Rupert Sheldrake
Rupert Sheldrake (born 28 June 1942) is an English biologist and author best known for developing the hypothesis of morphic resonance, a theory positing that memory is inherent in nature and that similar patterns of activity within self-organizing systems are influenced by those from the past, forming collective "habits" rather than fixed laws.[1][2] Born in Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, Sheldrake was educated at Newark Preparatory School, Ranby House School, and Worksop College before attending Clare College, Cambridge. After earning a BA in natural sciences from Clare College, Cambridge, in 1963 with double first-class honours, Sheldrake spent 1963–1964 as a Frank Knox Fellow at Harvard University studying the philosophy and history of science. He then completed his PhD in biochemistry at Cambridge in 1967 for his thesis on the production of hormones in higher plants. From 1967 to 1974, he served as a research fellow at Clare College, Cambridge, directing studies in biochemistry and cell biology and conducting research in developmental biology.[3][4][5] In 1974, Sheldrake moved to India as Principal Plant Physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) in Hyderabad, where he headed the Legume Physiology Programme until 1978.[3][6] Returning to the UK in 1979, he shifted focus to broader questions in biology and consciousness, publishing his seminal book A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Formative Causation in 1981, which introduced morphic resonance and argued against mechanistic views of nature, drawing sharp criticism from the scientific establishment—including a Nature editorial calling it "the best candidate for burning" in years.[1][7][8] Sheldrake's subsequent research has explored phenomena at the fringes of mainstream science, including the "sense of being stared at," telepathy in family pets (notably dogs anticipating their owners' return), and the effects of intention on random number generators, often through experimental studies published in peer-reviewed journals and detailed in books such as The Presence of the Past (1988), Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home (1999), and The Science Delusion (2012), a critique of dogmatic assumptions in modern science.[2][6][9] He has authored or co-authored over 100 scientific papers and nine books, and served as a fellow of the Institute of Noetic Sciences, while continuing independent research and public lectures challenging materialist paradigms.[10][11] His work has been polarizing, praised by some for expanding scientific inquiry into consciousness and criticized by others as pseudoscience, yet it has influenced discussions in philosophy of science, parapsychology, and ecology.[12][13]Biography
Early life and education
Rupert Sheldrake was born on 28 June 1942 in Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, England, into a middle-class family.[14] His father, a pharmacist who also worked as an herbalist and naturalist, encouraged his son's early fascination with plants and animals through regular nature walks and lessons about the local countryside.[15] His mother, interested in spiritualism, introduced him to Christian Science during his childhood, contributing to his exposure to alternative spiritual ideas alongside conventional influences.[14] Sheldrake developed a strong interest in natural history from a young age, influenced by his father's enthusiasm for the outdoors. He attended Newark Preparatory School and Ranby House School before moving on to Worksop College, a public school in Nottinghamshire, during the 1950s.[14][3] These early educational experiences laid the groundwork for his scientific inclinations, blending observational fieldwork with formal schooling. In 1959, Sheldrake entered Clare College, Cambridge, as a scholar to study the Natural Sciences Tripos, with a focus on biology and biochemistry. He graduated in 1963 with a first-class honours Bachelor of Arts degree. Following a year as a Frank Knox Fellow at Harvard University studying philosophy, he returned to Cambridge to pursue a PhD in biochemistry, which he completed in 1967.[14] His doctoral thesis was titled "The Production of Hormones in Higher Plants," focusing on plant hormone action.[3]Career
After completing his PhD in biochemistry at the University of Cambridge in 1967, Sheldrake served as a Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge, from 1967 to 1973, during which he was Director of Studies in biochemistry and cell biology.[10] As the Rosenheim Research Fellow of the Royal Society from 1970 to 1973, he conducted research on plant development and the aging of cells in the Department of Biochemistry at Cambridge.[10] From 1974 to 1978, he worked as Principal Plant Physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) in Hyderabad, India, where he headed the Legume Program, focusing on the development of crops suited to arid regions.[3] He continued as Consultant Plant Physiologist at ICRISAT from 1980 to 1985 and began formulating his concept of morphic resonance during this period in India.