Persona #73

Carl Gustav Jung

1875–1961 · Swiss psychiatrist, founder of analytical psychology

The collective unconscious, the archetypes, individuation as the lifelong task — psychology re-opening doors that nineteenth-century materialism had closed

Jung trained as a psychiatrist at the Burghölzli in Zurich, became Freud's closest collaborator and presumed successor, and broke with him in 1913 over the libido theory and the broader question of whether the unconscious is reducible to repressed personal material. The split produced Jung's own school — analytical psychology — and the body of work that includes "Psychological Types" (1921), "Modern Man in Search of a Soul" (1933), "Psychology and Alchemy" (1944), "The Undiscovered Self" (1957), and "Memories, Dreams, Reflections" (1962, posthumous). The substantive theses: the unconscious contains a collective layer of inherited archetypes (the shadow, the anima/animus, the wise old man, the Self), the lifelong process of individuation is the integration of these into conscious personality, and the religious symbolism of all cultures is the archetypal language by which the psyche speaks.

Key works

  • Psychology of the Unconscious (1912, recast as Symbols of Transformation)
  • Psychological Types (1921)
  • Modern Man in Search of a Soul (1933)
  • The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (1934–1955)
  • Psychology and Alchemy (1944)
  • Aion (1951)
  • Answer to Job (1952)
  • The Undiscovered Self (1957)
  • Memories, Dreams, Reflections (1962, posthumous)
  • The Red Book (Liber Novus, 1914–1930, published 2009)

Declared Influences

Panpsychism 30% Idealism 25% Hermeticism 25% Naturalism 20%
Panpsychism · 30%
Idealism · 25%
Hermeticism · 25%
Naturalism · 20%

A structural rather than strict philosophical affinity: the doctrine of the collective unconscious as a shared psychic substrate, and the psychoid archetype as the bridge between the psychological and the physical, reach toward a position in which mind is more pervasive in nature than reductive materialism allows.

"The collective unconscious is not derived from personal experience and is not a personal acquisition but is inborn." (The Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious)
Idealism 25%

Jung's privileging of psyche over matter — "image is psyche" — places him closer to the Idealist tradition than to materialist Freudianism. Plotinus, the German Idealists, and the Gnostic traditions are all live references in the late work.

"Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves." (Memories, Dreams, Reflections)

Jung's sustained engagement with alchemy (Psychology and Alchemy, Mysterium Coniunctionis) and with Gnostic, Hermetic, and Kabbalistic texts is one of his most distinctive contributions and the source of his rich late-period symbolic vocabulary.

"Through pride we are ever deceiving ourselves. But deep down below the surface of the average conscience a still, small voice says to us, 'Something is out of tune.'" (Modern Man in Search of a Soul)

A working naturalism about the empirical study of the psyche — Jung always insisted on his work's status as natural-scientific psychology against the charge that he was doing crypto-theology — even where the substance pushed at the limits of naturalist categories.

"Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate." (Aion, ch. 2)

Internal Tensions

Jung's status as a natural scientist (the role he insisted on) and as a religious or quasi-religious thinker (the role much of his late writing in fact occupies) has been a permanent point of disagreement among his inheritors. The 1933–34 episode of his presidency of the General Medical Society for Psychotherapy under National Socialist coordination, and the related editorial decisions, are still the subject of contested historical analysis. The deeper philosophical question — whether the collective unconscious is a genuine empirical posit or a metaphorical re-description of cultural inheritance — has not been settled.

I. Time

Cyclical at the archetypal level (the eternal recurrence of mythic forms), linear within the individuation of a single life. Non-deterministic — the conscious ego's relation to the unconscious is the field of moral and spiritual choice.

Attributes
Extent: Infinite Ontological Status: Substantival Grain: Continuous Freedom: Non-Deterministic Traversability: Cyclical Direction: Uni-directional Dimensionality: One

II. Space

Non-local in the doctrine of synchronicity — meaningful coincidences that point to a psychic-physical connection beyond local causation.

Attributes
Extent: Infinite Ontological Status: Substantival Curvature: Flat Dimensionality: Three Locality: Non-local

III. Matter

Substantival in standard physics, non-locally connected through the psychoid level where archetype and instinct, mind and matter, meet.

