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Patterns Beneath

Jung, Language Models, and the Science of Archetypes (Philosophical Questions)

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Patterns Beneath

By: Boris Kriger
Narrated by: Floyd Dameron
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About this listen

For a century, the collective unconscious has been one of the most provocative and most dismissed ideas in the history of psychology. Carl Gustav Jung claimed that human beings share a deep symbolic substrate set of recurring patterns he called archetypes that shapes our dreams, myths, and stories with a regularity no single culture invented. Science rejected the claim. The theory was vague, unfalsifiable, and steeped in mysticism. The verdict seemed final.

But the verdict confused the doctrine with the method. In dismissing Jung's metaphysics, science also abandoned the procedure of archetypization the structuring of symbolic spaces through reference configurations without ever demonstrating that the procedure itself was flawed. Patterns Beneath reopens the case.

Drawing on information geometry, topology, and the startling capabilities of large language models, Boris Kriger shows that archetypes can be reconceived not as mystical entities but as coordinate systems freely chosen reference points in the space of symbolic distributions, whose validity is determined by a single, testable criterion: do they preserve the structure of the space they describe? The answer transforms a metaphysical puzzle into a scientific programme.

Along the way, this book offers a vivid tour of Jung's life and ideas, a frank assessment of why science said no, a formal framework that addresses every legitimate criticism, and a provocative argument that the machines we have built to process language have become, without intending to, technological mirrors of our own symbolic architecture.

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
Consciousness & Thought Movements Philosophy Metaphysical
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