[3] Returning to the United Kingdom in 1985, Sheldrake shifted focus to broader questions in biology and consciousness, publishing his seminal book A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Formative Causation in 1981, which he wrote while in India. During the 1980s, he engaged with the Institute of Noetic Sciences in California as a researcher exploring consciousness and extended human abilities.[11] From 2005 to 2010, he directed the Perrott-Warrick Project, funded by Trinity College, Cambridge, which supported research into unexplained human and animal abilities, including parapsychological phenomena.[16] Since the early 2010s, Sheldrake has operated as an independent researcher without formal academic affiliations, continuing to author papers and books while maintaining his website, sheldrake.org, which hosts videos, podcasts, and resources on his work. His recent activities include speaking engagements, such as a presentation on the extended nature of minds at the Beyond the Brain conference in November 2025.[17] The introduction of his unconventional scientific ideas has sparked ongoing debates within academic circles.[2]Personal life
Sheldrake married voice teacher and author Jill Purce, with whom he has two sons: Merlin Sheldrake, a mycologist and author, and Cosmo Sheldrake, a musician and composer.[10][18] Sheldrake resides in London, England, where he has maintained a long-term connection to the local intellectual and cultural community.[3] He is also affiliated with Schumacher College in Dartington, Devon, serving as a fellow and contributing to its programs on ecology and holistic education, which reflect his broader personal commitment to environmental stewardship.[3] In his personal spiritual life, Sheldrake practices as an Anglican Christian, incorporating daily prayer such as the Lord's Prayer, alongside meditation and rituals like gratitude and connecting with nature.[19] He has explored the role of psychedelics in spiritual openings through personal reflection and writing, viewing them as tools for expanding consciousness outside his scientific pursuits.[20] As of 2025, Sheldrake remains in good health with no reported major illnesses and continues an active public presence, including speaking engagements on consciousness and spirituality.[21]Scientific ideas
Morphic resonance
Morphic resonance is a central hypothesis in Rupert Sheldrake's work, describing a process whereby self-organizing systems, such as crystals, organisms, or societies, inherit a collective memory from all previous similar systems through a non-local influence known as morphic fields.[22] These fields organize patterns of activity, and the resonance occurs because like influences like across time and space, allowing past forms and behaviors to shape present ones without relying on physical transmission of information.[22] This challenges traditional mechanistic views of memory and habit formation, proposing instead that nature possesses an inherent, cumulative memory that evolves rather than being stored solely in material structures like genes or brains.[22] Sheldrake developed the concept of morphic resonance in the late 1970s while serving as Principal Plant Physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) in Hyderabad, India, from 1974 to 1978.[10] His ideas were inspired by observations of plant development, collective behaviors in natural systems, and the limitations of conventional biochemical explanations for biological organization during this period.[10] He formalized the hypothesis in his 1981 book A New Science of Life, where he introduced it as a theory of formative causation.[23] Philosophically, morphic resonance integrates elements of vitalism by positing inherent organizing principles in nature that go beyond mechanical causes, panpsychism through the attribution of mind-like memory to natural systems, and a sharp critique of reductionism by rejecting the idea that all phenomena can be explained by dissecting them into atomic parts.[22] Sheldrake argues that memory is not localized in individual brains or genes but is distributed throughout nature, countering materialist assumptions that treat the universe as governed by fixed, eternal laws originating from the Big Bang.[24] Instead, he views natural regularities as habits formed through cumulative resonance, subject to evolution and natural selection, thereby restoring a sense of creativity and purpose to scientific inquiry.[22] The theory has key implications for understanding various phenomena, such as the accelerating rates of crystal formation for new compounds, where initial crystallizations become progressively easier over time due to resonance with prior instances.[22] It also accounts for animal instincts and migratory patterns emerging without full genetic encoding, as well as human cultural habits like language acquisition or technological learning speeding up across generations.[22] Morphic resonance proposes testable predictions, including the global acceleration of learning in isolated rat populations solving the same maze, where rats in new labs perform better as the collective experience accumulates worldwide, independent of direct communication.[25] In response to materialist objections that dismiss morphic fields as unphysical or unfalsifiable, Sheldrake emphasizes the theory's empirical testability, urging scientists to conduct experiments on phenomena like collective learning or memory inheritance rather than rejecting it on dogmatic grounds.[24] He contends that materialist paradigms themselves rest on untested assumptions about fixed laws and localized memory, which morphic resonance challenges through observable anomalies in biology and behavior that invite open investigation over philosophical exclusion.[24]Other hypotheses and experiments