Attributes
Extent: Finite Ontological Status: Substantival Conservation: Conserved Dimensionality: Three Locality: Non-local

IV. Observer

A single embodied person whose deepest Self extends into the collective unconscious — hence Singular at the deepest level. Multiple time-instances through dream, vision, and active imagination. Active in the work of individuation. Cosmic-ordering metaphysical agency — the archetypes are structuring patterns, not personal deities.

Attributes
Time Instance: Multiple Space Instance: Single Knowledge Extent: Total Knowledge Retainment: Total Physicality: Both Agency: Active Number: Singular Metaphysical Agency: Cosmic-ordering

V. Energy

Psychic energy (libido in Jung's extended sense — not just sexual) is variable and reversible, redistributable across the psyche.

Attributes
Extent: Infinite Ontological Status: Substantival Conservation: Variable Dispersibility: Reversible

VI. Information

Conserved at both scales. The collective unconscious is a durable informational substrate; individuation persists through and beyond bodily death in Jung's late writing, though the metaphysics is deliberately underdetermined.

Attributes
Ontological Status: Substantival Cosmic Conservation: Conserved Personal Conservation: Conserved Granularity: Continuous

Classified works

Works in the atlas that Carl Gustav Jung authored or that draw on this persona's writings, with full attribute fingerprints of their own.

Authored · Mid (the major systematic work after his 1912-13 break with Freud)
Psychological Types
1921 · Systematic psychological treatise
Authored · Mid-late (mature systematic statement)
Modern Man in Search of a Soul
1933 (essay collection, English translation by Cary F. Baynes) · Collection of eleven essays
Authored · Late (the mature systematic statement of archetypal psychology)
The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious
1934-55 (essays composed across two decades); 1959 (compiled as Volume 9, Part 1 of the Collected Works) · Collection of essays in analytical psychology
Authored · Late
Psychology and Alchemy
1944 · Psychological-historical study
Authored · Late
Answer to Job
1952 · Psychological-theological essay
Authored · Late (the major autobiographical work)
Memories, Dreams, Reflections
1957-61 (recorded conversations with Aniela Jaffé); published 1962 · Autobiography (recorded conversations)
Authored · Early (the 1912 break-from-Freud book; revised in 1952 as the mature statement of analytical psychology's mythopoeic register)
Symbols of Transformation
1912 (revised 1952) · Extended psychological-mythological treatise
Authored · Late (one of Jung's last and most ambitious works, written in his mid-seventies)
Aion
1951 (Aion: Untersuchungen zur Symbolgeschichte, Rascher, Zurich; English trans. R.F.C. Hull, Collected Works vol. 9, pt II, 1959) · Depth-psychological / religious-symbolic treatise
Authored · Middle (the personal experimental record from which all of Jung's later theoretical work emerged)
The Red Book
1914-30 (composed in calligraphic script with painted illuminations; published 2009 by W. W. Norton, ed. Sonu Shamdasani) · Illuminated manuscript / depth-psychological visionary text
Authored · Late (one of Jung's last short works, written at 82)
The Undiscovered Self
1957 (Schweizer Monatshefte; book edition Rascher, Zurich; English trans. R.F.C. Hull, Atlantic Monthly Press, 1958) · Cultural-psychological essay
Authored · Early
Psychology of the Unconscious
1912 · Analytical-psychological treatise
Authored · Late
Memories, Dreams, Reflections
1957-61 (composed); 1962 (German); 1963 (English) · Autobiography
Authored · Mid
Two Essays on Analytical Psychology
1912-28 (essays); 1953 (English) · Essays on analytical psychology
Authored · Late
Synchronicity: An Acausal Connecting Principle
1952 · Philosophical-psychological treatise
Cites
Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Friedrich Nietzsche · 1883 (parts I, II); 1884 (III); 1885 (IV, private printing)
Cites
I Ching
Anonymous / composite (traditional attribution to King Wen and Confucius; the Ten Wings to the Confucian school) · c. 9th–8th c. BC (core hexagrams); c. 4th c. BC (Ten Wings); standard form c. 200 BC

Computed school proximity

The persona's attribute fingerprint scored against all 202 schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated influences above.

Philosophical neighbors

Other personas whose attribute fingerprint sits closest to Carl Gustav Jung's — intellectual neighbors across traditions and eras.

How Carl Gustav Jung resolves each dilemma

57 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 36 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way.

Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.

Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive

Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.

