once pristine: 112007;324
series: meta;84

fwd to meta;85
back to meta;83

Jung invokes Schopenauer's statement, contained in the essay that Jung declares stands 'godfather' to his present writing, "On the Apparent Design in the Fate of the Individual": ' "simultaneity of the causally unconnected, which we call 'chance'." ' : Panofsky: 'Both mysticism and nominalism cut the tie between reason and faith [will and intellect]. But mysticism ... does so in order to save the integrity of religious sentiment, while nominalism seeks to preserve the integrity of rational thought and empirical observation ...' : Shaw: 'Schopenauer was the first among the moderns to appreciate the enormous practical importance of the distinction [between the will and intellect], ...'