Sheldrake proposed the psychic staring effect, or scopaesthesia, as a form of non-sensory perception allowing individuals to detect when they are being observed from behind, potentially mediated by morphic fields. In controlled experiments involving thousands of trials, subjects achieved hit rates significantly above the 50% chance level, with an overall average of 54.7% across more than 30,000 tests conducted by various investigators. For instance, in looking trials, scores typically reached around 60%, while non-looking trials hovered near chance, demonstrating repeatable statistical significance (p < 0.001 in meta-analyses). These results were obtained through simple setups where subjects guessed whether they were being stared at via video links or in person, eliminating sensory cues like sounds or reflections. Sheldrake investigated telepathy in animals, particularly the ability of pets to anticipate their owners' returns home, as evidence of unexplained perceptual bonds. In videotaped experiments with a dog named Jaytee from 1993 to 1998, the animal positioned itself at the window an average of 5 minutes before the owner's arrival in 85% of 100 filmed returns, even when routes and times varied unpredictably, with statistical significance far exceeding chance (p < 10^{-5}). Surveys of pet owners in the UK and US revealed that 45-51% reported similar anticipatory behaviors in their dogs, often occurring 10 minutes or more in advance without reliance on routine cues like clocks or sounds. These studies used home-based video monitoring to record behaviors during both experimental returns and control periods when owners did not come home, showing the dog waited at random locations only 4% of the time in controls. Sheldrake extended telepathy research to human interactions via telephone telepathy experiments, where subjects guessed who was calling from a small set of possible contacts before answering. In over 570 trials with 63 participants, the average hit rate was 45%, well above the 25% expected by chance for four possible callers, with p-values as low as 4 × 10^{-16} indicating robust significance. Filmed tests, including one with the Nolan Sisters in 2004, replicated this under stricter controls, yielding 45% accuracy in 250 trials and ruling out sensory leakage or optional stopping biases. The effect strengthened with familiar callers, suggesting emotional bonds enhance the phenomenon. Beyond these, Sheldrake hypothesized collective memory in inorganic systems like crystals, where the formation of new crystals benefits from morphic resonance with past instances, explaining why crystallization rates increase over time for novel compounds without genetic inheritance. In morphogenesis, he posited that developmental patterns in organisms arise from resonant influences of similar past forms, organizing cells into complex structures through non-local fields rather than solely mechanistic processes. These ideas extend morphic resonance to explain evolutionary habits and instinctive behaviors across species. Sheldrake emphasized democratizing science through simple, replicable home experiments that anyone could conduct with minimal equipment, such as coin flips for staring detection or randomized call logs for telepathy tests, to gather large datasets and challenge institutional biases toward complex lab setups.Publications
Selected books
Rupert Sheldrake has authored more than nine books since 1981, often integrating scientific inquiry with philosophical and spiritual perspectives, while his oeuvre reflects a progression from foundational biological hypotheses to explorations of parapsychological phenomena and critiques of established scientific paradigms.[10] His publishing career gained early prominence with A New Science of Life (1981), which proposed the concept of morphic resonance and elicited widespread debate, notably through an editorial in Nature magazine decrying it as "the best candidate for burning there has been for many years." Thematically, Sheldrake's early works in the 1980s centered on evolutionary biology and the hypothesis of formative causation, as seen in The Presence of the Past (1988), which expanded on morphic fields and collective memory.[26] During the 1990s and 2000s, his focus shifted toward practical experiments investigating perceptual anomalies and animal behavior, exemplified by titles like Seven Experiments That Could Change the World (1994) and Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home (1999).[26] In the 2010s, his publications increasingly addressed the dogmas limiting scientific progress and examined contemplative practices, including The Science Delusion (2012; updated as a 2020 edition with new evidence) and Science and Spiritual Practices (2017). Sheldrake has also co-authored six books, such as Chaos, Creativity, and Cosmic Consciousness (1992) with Ralph Abraham and Terence McKenna, and Natural Grace (1996) with Matthew Fox, though these complement rather than overshadow his solo contributions.[10] Several of his works have appeared in international editions across 28 languages, with updates in later printings to incorporate ongoing research and rebuttals to critiques.[10]A New Science of Life (1981)