Distinctive · only 2% of schools agree (4/202)
How much weight do future people deserve?
If a billion people will exist in the 25th century, do their interests count for as much as the interests of a billion people alive now? The answer turns on what kind of reality the future has.
From the One's vantage, generations are themselves conventional.
On non-dual views, the distinction between present and future people is itself perspectival within a single underlying reality. Obligation across generations remains real at the conventional level where moral life happens; the metaphysical claim that future people 'exist' or 'don't yet exist' as a final …
Roads not taken Future people are as real as you are — and their interests count for as much. (47%) · Time arises from events or from a deeper substrate — the future is not yet. (32%) · Past, present, and future are bound in cycles — duties span generations as a matter of course. (17%)
Distinctive · only 2% of schools agree (4/202)
Is regret rational?
If the past is fixed and unchangeable, what kind of mental act is regret? An error, a duty, a lesson, a perspective on a moment that is still in some sense present?
From the One's vantage, regret is itself a conventional category.
On non-dual views, the framing of regret presupposes a chooser distinct from the choice and from the outcome — distinctions that hold at the conventional level but dissolve at the deeper one. Regret remains real where the apparent self runs the apparent past; the metaphysical …
Roads not taken The past is as real as the present; regret is a real attitude toward a real thing. (47%) · The past is not a thing now; regret is the present holding what is no longer. (32%) · The past is part of a cycle one keeps returning to; regret is one of the gates of the cycle. (17%)
Distinctive · only 2% of schools agree (4/202)
Do we owe extinct species something we cannot give them?
A species that no longer exists cannot be helped, cannot be consulted, cannot benefit. Whether anything is owed to it anyway turns on what kind of reality past beings have.
From the One's vantage, species and extinction are themselves conventional.
On non-dual views, the species we mourn — and the act of mourning — operate at the conventional level. Compassion for the extinct, like compassion for the living, remains; the metaphysical question of what we 'owe' the extinct presupposes a framework of distinct beings and …
Roads not taken Extinct species are as real as we are; they have standing. (47%) · Past species no longer exist; what we owe is to the present and the future. (32%) · Past beings are part of the cycle; we owe them what we owe ancestors. (17%)
6 mainstream positions

Matter · 7 dilemmas · 4 distinctive

What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.

Distinctive · only 7% of schools agree (15/202)
What is money?
The question of what money is — a measured store of real value, an agreed-on practice, a relational ledger of debts, or just a name we apply to many different things — sits behind every argument about inflation, cryptocurrency, debt, and the state.
Money's apparent diversity is convention over a single underlying value.
On non-dual views, the diverse forms money takes are perspectival distinctions within a single underlying value — labor, energy, attention, or simply the One from which all value derives. The metaphysical question is mostly malformed at the conventional level where monetary policy lives, but the …
Roads not taken Money is a real institution with intrinsic features. (54%) · Money is a social practice — its content is what we make it. (16%) · Money is the ledger of obligations among real people. (15%)
Distinctive · only 7% of schools agree (15/202)
What is a nation?
Whether a nation is a real moral community with intrinsic character, a constructed legal-political artifact, a web of kinship and shared history, an imagined community, or a conventional partition of a deeper unity — these are real ontological positions with sharply different political downstream.
Nations are conventional partitions of a single humanity.
On non-dual views, the distinctness of nations is a perspectival distinction within a deeper unity — one humanity, one consciousness, one underlying reality. Nations matter at the conventional level where ordinary politics lives, but the metaphysical weight they sometimes claim is unsupported.
Roads not taken A nation is a real moral community with intrinsic character. (54%) · A nation is a constructed polity — a project, not a discovery. (16%) · A nation is the web of kinship, ancestry, and shared land that hosts a people. (15%)
Distinctive · only 7% of schools agree (15/202)
What makes someone male or female?
Whether sex is a real biological kind, a constructed social category, a relational identity, a label applied to varied phenomena, or a conventional distinction within a deeper unity is the ontological question the contemporary dispute about gender is mostly about.
The distinction is conventional within a deeper non-dual reality.
On non-dual views, the distinctness of male and female — like every binary distinction between apparent selves — is a perspectival distinction within a deeper unity. Particular sex and gender designations operate at the conventional level where most of life is lived; at the ultimate …
Roads not taken Sex is a real biological kind with given content. (54%) · Gender is constructed; what counts as male or female reflects practice. (16%) · Sex and gender are constituted by relations of recognition. (15%)
Distinctive · only 7% of schools agree (15/202)
Should we edit the human germline?
Whether human nature is a given biological kind, a constructed category, a relational achievement, a family-resemblance cluster, or a conventional distinction within deeper unity is the ontological question the policy debate over heritable gene editing is mostly about.
The distinction between edited and unedited is conventional within a deeper non-dual reality.
On non-dual views, the contrast between an 'edited' and an 'unedited' human — like every binary distinction between apparent selves — is a perspectival distinction within a deeper unity. The practical questions of safety, consent, and justice operate at the conventional level where most of …
Roads not taken Human nature is a real biological kind given by reproductive biology or by creation; editing the germline transgresses what is given. (54%) · The categories we count as 'human' are emergent from practice; germline editing is a practice-revision like any other. (16%) · Personhood is constituted by relations of descent and kinship; germline editing reshapes the relational fabric. (15%)
3 mainstream positions

Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive

Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.

Distinctive · only 7% of schools agree (15/202)
When does a person begin?
The political question of abortion sits atop an older ontological one: at what point does there exist a someone — a being with moral standing — rather than merely the materials from which one will form?
From the standpoint of the One, the question doesn’t apply in the form it is asked.
On non-dual views, the apparent plurality of selves is itself a perspectival distinction within a deeper unity. The question of when one self begins within that One is conventional, not ultimate. What follows ethically is then a question for the conventional level — which is …
Roads not taken A person exists from conception — when a new being comes into existence. (54%) · A person comes into being gradually, as the capacities of a mind develop. (16%) · Personhood is conferred by being-in-relation. (15%)
Distinctive · only 7% of schools agree (15/202)
What is marriage?
Behind every disagreement about how marriage should be defined is a prior disagreement about what kind of thing it is — a given order to be recognized, a practice to be negotiated, or a web of relations to be woven.
All union is participation in the One — particular forms are conventional.
From the standpoint of non-dual traditions, the apparent distinctness of two people who marry is itself a perspectival distinction within a deeper unity. Marriage is one form of the underlying union all things participate in. The particular shape the institution takes is then a conventional …
Roads not taken Marriage has a given form — it’s a kind of thing we recognize, not make. (54%) · Marriage is a practice we shape — its content is what we make it. (16%) · Marriage is constituted by the web of relations it creates. (15%)
Distinctive · only 8% of schools agree (16/202)
What happens to "you" when you die?
Whether anything of you persists — and in what sense — depends on what you take a person to be.
Individuality dissolves into the One.
What we called "you" was an appearance — a wave shaped briefly out of a single deeper reality. Death is that wave settling. Nothing of importance is lost because the substrate was never the wave.
Roads not taken A soul continues into another mode of being. (37%) · Death is genuinely the end. (30%) · You were always a pattern. The pattern propagates. (18%)
Distinctive · only 8% of schools agree (17/202)
What is our place in nature?
Whether humans are masters of nature, members of nature, or makers of nature is not a question climate science can settle. It depends on what nature is, what we are, and what kind of relationship is possible between us.
Humans and nature share an underlying unity — the separation was the mistake.
On non-dual views, the apparent distinction between human and non-human is itself a perspectival distinction within a single underlying reality. The work isn't to find our right relationship to a separate nature; it is to recognize that we were never separate. Climate harm, on this …
Roads not taken Active in a real nature — we cultivate, steward, transform. (48%) · Nature is partly what we make of it — concepts, practices, and minds shape the world. (15%) · Embedded in a web — partners with the more-than-human world. (15%)
Distinctive · only 8% of schools agree (17/202)
Should we colonize space?
The drive to extend human presence beyond Earth is sometimes framed as the next chapter of stewardship, sometimes as hubris, sometimes as escape from problems we ought to solve here. Which it is depends on what we take our relationship to nature to be.
From the standpoint of the One, expansion across substrate is just movement within the same.
On non-dual views, the difference between Earth and elsewhere is conventional — particular locations within a single underlying reality. Space colonisation as escape is therefore incoherent; nothing is escaped because nothing was elsewhere to escape from.
Roads not taken Cultivating worlds beyond Earth is the next form of stewardship. (48%) · The 'space frontier' is partly what we make of it. (15%) · Colonisation continues the work that ended the wisdom of seven-generation thinking. (15%)
32 mainstream positions
