung’s psychology and people in his circle. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 151

C.A. Meier judges Marie-Louise von Franz harshly, saying that she totally misunderstood Pauli, failing to appreciate his efforts to conduct an analytic dialogue with her and that their relationship was tragic. ~Suzanne Giser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 151

To von Franz he wrote:

In general I am now rather tired of the lack of mathematical-scientific training of Jung’s whole circle.

I still always hope for the miracle of some day finding someone who is both adequately trained in mathematics and science (about to the level of a second term student) and also has the necessary human maturity to understand the psychological side of my dreams. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 164

This subjective side also exists and concerns [. . . ] that my relationship to psychology may not become intellectual and must remain a relationship via the unconscious: the ›correspondentia‹ must always at the same time express a piece of the de facto existing process of individuation.’ Pauli to von Franz, 6 May 1953 [1569], PLC IV/2.  ~The Innermost Kernel, Page 167, fn 566

To Marie-Louise von Franz Pauli writes that although he feels a hundred percent Western, he has been fascinated by China and the Chinese on account of the symmetrical approach which has formed the foundation of their culture and their civilization for thousands of years.  ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 172

Pauli summarizes his notion of God in a letter to Marie-Louise von Franz:

As far as my own conception of God (if it can still be called that at all) is concerned, God is to me identical with the order of the cosmos (not simply with the world as for the pantheists).

In contrast to church religion, however, I believe that our ideas of the cosmic order should remain unprejudiced, both with regard to the utility of the (narrower) causality principle (determinism) and to its implications, and also to the admissibility of an anthropomorphic concept of consciousness in this context. (In the latter respect I remain true to Schopenhauer). ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 190

To von Franz he writes:

. . . his last letter contains for example quite excellent elaborations on the unity of the individual as a microcosm which has to be related to the unity of the description of nature. I can confirm this in detail and even verify it. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 225

The discussions, together with Pauli’s consistent support, eventually led Jung to compile a text on synchronicity which he sent to Pauli on 22 June 1949.

At the same time he thanked Pauli for all his encouragement.

After many further discussions and debates in letters and verbally with Markus Fierz, C.A. Meier, Max Knoll and Marie-Louise von Franz the work was published in 1952 together with Pauli’s article on Kepler. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 282

Pauli’s attitude to astrology was very negative.

He could accept the Chinese oracular method I Ching and was open to parapsychological phenomena.

But astrology was anathema to him.

He acknowledged in a letter to von Franz that his reaction against astrology went far beyond what was rationally justified and could not be supported with relevant arguments.

‘Here tome only one problem is relevant. I-Ching appeals to me instinctively, and I willingly accept synchronicity on the strength of my own experience, but – I have an instinctive dislike of horoscopes which goes far beyond the rational.1

With a horoscope I feel like a cat whose fur is being rubbed the wrong way, or like a physicist who is faced with an apparatus with a fundamental design fault (see below!).

For example, Mrs. Carry Baynes asked me after my Kepler paper in Princeton (1950) why I so totally reject astrology when I accept the I-Ching and synchronicity. – I could only stammer out something, I did not know the true answer.

But nothing altered the fact.’ Pauli to von Franz, 12 Nov. 1953 [1672], PLC IV/2.

Nevertheless a horoscope was made for him and is deposited as an appendix to a letter to Jung on 23 December 1953 at the ETH, WHS Hs. 1056:30880. ~The Innermost Kernel, Page 307, fn 896

In a letter to Marie-Louise von Franz he deals with Poincaré’s emphasis on intuition a little cursorily and says that it is not unusual for mathematicians to obtain their impulses direct from the unconscious. ~Susanne Geiser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 314

Pauli to von Franz, 22 Feb. 1951 [1205], PLC IV/1. ‘I still see that you mention H. Poincaré.

He was a favourite author of my youth.

However the characteristic of experiencing intuition direct from the unconscious is surely one he shares with many other mathematicians.’ ~The Innermost Kernel, Page 314, fn 951

[From: The Innermost Kernel by Suzanne Gieser]:

Pauli is portrayed as a brilliant genius, indeed even as the greatest physicist of his time.

His colleague Max Born compares him with Einstein and says that in certain respects he has to be considered even greater than Einstein. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 6

At the age of 21 Pauli made his name known with an article on the theory of relativity that he wrote at the request of Sommerfeld.

This article was so well written that it earned the admiration of Einstein himself. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 16

Einstein wrote a brief review of Pauli’s article:

One does not know what to admire most, the psychological grasp of the development of the ideas, the assurance of the mathematical deduction, the deep physical insight, the capacity for lucid and systematic presentation, the knowledge of the literature, the technical integrity, the confidence of the criticism. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 17

 

During the period 1940–46 Pauli was employed at The Institute for Advanced Study, where he worked in close proximity to Einstein.