A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Formative Causation, published in 1981 by Blond & Briggs as a monograph, introduced Rupert Sheldrake's central hypothesis of formative causation, later termed morphic resonance. The core thesis posits that morphic fields serve as organizing principles for biological systems, extending beyond genetic determinism to incorporate a resonant form of memory inherent in nature. According to Sheldrake, these fields shape the development and behavior of organisms by resonating with the cumulative patterns of similar past systems, challenging the mechanistic paradigm that views life as governed solely by physical and chemical laws inherited through genes. Genes, in this model, act primarily as triggers for developmental processes rather than repositories of all formative information.[22] The book critiques the limitations of conventional biology, arguing that mechanistic explanations fail to account for phenomena such as the self-organization of complex forms. Key sections explore applications in embryology, where morphic fields guide the differentiation of cells into structured tissues and organs, drawing on examples like the consistent patterning in amphibian limb regeneration despite varying genetic inputs. Sheldrake also applies the hypothesis to animal behavior, illustrating how learned skills, such as maze navigation in rats, appear to transmit non-locally across populations through resonance, and to plant development, where growth patterns in crystals and shoots exhibit habitual stability influenced by prior instances. These discussions rely on descriptive models of field interactions, eschewing mathematical equations in favor of conceptual frameworks that emphasize holistic, goal-oriented causation akin to Aristotelian teleology but updated for modern science.[23] Upon release, an excerpt from the book appeared in New Scientist, prompting widespread attention. However, it elicited sharp criticism in an editorial in Nature by editor John Maddox, titled "A book for burning?", which described it as "the best candidate for burning there has been for many years" and condemned its ideas as heretical to established science. This controversy ignited early debates within biology, positioning Sheldrake's work as a provocative revival of vitalistic thinking, where life processes involve non-material organizing principles, though it faced dismissal from mainstream academics as pseudoscientific. The book's influence extended to stimulating discussions on alternative paradigms in developmental biology, laying groundwork for Sheldrake's subsequent explorations without formal experimental validation at the time.[27]The Presence of the Past (1988)
In The Presence of the Past: Morphic Resonance and the Habits of Nature, published in 1988 by Jonathan Cape in London, Rupert Sheldrake expands his hypothesis of morphic resonance beyond biological organisms to encompass human society and collective phenomena. Building briefly on the biological foundations outlined in his 1981 book A New Science of Life, Sheldrake argues that memory is not stored solely in individual brains or genes but inheres in nature through resonant fields that connect past and present systems. These fields enable self-organizing systems—from crystals to societies—to inherit "habits" from similar previous systems, influencing patterns of development and behavior across time. Sheldrake applies this theory to collective human memory, positing that cultural traditions, languages, and even scientific paradigms function as morphic fields stabilized by resonance with past iterations. For instance, the evolution of languages occurs not just through innovation but via resonance with ancestral forms, allowing speakers to intuitively grasp complex grammars without explicit learning. Similarly, scientific paradigms persist as habitual thought patterns, reinforced by the cumulative resonance of prior research, which explains their resistance to change until new resonant influences emerge. In societal terms, Sheldrake critiques the individualism prevalent in modern psychology, arguing that personal memories and behaviors are shaped by collective fields rather than isolated minds, thus challenging views of the self as entirely autonomous.[28] The book illustrates these ideas with examples of historical shifts in behaviors, such as the declining belief in ghosts in Western societies over the past century, which Sheldrake attributes to weakening morphic resonance from earlier eras when such beliefs were widespread and reinforced through shared cultural narratives. He suggests this shift reflects evolving collective habits rather than mere rational enlightenment. Sheldrake further contends that these resonant influences contribute to a participatory universe, where human consciousness actively co-creates reality by drawing on and modifying past fields, fostering creativity in art, ritual, and social organization.[29] Structurally, the book comprises theoretical expositions, historical analyses, and implications for various fields, culminating in appendices that detail experimental methods to test morphic resonance, such as cross-generational learning tasks and observations of behavioral diffusion in populations. These empirical suggestions address criticisms from the 1981 controversy surrounding his earlier work, offering practical ways to investigate resonance in human contexts while emphasizing the theory's potential to unify mechanistic science with participatory dynamics.[30]The Rebirth of Nature (1991)
