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- The following is a summary of the concepts from the book FLYING
- SAUCERS, A MODERN MYTH OF THINGS SEEN IN THE SKY by C.G. JUNG.
- (1978, Princeton University press ISBN 0-691-01822-7, written in
- 1958), and is part of the Collected works of C.G. Jung.
- All I could hope to do here is pick out major points of the book
- and relate them as best I can. All quotes from the book will
- start with /and end with \ and include the paragraph number.
- Please forgive a word or two left out here and there. I would
- strongly recommend a study of the works of Jung but for those
- unfamiliar I will try a brief description to avoid some confusion.
- Jung says the individual unconcious is as real and as important
- as the concious and that the collective unconcious is one shared
- by everyone, built up and passed on somewhat like instincts in the
- animal kingdom. He names the major influences of the unconcious
- archetypes. One he calls the shadow, which is the 'bad' in us,
- another the anima or animus which describes the traits of the
- opposite sex which we can all sometimes display. His philosophy
- is that the more we are aware of these traits the easier we can
- achieve individuation, or becoming a whole person. Mandalas,
- circular objects (often found as art, the Aztec calendar might be
- an example), are important because they often reveal much about
- ourselves. That is a very rough summary of some of his major
- ideas.( I am not an authority, hence the following has turned out
- to be more of a "best of" quotes from the book. Hopefully his
- overall opinion of the subject can be deciphered.)
- In the introduction. Jung relates that there are manifstations
- of psychic changes which occur at the beginning and end of
- Platonic months,/589 .changes in the constellation of psychic
- dominants, of the archetypes, or "gods" as they used to be
- called, which bring about, or accompany, long lasting transfor-
- mations of the collective psyche... This transformation started
- in the historical era and left its traces first in the passing of
- the aeon of Taurus into Aries, and then Aires into Pisces, whose
- beginning coincides with the rise of Christianity. We are now
- nearing that great change which may be expected when the spring-
- point enters Aquarius.\
- Jung tackles the UFOs, 594/ only with their undoubted psychic
- aspect, and in what follow shall deal almost exclusively with
- their psychic comcomitants.\
- In part 1 Jung cites several cases of spiritual seances in
- which several attendees witnessed a visual phenomenon but others
- present (including himself) saw nothing. 608/But if it (UFOs) is
- a case of psychological 'projection', there must be a psychic
- cause for it. One can hardly suppose that anything of such world-
- wide incidence as the UFO legend is purely fortuitous and of no
- importance whatever...in this case a psychological situation
- common to all mankind. The basis for this kind of rumour is an
- emotional tension having its cause in a situation of collective
- distress or danger...This condition undoubtedly exists today, in
- so far as the whole world is suffering under the strain of
- Russian policies and their still unpredictable consequences. In
- the individual, too, such phenomena ..only occur when he is
- suffering from a psychic dissociation, when there is a split
- between the conscious attitude and the unconcious contents
- opposed to it. Precisely because the conscious mind does not know
- about them and is therefore confronted with a situtation from
- which there seems to be no way out, these strange contents cannot
- be integrated directly but seek to express themselves indirectly,
- thus giving rise to unexpected and apparently inexplicable
- opinions, beliefs, illusions, visions, and so forth.\
- He says that oftens this happens just to those who are least
- inclined to believe in them, which then gives them an air of
- particular credibility.
- /614 UFOs..have become a 'living myth'. We have here a golden
- opportunity of seeing how a legend is formed, and how in a
- difficult and dark time for humanity a miraculous tale grows up of
- an attempted intervention by extra terrestrial "heavenly" powers,
- and this at the very time when human fantasy is seriously
- considering the possibility of space travel... We at least are
- concious of our space conquering aspirations, but that a
- corresponding extra terrestrial tendency exists is a purely
- mythological conjecture, i.e., a projection.\
- /622. If the round shining objects that appear in the sky be
- regarded as visions, we can hardly avoid interpreting them as
- archetypal images. They would then be involuntary, automatic
- projections based on istinct, and as little as any other psychic
- manifestations or symptoms can they be dismissed as meaningless.
- Anyone with the requisite historical and psychological knowledge
- knows that circular symbols have played an improtant role in
- every age.. There is an old saying that "God is a circle whose
- centre is everywhere and the circumference nowhere."\
- /623. The present world situation is calculated as never before to
- arouse expectations of a redeeming, supernatural event. If these
- expectations have not dared to show themselves in the open, this
- is simply because no one is deeply rooted enough in the tradition
- of earlier centuries to consider an intervention from heaven as a
- matter of course. We have indeed strayed far from the metaphysical
- certainties of the Middle Ages, but not so far that our historical
- and psychological background is empty of all metaphysical hope.\
- /625. Nuclear physics has begotten in the laymans head an
- uncertainty of judgment that far esxceeds that of the physicists
- and makes things appear possible which but a short while ago would
- have been declared nonsensical. Consequently the UFOs can easily
- be regarded and believed in as a physicists miracle.\
- In part 2, a major portion of the book, Jungs examines dreams
- that involve UFOs and then comments on their particular 'meaning',
- too lengthy to repeat here. Some points he makes are;
- /636. It must be emphasized however that there is also the
- possibility of a natural or absolute knowledge, when the
- unconcious psyche coincides with objective facts. This is a
- problem that has been raised by the discoveries of parapsychology.