It was in many ways a difficult period for Pauli.  ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 18

To him true science was still linked with a contemplation of the structure of existence, closely associated with man’s religious function.

The ambition of science must be to discover connections and to place man in a context that is greater than man himself.

On the other hand the same can be said of Einstein’s attitude, a fact that did not deter him from participation in the Manhattan Project. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 20

In 1945 the Nobel Prize was awarded to Pauli for the exclusion principle, which he had formulated in 1924.

At the banquet that was held at the Institute for Advanced Study on 10 December 1945 to honour this occasion, Einstein gave an emotional speech in which he called Pauli his ‘spiritual son’, who was to complete the work he had begun. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 21

When Pauli receives news of Einstein’s death in 1955 he writes to Max Born recalling this occasion:

Einstein’s death has also touched me personally.

A friend so well disposed to me, so paternal, is now no more.

I shall never forget the speech that he gave in 1945 in Princeton about me and for me, after I had been awarded the Nobel Prize.

It was like a king abdicating and naming me as a kind of ‘chosen son’ as his successor.

Sadly there are no notes for this speech of Einstein’s (it was improvised and there is no manuscript at all). ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 21

 

Both Pauli and Jung began as brilliant exponents of the work of their famous mentors, but later turned away from their way of thinking.

However it must be emphasized that in many other respects the relationships between Jung and Freud and between Pauli and Einstein show more differences than similarities. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 22

Pauli was of course never a ‘pupil’ of Einstein in the same sense.

However he acquired a thorough understanding of Einstein’s theories at a very early stage and was considered one of the few who really understood Einstein. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 22

According to Pauli, Einstein tried to the last to win Pauli over to his side, because he felt that Pauli was the physicist who understood him best and who was nearest to his own thinking on physics.

Pauli also asserted that he was fully aware of what Einstein wanted and that he understood why Einstein could not accept the quantum theory as complete. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 22

Pauli was even inclined to agree with Einstein that the quantum theory is incomplete, but on grounds different from Einstein’s.

Pauli also believed that he understood the non-scientific reasons behind Einstein’s refusal to accept quantum physics.  ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 22

What is interesting in this comparison, however, is the type of criticism that Pauli and Jung levelled against their ‘mentors’.

The stumbling block, to both Pauli and Jung, was that the models of their ‘mentors’ could not cope with the irrational, an element which they associated with the occurrence of the ‘unique’, the ever present creative act of nature, which cannot be grasped within a rational scheme.

They also criticized them for their lack of understanding of the role of the observer in science. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 22

I remarked to Bohr at the time that Einstein was regarding as an imperfection of wave mechanics within physics what is in fact was an imperfection of physics within life.

Mr. Bohr readily agreed with this statement.

Nevertheless, I had to admit that there was an imperfection or incompleteness somewhere, even if it was outside the realm of physics, and since then Einstein has never stopped trying to bring me around to his way of thinking.’ Pauli to Jung, 27 May 1953 [62P], PJL, 121. ~Wolfgang Pauli, The Innermost Kernel, Page 22, fn 70

There was another reason for Pauli’s reluctance to stay in the USA.

He suspected that research policy in America would not remain free but would come increasingly to be controlled by the government and the military.

He speaks of this in a letter to Einstein:

In addition there was the consideration that it is perhaps in any case a good thing if quite a few physicists remain in Europe.

So at last my decision was reached, although in the short term working conditions for scientific physics in America may be very favourable.

In the more distant future (say in about 5 years), however, I do see the big danger of an intervention of the military in physics (with or without the subterfuge of the plain-clothes commission of non-physicists).

Certain indications appear unfavourable.

The extensive suspension of purely scientific publishing and the ‘under cover’ work in the university laboratory at Berkeley.

By ‘intervention’ I do not only mean censorship, but also an influencing of the direction of investigation in experimental work.

Even without legal force it is impossible to imagine a united front of physicists against such tendencies; it is too easy to entice young people with good positions and career prospects. . . ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 23

If we are to identify the concept of positivism with Comte’s positivism, the epistemological position taken by Einstein in his old age must also be designated positivist.

For his battle cry against the Copenhagen School was: ‘Physics is the description of reality as opposed to what one simply imagines!’ ~Wolfgang Pauli, The Innermost Kernel, Page 43

Just like Einstein, he [Pauli] longed for a uniform view of the universe.

The difference between him and Einstein was that Sommerfeld felt obliged to accept the viewpoints of modern physics, which Einstein was never willing to do. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 59

I am not very happy with ‘vague physics’, especially when young enthusiasts or formalists talk about it in the department for hours, although I must acknowledge the legitimacy of the whole way of looking at it.

