@taylan @cjd @Hyolobrika@mstdn.io @dhfir
Wolfgang Pauli was no fool and collaborated with Jung on philosophical discussions about certain correspondences between physics and psychology. Ideas like synchronicity are almost impossible to prove in the repeatable, scientific sense - this doesn't mean they don't play a role in the lives of individuals.
True scientific advances often don't look scientific until after the fact. Quantum physics and relativity theory were both seen as outrageous at the time, see the quote above that started this conversation. Common sense =/= scientific truth, and in fact the former is informed by the latter, on a long enough time scale.
That being said, such advances come only at an extremely high threshold of hard work, intelligence, imagination and good fortune - once or twice in a century.
Quantum theory and relativity were questionable, so experiments were done, and they came out more accurate than competing theories. So again, no empirical evidence, no dice.
Is there even any solid theory around "orgone energy" that could be empirically tested? If I'm not mistaken, quantum physics and relativity were based on pretty rigorous calculations to begin with, not wild speculation of esoteric forces.