- Absolute knowledge occurs not only in telepathy and precognition,
- but also in biology, for instance in the attunement of the virus
- of hydrophobia to the anatomy of dog and man as described by
- Portmann, the wasps apparent knowledge of where the motor ganglia
- are located in the caterpillar that is to nourish the wasps
- progeny, the emission of light by certain fishes and insects with
- almost 100% efficiency, the directional sense of carrier pigeons,
- the warning of earthquakes given by chickens and cats, and the
- amazing cooperation given in symbiotic relationships.\
- (I could not help to think of the the recent Lear.txt when I
- read the following paragraph)
- /648. Today, as never before, men pay an extraordinary amount of
- attention to the skies, for technological reasons. This is
- especially true of the airman, whose field of vision is occupied
- on the one hand by the complicated control apparatus before him,
- and on the other by the empty vastness of cosmic space. His
- consciousness is concentrated one sidedly on details requiring the
- most careful observation, while at his back, so to speak, his
- unconcious strives to fill the illimitable emptiness of space. His
- training and his common sense both preclude him from observing all
- the things that might rise up from within and become visible in
- order to compensate for the emptiness and solitude of flight high
- above the earth. Such a situation provides the ideal conditions
- for spontaneous psychic phenomena, as everyone knows who has lived
- sufficiently long in the solitude, silence and emptiness of
- deserts, seas, mountains or in primeval forests. Rationalism and
- boredom are essentially products of the over induged craving for
- stimulation so characteristic of urban populations. The city
- dweller seeks artificial sensations to escape his boredom; the
- hermit does not seek them, but is plagued by them against his
- will.\ He continues by discussing how isolation, hunger, etc. can
- cause visions, hallucinations, in all men.
- /655. .. Either these are hard and fast facts, or else it is
- nothing but illusion begotten by repressed sexuality or an over
- compensated inferiourity complex. As against this I haved urged
- that the psyche be recognized as having its own peculiar
- reality... Whatever the reality of the psyche may be, it seems to
- coincide with the reality of life and at the same time to have a
- connection with the formal laws governing the inorganic world. For
- the psyche has yet another property which most of us would rather
- not admit, namely, that pecuiar factor which relativizes space and
- time, and is now the object of intensive parapsychological
- research.\
- /667. Everything in our experience is subject to the law of
- gravity with one great exception:the psyche, which, as we
- experience it, is weightlessness itself.\
- /678. Modern man still does not realize that he is entirely
- dependent on the cooperation of the unconscious, which can
- actually cut short the very next sentence he proposes to speak. He
- is unaware that he is continuously sustained by something, while
- all the time he regards himself exclusively as the doer.\ He then
- discusses the unconcious eloquently.
- /681. The only certain thing is our profound ignorance, which
- cannot even know whether we have come nearer to the solution of
- the great riddle or not. Nothing can carry us beyond an "It seems
- as if" except the perilous leap of faith, which we must leave to
- those who are gifted or graced for it.\
- In one dream a male is confronted by a female EBE and Jung
- discusses the neccesity of realizing the anima in order to achieve
- full realization of the self. A tally of those reporting contact
- with EBE's to see how many have encountered those of the opposite
- sex would be of interest as Jung relates the anima-animus
- realization is a difficult one, as compared to other aspects to
- it. (Although there could be other reasons for the sex
- encountered.) After again discussing the stressfull, destructive
- age in which we live, he says /719. Anxiously we look round for
- collective measures, thereby reinforcing the very mass mindedness
- we want to fight against. There is only one remedy for the
- levelling effect of all collective measures, and that is to
- emphasize and increase the value of the individual. A fundamental
- change of attitude is required, a real recognition of the whole
- man. This can only be the business of the individual and it must
- begin with the individual in order to be real.. Large political
- and social organizations must not be ends in themselves, but
- merely temporary expedients. Just as it was felt neccessary in
- America to break up the great trusts, so the destruction of huge
- organizations will eventually prove to be a necessity because,
- like a cancerous growth, they eat away mans nature as soon as
- they become ends in themselves and attain autonomy.\
- He talks about attaining individuation and the experiences which
- make it difficult. /721. There is another reason why such
- experiences \(those found while attempting individuation)/are
- shunned, indeed feared as pathological, and why the very idea of
- the unconscious and any preoccupation with it is unwelcome. It was
- not so long ago that we were living in a primitive state of mind
- with its "perils of the soul"-loss of soul, states of possession,
- etc., which threatened the unity of the personality, that is the
- ego these dangers are still a long way from having been overcome
- in our civilized society. Though they no longer afflict the
- individual to the same degree, this is certainly not true of
- social or national groups on a large scale, as contemporary
- history shows only too clearly. They are psychic epidemics that
- destroy the individual.\ Perhaps this is the reason why talking
- about UFO's to the average person is looked upon as "whacko".