But perhaps it can still be overcome by some ‘metaphysics’ (all physics is metaphysics according to Einstein).

How inelegant, for example, the general theory of relativity would become, if one were to take into account the precision of measurement there too! ~Arnold Sommerfield, The Innermost Kernel, Page 59

We find the same distinction between different kinds of ‘mysticism’ or ‘religion’ in many representatives of modern physics: in Niels Bohr, Oskar Klein, Wolfgang Pauli, Werner Heisenberg and Albert Einstein, to mention a few. ~Wolfgang Pauli, The Innermost Kernel, Page 59

The emphasis on acausality and ‘revolution’ in physics only emerged after 1925 and as a direct response to Schrödinger and Einstein’s challenge to the Göttingen-Copenhagen version. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 60

As we have already seen, Pauli rejected the use of concepts that do not correspond to observable or measurable quantities.

Just as Einstein’s work on the theory of relativity started from Mach’s criticism of the concepts of time and space, so a questioning of physical concepts which do not relate to measurable quantities formed the core of Pauli’s epistemological criticism. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 76-77

However the fact is that Einstein had never given his unqualified support to positivism even while young: ‘I do not curse the little Machian steed; […]. But it cannot bring forth anything living, only trample down harmful vermin.’  ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 80

Pauli had in the summer of 1954 published a revised version of his 1952 lecture entitled ‘Probability and Physics’, in which he describes the approach of Einstein and of classical physics as ‘the ideal of the detached observer’. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 131

 

In 1928 Jung cited Einstein’s theory of relativity as an example of the way in which for modern man the old absolute explanations were dissolving into the inconceivable. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page

Jung’s knowledge of modern physics prior to meeting Pauli was rather superficial.

In 1911 Einstein had indeed been his dinner guest and talked about his ‘electrical theory of light’.

Jung later states in a letter to Carl Seelig that this conversation caused him to start thinking about the possible relativity of time and space, and the psychic preconditions of these concepts. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 155

Similarly Pauli considered that Plato, Kepler, Descartes and, in modern times, Einstein could be called trinitarian thinkers, while Pythagoras, Kant, Schopenhauer, Fludd and Bohr could be called quaternarian. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 194

The conflict between Einstein and Bohr may thus also be seen as a conflict between Parmenides and Heraclitus. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 218

However there is in all people a third stage of religious experience, albeit only seldom a very pure one; I would call it cosmic religiosity.

This is difficult to make clear to the person who possesses nothing of it, no human concept of God corresponds to it.

The individual feels the nothingness of human wishes and purposes and the sublimity and wondrous order which is revealed in nature and in the world of ideas.

He feels individual existence as a kind of prison and wishes to experience the wholeness of being as a uniform and meaningful one. [. . . ]

The religious geniuses of all times were distinguished by this cosmic religiosity, which knows no dogma and no God, conceived in the image of man. [. . . ] It seems to met hat the most important function of art and science is to arouse this feeling in those who are receptive and to keep it alive. [. . . ]

On the other hand I maintain that cosmic religiosity is the strongest and most noble driving force behind scientific research. ~Wolfgang Pauli, The Innermost Kernel, Page 150

The way Einstein contrasts the confinement in the chaotic world of phenomena and the longing for a liberating clear, elevated rational order was a leitmotif which Pauli considered fundamental to understanding the difference between the complementarity perspective of the Copenhagen School and the worldview of classical physics. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 150

The statistical character of natural laws already was an answer to the question about the nature of cosmic order – an answer given to us by nature herself. Einstein could not accept this ‘open’ order – an order that eludes our rational categories. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 154

Fludd proceeded from the number four. Pauli wished however also to apply the same approach to the latter-day conflict between Einstein and Bohr. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 259

Pauli also used this psychological perspective when assessing his colleagues in science. For instance, he felt that he had fully understood Einstein’s position, which he labelled metaphysical realism. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 263

Consequently, what chiefly annoyed Einstein in quantum physics was ‘. . . that the state of a system is defined only by specification of an experimental arrangement.’ ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 263

From Einstein’s point of view the statistical description of reality in quantum mechanics must be incomplete, because it makes it impossible to determine the real state of an object. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 263

Einstein’s worldview was not ‘the observer’s’ but assumed the existence of certain exactly defined relationships which exist whether we observe them or not. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 263

Pauli called Einstein a ‘Spinozist’, because Einstein had told him that his image of God largely agreed with Spinoza’s.