In The Rebirth of Nature: The Greening of Science and God, published by Bantam Books in 1991, Rupert Sheldrake presents a synthesis of scientific inquiry, ecological awareness, and theological reflection, advocating for a renewed perception of the natural world as inherently alive and purposeful. Building on his earlier hypothesis of morphic resonance introduced in biological contexts, Sheldrake critiques the dominant mechanistic paradigm of modern science, which he argues fosters anthropocentrism by treating nature as a lifeless machine devoid of intrinsic agency or teleology. This perspective, he contends, has contributed to humanity's alienation from the environment and must be supplanted by a more holistic framework that recognizes the ensouled quality of all matter.[31][32][33] Central to the book's thesis is the revival of animistic traditions through the concept of morphic fields, which Sheldrake posits as organizing principles that imbue natural systems with memory, habit, and evolutionary directionality, countering the randomness of Darwinian selection alone. He integrates James Lovelock's Gaia hypothesis, portraying Earth as a self-regulating, living entity where biological and geological processes interact symbiotically, thus challenging reductionist views that separate life from its planetary context. Discussions of hylozoism—the philosophical notion that matter possesses inherent vitality or soul—further underpin this vision, suggesting that purpose emerges not from external imposition but from the dynamic, relational essence of the cosmos itself. Aimed at a general readership following the academic controversies surrounding his prior works, the book employs accessible language to bridge scientific skepticism with ecological urgency.[34][35][36] Sheldrake draws heavily on process theology, particularly the ideas of Alfred North Whitehead, whose philosophy of becoming emphasizes relationality and creativity as fundamental to reality, offering a metaphysical foundation for viewing evolution as directed toward greater complexity and harmony. This theological dimension critiques the disenchantment wrought by Cartesian dualism, proposing instead a participatory cosmos where human consciousness participates in divine creativity. To illustrate these concepts, Sheldrake references contemporary environmental crises, such as deforestation and biodiversity loss, as symptoms of a worldview that exploits nature without recognizing its reciprocal intelligence, urging a practical reorientation toward stewardship informed by this reborn animism.[37][38][39]Seven Experiments That Could Change the World (1994)
In Seven Experiments That Could Change the World, published in 1994 by Fourth Estate in the United Kingdom and in 1995 by Riverhead Books in the United States, Rupert Sheldrake critiques the rigidity of scientific orthodoxy, arguing that untested assumptions stifle inquiry into anomalous phenomena. He posits that collaborative, citizen-led research using simple, low-cost methods can verify or refute these anomalies, thereby expanding scientific understanding without requiring expensive institutional resources. This approach serves as a response to Sheldrake's academic isolation following earlier controversies over his morphic resonance hypothesis, inviting public participation to democratize science and test ideas previously dismissed as unprovable.[40][41] The book proposes seven practical experiments designed to probe unexplained aspects of nature, each outlined in a dedicated chapter that describes the phenomenon, step-by-step testing protocols accessible to amateurs, anticipated results under conventional versus alternative explanations, and broader implications. For instance, one experiment investigates whether dogs anticipate their owners' return home, suggesting video monitoring of pets during randomized owner departures to check for precognitive behavior linked to social bonds. Another examines how pigeons home, proposing releases with manipulated sensory cues to assess non-local influences beyond known navigation mechanisms. A third explores group mind in nature, such as whether termite colonies or bird flocks like starlings exhibit collective decision-making that implies shared fields of influence, potentially through observations of synchronized roosting or building behaviors.