Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies by C. G. Jung is a 1959 work that examines the psychological and symbolic dimensions of mid-twentieth-century UFO sightings. It approaches UFO and anomalous encounters through detailed case material and reflective analysis. The book situates extraordinary experiences within wider cultural debates about reality, psychology, and the unknown.
DSETI tracks this reference because C. cited it repeatedly as a touchstone in discussions of anomalous experience and contact. It provides a rich set of narratives and interpretive frameworks that can be compared with dream and trance reports. The volume also models how to balance sympathy for experiencers with critical inquiry.
For DSETI, Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies helps ground claims and dreams in an existing literature of encounters, regressions, and visionary states. It offers vocabulary, scenarios, and motifs that recur in many dream and abduction narratives. This makes it a useful anchor point for comparing content across the Dream Archive and evaluating emerging patterns.