Spinoza saw all existence as a single systematic unit which he called God or nature. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 263

In this situation it was fortunate that a third person intervened and acted as intermediary: Wolfgang Pauli. [–––] He became a close friend of Einstein’s and regarded himself, probably with some justification, as the designated ‘successor’ in theoretical physics. ~Max Born, The Innermost Kernel, Page 264

What annoyed Einstein was that ‘In quantum physics the state of the physical system depends on how one sees it’, as he put it.

The fact that this would be just as true of macrophysics as of microphysics does not fit in well with Einstein’s worldview. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 264

Pauli asserted that Einstein’s Spinozism thus lay on a level other than determinism. It is the wish to be able to understand the context of everything on an objective level – to be able to see reality as it really is. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 264

Einstein’s opinion irreversibility has to be considered an illusion created by ‘improbable’ initial conditions. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 265

Pauli believed that Parmenides’ beautiful resting cosmic sphere expressed a flight from reality.

He also called the striving of Einstein, Schrödinger and others back to a classical worldview ‘regressive hopes’. 266

Pauli accepts Jung’s definition of reality: ‘Only that which acts upon me do I recognize as real and actual.

But that which has no effect on me might as well not exist.’ ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 266

In a letter to Carl Seelig, Jung says that the very first seeds of the principle came from Einstein.

In 1911 Einstein had been at a dinner given by Jung and told him about his theory of relativity. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 274

It was Einstein who first 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.

It was a long time before Jung dared to publish anything extensive on synchronicity.

The ‘strange psychic parallelisms’ of which Jung speaks are part of the everyday experience of most people, but because of their strangeness they

are at best brushed aside as curiosities.

As such occurrences go beyond our cherished view of reality, most people choose to ignore them or to dismiss them by labelling them ‘chance’. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 274-275

Cf Ira Progoff, Jung, Synchronicity and Human Destiny (New York, 1973), 151 f.

Progoff claims that Jung told him that Einstein had often visited him and that they had had many long discussions.

He also implies that these discussions were of importance to Einstein, because Einstein’s papers have shown that dreams and mental images also played a large role in Einstein’s thinking.

This statement should be taken with pinch of salt.

We certainly know that Einstein visited Jung with other guests on two or three occasions.

In a letter to Freud in 1911 Jung mentions that he has had a dinner at which he spent the whole evening talking to a physicist about the ‘electrical theory of light’. (Jung to Freud, 18 Jan. 1911 (230 J), The Freud-Jung Letters, 384.)

If Jung had made any great impression on Einstein, or if the discussions between them were of any significance, this would surely have come out in the correspondence with Pauli.

Not once does Jung mention his ‘many long’ discussions with Einstein to Pauli.

Nor does Pauli seem to have discussed Jung with Einstein, which he would quite certainly have done had Einstein showed the slightest interest in dreams and suchlike. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 274, fn 842

However I am, like Jung, of the opinion that the production of balance between the spirit and physical matter necessitates an elevation of the feminine principle or symbol and that this at the same time has to correct the one-sidedness of a purely patriarchal age. This seems to be the mood of our time (of which it may perhaps also be said that it has no chivalry).

Insofar as science is a product of masculine consciousness, the ‘eternal feminine’ in terms of natural philosophy means the consciousness-transcending unity beyond the opposing pair. [–––]. Classical science from Galileo-Kepler-Newton right down to Einstein stands on the other hand for the trinitarian-patriarchal view.

Only modern physics has again recognized that in this world actual phenomena of necessity form and remain complementary opposing pairs and that they at the same time allow the observer freedom.

It has not yet been officially admitted that he psychic state of an involved observer may also have an influence on the natural process.

I should like to attempt here to make a comparison with the ancient Chinese way of thinking (communicated to me by R. Wilhelm), in order to express what I cannot yet grasp in exact concepts: the two signs of the I Ching, Yang (male) and Yin (female), originally signify a mountain in the sun (south side) and a mountain in the shade (north side).

We must learn to realize in our occidental manner and with the aid of our mathematics (which the ancient Chinese did not know) that there is only one X (one ‘mountain’, one ‘content’, one ‘real’, one ‘essence’, or whatever one may call the element of a still unknown and invisible reality) that according to the ‘illumination’ for us mortals i.e. according to how it appears in our human consciousness (this divides and distinguishes), appears either spiritual or material. ~Wolfgang Pauli, The Innermost Kernel, Page 323

What began to happen around the turn of the century must according to Pauli be interpreted as the return of the feminine principle. Einstein’s theory of relativity showed that neither time nor space are absolute categories but that they are intertwined. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 342

Man, the observer, immediately returns to the world of science when Einstein states that space has to be defined from the position of the observer in a movable system of reference. ~Suzanne Gieser, The Innermost Kernel, Page 342

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