Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
He was a contemporary of Freud's. Freud was his mentor, and Freud wanted him to be his replacement, but Freud was an avowed atheist. And Jung was a deeply spiritual man. He had these very intense and genuine spiritual experiences from when he was a little boy, from when he was three years old, that he remembers. His biography is fascinating about him because he remembers them with such detail.
And he was interesting to me because he was a very faithful scientist, and I considered myself a science-based person from when I was little. And yet he had this spiritual dimension to him. which infused all of his thinking and really, I think, made him, you know, it branded his form of recovery or of treatment.
And he was interesting to me because he was a very faithful scientist, and I considered myself a science-based person from when I was little. And yet he had this spiritual dimension to him. which infused all of his thinking and really, I think, made him, you know, it branded his form of recovery or of treatment.
And he was interesting to me because he was a very faithful scientist, and I considered myself a science-based person from when I was little. And yet he had this spiritual dimension to him. which infused all of his thinking and really, I think, made him, you know, it branded his form of recovery or of treatment.
And he thought that he had this experience that he describes in this book where he's sitting up on the third, he ran one of the biggest sanitariums in Europe in Zurich, and he was sitting up on the third floor of this building, And he's talking to a patient who was describing her dream to him.
And he thought that he had this experience that he describes in this book where he's sitting up on the third, he ran one of the biggest sanitariums in Europe in Zurich, and he was sitting up on the third floor of this building, And he's talking to a patient who was describing her dream to him.
And he thought that he had this experience that he describes in this book where he's sitting up on the third, he ran one of the biggest sanitariums in Europe in Zurich, and he was sitting up on the third floor of this building, And he's talking to a patient who was describing her dream to him.
And the fulcrum of that dream was a scarab beetle, which was an insect that is very, very uncommon, if at all, in Northern Europe. But it's an almond figure in the iconography of Egypt and the hieroglyphics on the walls of the pyramids, et cetera. And... And while he was talking to her, he heard this bing, bing, bing on the window behind him.
And the fulcrum of that dream was a scarab beetle, which was an insect that is very, very uncommon, if at all, in Northern Europe. But it's an almond figure in the iconography of Egypt and the hieroglyphics on the walls of the pyramids, et cetera. And... And while he was talking to her, he heard this bing, bing, bing on the window behind him.
And the fulcrum of that dream was a scarab beetle, which was an insect that is very, very uncommon, if at all, in Northern Europe. But it's an almond figure in the iconography of Egypt and the hieroglyphics on the walls of the pyramids, et cetera. And... And while he was talking to her, he heard this bing, bing, bing on the window behind him.
And he didn't want to turn around to take his attention off her, but finally he does it. In exasperation, he turns around, he throws up the window, and a scarab beetle flies in and lands in his hand. And he shows it to the woman, and he says, is this what you were thinking of? Is this what you were dreaming about?
And he didn't want to turn around to take his attention off her, but finally he does it. In exasperation, he turns around, he throws up the window, and a scarab beetle flies in and lands in his hand. And he shows it to the woman, and he says, is this what you were thinking of? Is this what you were dreaming about?
And he didn't want to turn around to take his attention off her, but finally he does it. In exasperation, he turns around, he throws up the window, and a scarab beetle flies in and lands in his hand. And he shows it to the woman, and he says, is this what you were thinking of? Is this what you were dreaming about?
And he was struck by that experience, which was similar to other experiences he's had like that. And that's what synchronicity means. It's a It's an incident, a coincidence. And like if you're talking with somebody about somebody that you haven't thought about in 20 years and that person calls on the phone, that's synchronicity.
And he was struck by that experience, which was similar to other experiences he's had like that. And that's what synchronicity means. It's a It's an incident, a coincidence. And like if you're talking with somebody about somebody that you haven't thought about in 20 years and that person calls on the phone, that's synchronicity.
And he was struck by that experience, which was similar to other experiences he's had like that. And that's what synchronicity means. It's a It's an incident, a coincidence. And like if you're talking with somebody about somebody that you haven't thought about in 20 years and that person calls on the phone, that's synchronicity.
And he believed it was a way that God intervened in our lives that broke all the rules of nature that he had set up, the rules of physics, the rules of mathematics, you know, to reach in and sort of tap us on the shoulder and say, I'm here. And so he tried to reproduce that in a clinical setting.
And he believed it was a way that God intervened in our lives that broke all the rules of nature that he had set up, the rules of physics, the rules of mathematics, you know, to reach in and sort of tap us on the shoulder and say, I'm here. And so he tried to reproduce that in a clinical setting.
And he believed it was a way that God intervened in our lives that broke all the rules of nature that he had set up, the rules of physics, the rules of mathematics, you know, to reach in and sort of tap us on the shoulder and say, I'm here. And so he tried to reproduce that in a clinical setting.
And he would put one guy in one room and another guy in another room and have them flip cards and guess what the other guy had flipped. And he believed that if he could beat the laws of chance, laws of mathematics, that he would have proved the existence of an unnatural law, a supernatural law. And that was the first step to proving the existence of a god. He never succeeds in doing it.