[40][42] Additional tests include detecting the sense of being stared at via blind trials with subjects guessing when observed from behind, and probing phantom sensations in amputees or plants through sensory feedback experiments to evaluate persistent field effects. Sheldrake also suggests verifying if fundamental constants like the speed of light vary over time by compiling historical measurements, and assessing experimenter effects by replicating studies under blinded conditions to detect subconscious influences on outcomes. One key example focuses on morphine's effects on addicted rats, testing whether addiction severity changes based on environmental context—such as enriched versus isolated cages—using voluntary consumption trials to challenge purely biochemical models of dependency. Another representative test asks whether hens can count their chicks, involving separation experiments where hens' distress responses are measured against varying numbers to probe innate numerical abilities. These methods emphasize replicability and minimal equipment, with expected outcomes potentially supporting morphic resonance by showing non-local or habitual influences in biological systems.[40][41][43]Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home (1999)
In Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home: And Other Unexplained Powers of Animals, Rupert Sheldrake presents a compilation of anecdotal reports and experimental data suggesting that many pets, particularly dogs, exhibit apparent telepathic abilities to sense their owners' intentions to return home, independent of sensory cues or predictable routines. Drawing from surveys of over 1,000 dog owners, Sheldrake reports that approximately 45% observed their dogs anticipating returns by going to a door or window, often more than 10 minutes in advance, with reactions occurring in about 80% of instances where the owner formed the intent to leave for home during randomized trials. These case studies, involving more than 100 dog owners across various households, highlight patterns where dogs showed excitement or positioning behaviors without reliance on clocks, traffic sounds, or habitual schedules.[44] To test these observations under controlled conditions, Sheldrake conducted videotaped experiments with specific dogs, such as Jaytee, owned by Pamela Smart, over more than 100 trials involving random departures to locations several miles away. In these setups, the owner decided the return time unpredictably, and video analysis revealed Jaytee moving to the window or door during the 10-minute pre-arrival period in 82% of "coming home" trials, compared to only 4% during equivalent periods when no return was planned, yielding statistically significant results (p < 0.001 via chi-square analysis). Sheldrake interprets these non-local connections as evidence of telepathy facilitated by morphic fields, where animals access information about distant events through habitual bonds rather than physical signals.[45] The book broadens its scope beyond dogs to include similar phenomena in cats (reported by 24% of owners in the same survey), parrots like N'kisi (who appeared to respond to owners' thoughts about objects), and other human-animal relationships, such as horses sensing rider falls from afar. Sheldrake argues these instances undermine behaviorist models, which attribute pet behaviors solely to conditioned responses or environmental learning, as the randomized protocols eliminated confounds like routine timing or auditory hints. This work exemplifies morphic resonance in action, positing that shared emotional fields enable such intuitive links. Originally published by Crown in 1999, the 352-page volume features appendices with raw data tables from surveys and experiments, including time-course graphs and probability calculations for replication. Updated editions, such as the 2011 version from Three Rivers Press, incorporate additional case reports and refined analyses from subsequent trials, expanding the dataset while maintaining the core emphasis on empirical validation of unexplained animal powers.[46]The Sense of Being Stared At (2003)
In The Sense of Being Stared At: And Other Aspects of the Extended Mind, published by Harmony Books in 2003, Rupert Sheldrake presents research suggesting that humans and animals possess an innate ability to detect when they are being observed, even from behind or at a distance.[47] He hypothesizes that this "psychic staring effect," or scopaesthesia, operates through an invisible "eye field" or perceptual field that connects the observer and the observed, extending beyond conventional sensory explanations.[48] This field is proposed as part of Sheldrake's broader theory of morphic resonance, where influences from similar past systems shape current perceptions.[49] The book compiles over 20 years of Sheldrake's investigations, arguing that such abilities are biological and evolutionary adaptations rather than paranormal anomalies.[50] Evidence for the hypothesis draws from both laboratory and field studies involving thousands of trials. In paired experiments, subjects seated with their backs to a "looker" guessed whether they were being stared at, achieving hit rates significantly above the 50% chance level, often around 55-60% overall, with higher accuracy (up to 65%) in "staring" conditions.