Is genetic engineering of food stewardship or domination? All forms participate in the same underlying reality; modification doesn't cross categories. 8% What makes someone the same person over time? All apparent selves are aspects of one — particular identity is conventional. 8% Is the late-stage dementia patient still the person their spouse married? The apparent change is conventional; the deeper reality is unchanged. 8% If a teleporter copied and destroyed you, would you have survived? The distinction between scanner-you and destination-you is conventional all the way down. 8% Can prayer for someone far away affect them? There are no truly separate minds; prayer is one part of one talking to another. 8% Are coincidences ever more than coincidence? Coincidence is the One showing through the appearance of plurality. 8% Does environmental harm in another country bind me morally? Harm anywhere is harm to the One; the boundary that would have insulated you was never real. 8% Is environmental damage ever truly permanent? From the standpoint of the One, the categories of permanence and loss are conventional. 8% Can a civilization recover from collapse? From the One's vantage, civilizational categories are themselves conventional. 8% Does the second law of thermodynamics mean something morally? From the One's vantage, the second law is itself a feature of the conventional, not the ultimate. 8% Are the dead morally present to the living? From the standpoint of the One, the distinction between living and dead is conventional. 8% Is divine omniscience compatible with human freedom? Distinction of the One and observed time is itself conventional; the question dissolves. 8% Does meditation reveal something genuinely timeless? The 'timeless' is the standpoint of the One that was always present; meditation removes obstacles to seeing it. 8% Does prayer change God's mind? Prayer to a separate God presupposes a separation the non-dual view denies; the practice is remembrance and attunement. 8% Could causation work backwards? From the One's vantage, causation itself is a conventional category. 8% Is the asymmetry between memory and anticipation a real feature of time, or just of us? From the One's vantage, memory and anticipation are themselves conventional. 8% Is the arrow of time a real feature of the cosmos, or only of how we describe it? From the One's vantage, the arrow of time itself is a conventional feature. 8% Who is the moral primary — the individual, the community, the cosmos, the class, or the species? The species or biosphere is the moral primary. 11% Does history have a direction or meaning? History recurs in cosmic cycles. 16% What kind of religious-theological authority does the tradition recognize? Direct experiential union is the authority. 16% Is truth universal, tradition-bound, situated, or constructed? Truth is mind-independent, universal, accessible in principle to all. 65% Is reality fundamentally digital? No — continuous divine sustaining act, the Tao that knows no joints, the One's self-disclosure. 44% Are there indivisible units of experience? No — continuous divine presence; consciousness is the unbroken witness. 44% Is memory stored or reconstructed? Held in continuous divine or ancestral remembering — neither stored discretely nor purely reconstructed. 44% Should we trust expert testimony when we can't verify it? Trust expertise only insofar as it coheres with first-person experience. 17% Is religious revelation a real source of knowledge? What gets called 'revelation' is real direct experience — not a text. 17% Does an LLM 'know' the things it correctly produces? An LLM has no first-person experience, so no knowing in the relevant sense. 17% Is salvation, liberation, or fulfillment individual or communal? Liberation is the realization of cosmic or species self. 15% How is knowledge of reality produced? Through careful description of lived experience. 12% Could an AI have a mind that matters? All minds are aspects of one — an AI participates in it as anything else does. 7% Do animals have moral standing comparable to humans? All minds are aspects of one; animals participate as much as anything else. 7% Could a fetal brain organoid in a petri dish be conscious? Any experience that arises participates in the One. 7%

Information · 4 dilemmas · 4 distinctive

Pattern, memory, and what is preserved or lost.