- /722. To the constantly reiterated question "What can I do ?" I
- know no other answer except "Become what you have always been,",
- namely, the wholeness which we have lost in the midst of our
- civilized, conscious existence, a wholeness which we always were
- without knowing it... "What on earth can I do in the present
- threatening world situation, with my feeble powers?"... To
- worship collective ideals and work with the big organizations is
- spectacularly meritorious, but they nevertheless dig the grave for
- the individual. A group is always of less value than the average
- run of its members, and when the group consists in the main of
- shirkers and good for nothings, what then? Then the ideals it
- preaches count for nothing too. Also, the right means in the hands
- of the wrong man work the wrong way, as a Chinese proverb informs
- us.\
- In part 3 titled UFOs and Modern painting Jung discusses the
- image of the UFO as a product of the unconcious brought to light
- with several (unknown) paintings, again stressing the similarity
- of the UFO and the mandala. Referring to the hypothesis that UFOs
- are psychic projections of the unconcious, in order to compensate
- for a lacking in the concious mind, he answers the question
- " What is the use of them if we dont understand them? "
- /732. The language of the unconcious does not have the
- intentional clarity of concious language; it is a condensation of
- numerous data, many of them subliminal, whose connection with
- conscious contents is not known. These data do not take the form
- of a directed judgement, but follow an instinctinve, archaic,
- "pattern" which, because of its mythological character, is not
- recognized by the reasoning mind. The reaction of the uncouncious
- is a natural phenomenon that is not concerned to benefit or guide
- the personal human being, but is regulated exclusively by the
- demands of psychic equilibrium.\
- In summary Jung relates his findings are based on /771...not the
- product of unbridled fantasy, as is often supposed, but ..
- on thorough researchs into the history of symbols.\ and says he
- spared us with the details (symbols are a major part of his work,
- found in other text). He explains with an example of the concept
- of numbers and how they can be considered "discovered" and there-
- fore Godlike, or invented by man, as an instrument for counting.
- Part 4 is a summary of the history of UFO phenomenon which
- discusses the Basel Broadsheet, 1566, the Nuremburg Broadsheet,
- 1561, and a couple of other old prints depicting UFO type objects,
- though his thoughts continue in the same vain, that they are
- concious representations of the individual or collective
- unconcious
- Part 5, UFOs considered in a non-psychological light, sums
- what he has said up to this point, although I dont see where he
- treats them as other than psychological. I interpret it as UFOs
- are psychic projections, and just because they are a product
- of our collective unconcious does not mean they can't show up on
- a radar screen.
- In the epilogue he relates the particulars of an EBE contact as
- published by Orfeo M. Angelucci, "The Secret of the Saucers"
- (1955), and Orfeo's story to shreds of a first year psychology
- analysis paper, picking out almost everything he reports and
- showing what psychological hypothesis it represents. He then
- prints the letter he wrote to the APRO bulletin in July 1958, and
- discusses the controversy that followed (they reported that he
- believed in UFOs, to which he objected. It is not as simple as
- believing or not.) He also answers a couple of questions from
- the publisher of the APRO magazine and discusses ball lightning.
- The book ends with a copy of a letter to Donald Keyhoe on his
- views.
- I consider this book an excellent addition to my library and
- might consider it to be more on the right track than anything else
- I have read on the subject, although it was written 30 years ago.
- Even if all of what he conjectures about the stuff UFOs are made
- of is wrong, there is still a wealth of material for individuation
- on every page. Quantum physics says you cant measure it unless
- your a part of it. Abductions, implants, deals with the
- government, maybe these are all real to the people who see and
- experience them, and maybe if they are real to them, they are real
- to all of us. I think we would be remiss if the answer to the UFO
- phenomenon was written 30 years ago and we have not taken the
- time to delve deeper into considering this aspect of the
- explaination. It seems to be a real answer to a real phenomenon,
- and as one who thinks he saw a flying disc, I would be most
- interested in knowing not quite what it was, but why a few friends
- and I saw it, I'm not about to dismiss the possibility that
- "it was all in our minds".
-
- Thomas Rhone
- May, 1988
-
-