There are some people who, when they enter a room, stuff happens. Appliances go berserk, computers crash, cell phones act up. Physicist Wolfgang Pauli, one of the early supporters of Jung’s theory on synchronicity, was one such person. In fact, it happened so frequently when Pauli was around that his co-workers called it “the Pauli effect.” But with Pauli, the effect could happen when he wasn’t even present.
In Deciphering the Cosmic Number: The Strange Friendship of Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, author Arthur I. Miller discusses an incident that happened in the 1920s. One afternoon at the University of Gottingen in Germany, a complicated apparatus for the study of atoms collapsed, without apparent cause. Pauli was in Switzerland at the time. “At last, said his colleagues, relieved, here was clear proof it couldn’t be the Pauli effect.” The professor in charge of the laboratory wrote Pauli, telling him abut the event. After a protracted delay, he received a letter from Pauli saying that he had been on his way to Copenhagen, but at the moment the equipment broke down, his train had stopped for a few minutes at the Gottingen station.
Miller also relates another story that happened in 1955. In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the discovery of Einstein’s special theory of relativity, Pauli was to lecture at the Zurich Physical Society. Three of his friends and colleagues had dinner with him beforehand, then they all set out for the lecture. One Swiss physicist was on his scooter, saw he was low on gas, and stopped at a gas station. His scooter caught fire, was totaled, and he had to walk. A second Swiss physicist discovered that his bike had two flat tires, so he had to walk, too. The third man took the tram, which he did frequently, but forgot to get off at the right stop.
They all made it to the lecture, but as one of the men observed, “A defining feature of the Pauli effect was that Pauli himself never experienced any harm.”
As one of Pauli’s close friends noted, “It is quite legitimate to understand the ‘Pauli effect’ as a synchronistic phenomenon as conceived by Jung.”
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Do any of you know someone like this?


