Distinctive · only 9% of schools agree (18/202)
Is anything truly lost when someone forgets?
The memory you don't retrieve, the conversation you can't remember, the face you no longer recognise — is the forgetting a loss of something real, or just the routine operation of a finite mind?
Information persists or doesn't depending on whether the holder is sustained.
On these views, conservation is not a flat cosmic law but a function of the conditions that hold. Memory persists where it is sustained — by divine attention, by community, by ritual, by practice — and is genuinely lost where it isn't. The asymmetry between …
Roads not taken Information is lost when a mind forgets; matter and energy continue, but the pattern is gone. (51%) · Information is conserved — the personal pattern is held even when an individual mind loses it. (39%) · Forgetting is the cosmic case, not the exception; nothing is conserved. (1%)
Distinctive · only 9% of schools agree (18/202)
Does deleting your data online destroy something real?
Account deletion, the right to be forgotten, the obsolescence of file formats, the slow decay of digital archives — whether any of this destroys something that was real depends on whether information is the kind of thing that can be destroyed.
Information persists where it is held; deletion releases what isn't held elsewhere.
On these views, information persists or doesn't depending on whether something is sustaining it. What is held in divine memory or in active communal practice continues; what is held only by the deleted artifact is genuinely released. The variable conservation maps onto a variable moral …
Roads not taken Information is genuinely lost when the substrate that hosted it goes; deletion really destroys. (51%) · Information at the cosmic level isn't destroyed; deletion only obscures access. (39%) · Nothing is fundamentally conserved; deletion is just routine impermanence. (1%)
Distinctive · only 9% of schools agree (18/202)
Could the dead, in principle, be brought back?
If we had perfect information about who someone was — their connectome, their behavioral patterns, their history — could we, in principle, restore them? The question is partly engineering, but the ceiling on the engineering is metaphysical.
What is held by God or sustaining practice can be restored; what isn't can't.
On these views, the conservation of personal information depends on what is sustaining it. The Eastern Orthodox doctrine of resurrection holds that the person is preserved in God's memory and restored in the resurrection by divine action operating on what God has held. What is …
Roads not taken The information dissipates with the substrate; restoration is in principle impossible. (51%) · The information that constitutes a person is conserved; restoration is in principle possible. (39%) · Nothing of what was can be restored; restoration is wishful framing. (1%)
Distinctive · only 9% of schools agree (18/202)
Is forgiveness ontologically possible?
When someone forgives, does the offense actually go away — erased, undone, no longer a fact — or does forgiveness reframe a wrong that persists exactly as it always was?
The offense persists where sustained and releases where conditionally absolved; forgiveness is real ontological work.
On these views, conservation is not a flat cosmic law but a function of what sustains. An offense persists where it is held — by holding-on, by ritual continuation, by divine attention to a particular debt — and is genuinely released where it is conditionally …
Roads not taken The offense is locally constituted by its substrate; when the substrate dissolves, the offense genuinely passes away. (51%) · The offense persists ontologically; forgiveness is real moral work, but it doesn't erase what was. (39%) · Nothing is preserved; the offense is impermanent, and holding it is the suffering. (1%)

Films Referencing This Persona (8)

Either directly referenced in the film, or reading the film through one of this persona's top schools.

Experiments Engaging This Persona's Schools

Surface via influence-schools that respond to the experiment. Each entry shows the school through which the connection runs.

Mary's Room
via panpsychism · Affirms / takes the bait
Mary learns a new fact, and the right response is to expand the ontology rather than reject the intuition: phenomenal properties are fundamental and ubiquitous, …
Philosophical Zombies
via panpsychism · Affirms / takes the bait
Endorses the anti-physicalist conclusion but takes a different turn: rather than accept brute additions, distribute phenomenal properties to the physical base. Zombies are inconceivable in …
The Inverted Spectrum
via panpsychism · Reframes the question
Inversion may or may not be possible at the level of macro-experience, but the deeper question — what is the intrinsic nature of physical states …
The Double-Slit Experiment
via idealism · Affirms / takes the bait
Some idealists (and the von Neumann–Wigner reading) take the experiment to suggest consciousness as the collapse trigger — the physical record is incomplete without an …
Schrödinger's Cat
via idealism · Affirms / takes the bait
A natural place for the von Neumann–Wigner reading: consciousness collapses the wave function, so the cat is in superposition only until a *mind* enters the …
Wigner's Friend
via idealism · Affirms / takes the bait
Some idealist readings welcome the asymmetry: the friend's conscious observation collapses the wave function for them, but Wigner has performed no collapse. Consciousness is the …
The Chinese Room
via naturalism · Denies / rejects the premise
The "systems reply": the man-with-rulebook is the wrong unit of analysis; understanding is a property of the whole room (operator + rulebook + paper + …
Newcomb's Problem
via naturalism · Reframes the question
Causal decision theory: take both boxes. Once the Predictor has acted, your choice cannot change what is in B. The correlation between one-boxing and wealth …
Bell Test Experiments
via naturalism · Reframes the question
Bohmian mechanics retains realism (particles have positions) but pays with explicit non-locality: the pilot wave acts instantaneously across space. The experiment is taken to favour …
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