[51] These results persisted in controlled settings where sensory cues like sounds or air movements were minimized, such as with blindfolds and no feedback provided to subjects.[52] Field studies in schools and public venues replicated the effect, with over 15,000 trials across more than 700 participants showing consistent above-chance detection.[53] Sheldrake critiques explanations attributing the phenomenon to subtle sensory deprivations or expectations, noting that experiments eliminating such factors—through randomization and isolation—still yielded positive outcomes.[54] The book extends the discussion to animals, citing experiments where pets and wildlife exhibited similar detection abilities, such as birds fleeing when stared at from afar or dogs alerting to unobserved observers.[49] Sheldrake posits an evolutionary role, suggesting this sense enhances survival by enabling early predator detection in ancestral environments, akin to camouflage evasion or group vigilance in social species.[55] Related perceptual anomalies, like remote viewing—where individuals describe distant or hidden targets—are explored as extensions of the same field-based mechanism, supported by declassified studies showing above-chance accuracies in controlled trials.[56] To engage readers, Sheldrake includes practical self-tests for detecting staring, using simple setups like coin flips for randomization, encouraging replication in everyday settings.[50] These tie back to morphic fields, implying collective human experience strengthens the phenomenon over time through resonant influences.[57]The Science Delusion (Science Set Free) (2012)
The Science Delusion, published in 2012 by Coronet in the United Kingdom and as Science Set Free by HarperOne in the United States, presents Rupert Sheldrake's critique of materialism as a constraining ideology in contemporary science. Sheldrake contends that science operates under a set of unexamined assumptions that have hardened into dogmas, limiting inquiry into phenomena such as consciousness, memory, and purpose in nature. He argues that these dogmas treat science as a closed belief system rather than an open method of exploration, thereby hindering progress and innovation. By reframing these assumptions as testable questions, Sheldrake advocates for a more dynamic science liberated from rigid materialism, allowing for broader investigations including those aligned with his concept of morphic resonance.[58][6] The book's structure dedicates a chapter to each of ten core dogmas of modern science, systematically challenging them with historical context, empirical evidence, and alternative hypotheses. Sheldrake draws on examples from the history of science to illustrate how previous dogmas, such as the once-widely accepted practice of phrenology—which posited that skull shapes determined personality traits—were eventually overturned, demonstrating that scientific orthodoxy is not infallible. For each dogma, he reviews supporting research, highlights anomalies that contradict the assumption, and proposes avenues for further study, emphasizing that questioning these tenets could revitalize scientific creativity. An updated edition released in 2020 includes a new foreword addressing ongoing developments in fields like physics and biology that further undermine materialist foundations.[24][59] The ten dogmas Sheldrake identifies and critiques are:- Everything is mechanical: Sheldrake argues that mechanistic explanations fail to account for life's complexities, citing evidence from biology and physics suggesting non-mechanical influences like habits in nature.[24]
- Matter is unconscious: He challenges this by pointing to panpsychist philosophies and quantum mechanics interpretations where consciousness is fundamental, not emergent.[24]
- The total amount of matter and energy is always the same: Questioning conservation laws, Sheldrake references dark energy expansions and historical violations in early experiments.[24]
- The laws of nature are fixed: He proposes that laws may evolve through morphic resonance, supported by varying constants in cosmological data.[24]
- Nature is without inherent purpose: Sheldrake counters with teleological aspects in evolution and development, drawing on Aristotelian concepts revived in modern biology.[24]
- All biological inheritance is material, passed on by genes: Challenging genetic determinism, he highlights epigenetic influences and formative causation in morphogenesis.[24]
- Minds are located within heads and are nothing but the activities of brains: Sheldrake cites out-of-body experiences and telepathy studies to suggest extended minds beyond the brain.[24]
- Memories are stored in the brain and are wiped out at death: He argues against localized storage, proposing field-based memory via morphic resonance, evidenced by habit formation across generations.[24]
- Telepathy and other psychic phenomena are illusory: Reviewing parapsychology research, Sheldrake presents statistical evidence for psi effects that mainstream science dismisses.[24]
- Mechanistic medicine is the only kind that works: Sheldrake advocates integrating holistic approaches like homeopathy, supported by clinical trials showing placebo and mind-body effects.[24]