Global Thought, Shadow Projection and Coloniality: A Quantum Case for Religious Practice

Authors

  • Andrew Milne University of St Andrews

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15664/985m4b16

Keywords:

Quantum (social theory), Liberation theology, Coloniality, Jung, Dussel, Recognition

Abstract

In this paper I argue that religious practice is key to global thought. To demonstrate this, I explore the work of two thinkers: psychologist Carl Jung and Marxist liberation philosopher Enrique Dussel. As a means of addressing the implicit ontological biases which close the minds of many to spiritual wisdom, my discussion makes use of the quantum metaphysics developed by Jung in correspondence with his patient, Wolfgang Pauli. For Jung ([1957] 2010, 13), real religion is defined by an ongoing relationship to the transcendent, while the rigid dogmatism common to modern institutionalised religion serves to stifle this relationship. Religious practices help us to cultivate our own relationship to the transcendent, and thus to resolve antitheses which we will otherwise externalise into the social world, projecting the qualities which we do not want to see in ourselves onto the Other (Jung [1957] 2010, 3). This “shadow” projection is a key driver of the ongoing crisis in global thought, exemplified by Israel’s genocide in Gaza (Albanese 2024). Furthermore, the coloniality and dehumanisation wrought by shadow projection is both perpetuated and capitalised upon by military-industrial-complexes which are materially incentivised to manufacture consent for endless wars in defence of “liberal-democratic” ideals. Religious practices are key means of challenging dogmas, religious, liberal, conservative or otherwise, and reconciling ourselves with the shadows they cast. Dussel shows us what this means on the collective level, emphasising the need to grapple with history, and with the materiality of the present, if we are to understand our infinite responsibility to the Other through recognition of their difference, and, thus, to think globally.

The Tail of the Swan, 1914 by Hilma AF Klint

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Published

2025-09-23

How to Cite

Milne, A. (2025). Global Thought, Shadow Projection and Coloniality: A Quantum Case for Religious Practice. INTER- The Journal for Global Thought, 1(1), 104-137. https://doi.org/10.15664/985m4b16