By Friedrich Lenkeit, Guest Contributor to Maier Files Tidbits Thank you for allowing me to return to these pages. My previous reflection on remembrance and Veterans Day came from the heart, but today I wish to speak from the mind—to analyze a silent war being waged not in the streets, but in the very architecture of human thought itself. From Academic Theory to a Blueprint for Control I have spent...
“What if the battlefield was no longer land or ideology — but the human nervous system itself?” When most people hear the term mind control, they envision the tropes of bad thrillers: hypnotic spirals, CIA brainwashing labs, and cult leaders whispering strange mantras. But the true story, as Heiner Gehring presents it in Versklavte Gehirne (“Enslaved Minds”), is far more disquieting — and far more real. In the mid-20th century,...
The Intersection of Physics and Psychology: Unraveling the Mysteries of Matter, Energy, and the Mind
In Arthur I. Miller’s Deciphering the Cosmic Number: The Strange Friendship of Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung, we are introduced to a profound and intellectually stimulating discourse that explores the intersection of quantum physics and psychology. Through the lens of Wolfgang Pauli, a pioneering physicist, and Carl Jung, the father of analytical psychology, Miller delves into the complex relationship between matter, energy, and the psyche. The exploration of these concepts, particularly through the riddle of the electron, offers us a […]...
In most cultures, there is no clear line separating myth from folk or fairy tale. All these together form the literature of preliterate societies. The Nordic languages have only one word for both: saga. The German language retained the word Sage for myths, while fairy stories are called Märchen. It’s the same in the Dutch language, the word Sage for myths, while fairy tales are called sprookjes. It is unfortunate...
In the realm of myth and music, the story of Tristan und Isolde holds a profound place, delving into the mystique of love and death. This article explores the deeper, perhaps occult, significance of the Tristan und Isolde myth, using insights from Denis de Rougemont’s “L’amour et l’Occident” and Robert A. Johnson’s “Die Traumvorstellung Liebe – Der Irrtum des Abendlandes.” By examining Richard Wagner’s music drama, we unravel the layers...
Carl Jung, in his chapter “The Soul and Death” from Psychology and the Occult, offers a deeply contemplative examination of the inevitable intersection between life and death, urging us to reconcile these forces as part of a continuous psychological process. Unlike the typical view that death marks a strict endpoint, Jung expands on the notion that death serves a psychological and even transformative role for the human soul, urging us to prepare not only for life but for its cessation […]...
Carl Gustav Jung’s The Undiscovered Self offers a profound exploration into the psychological struggles of modern individuals, particularly within the context of mass-mindedness and societal structures. This short but impactful book delves into the consequences of losing personal identity in the face of collective movements and ideologies, touching on themes that resonate strongly in today’s world. As the fabric of our society becomes ever more dominated by political movements, technological...








