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{{Short description|English author and parapsychological researcher}}
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{{about|Rupert Sheldrake and his theory of morphic fields|the concept in developmental biology|Morphogenetic field}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}
{{Use British English|date=January 2014}} {{Use British English|date=January 2014}}
{{Infobox person {{Infobox person
|name = Rupert Sheldrake | name = {{center|Rupert Sheldrake}}
|image = Sheldrake TASC2008.JPG | image = Sheldrake TASC2008.JPG
|image_size = | image_size =
|alt = | alt =
|caption = Rupert Sheldrake in 2008 at a conference in ] | caption = Sheldrake in 2008
|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1942|06|28|df=yes}} | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1942|6|28|df=y}}
|birth_place = ], Nottinghamshire<ref name=bio-anglican/> | birth_place = ], Nottinghamshire, England<ref name=bio-anglican/>
|residence = | nationality = British
| education = ] (])<br />]<br />] (])
|nationality = British
| employer = The ] (2005–2010)
|education =
| occupation = Researcher, author, critic
*PhD (biochemistry), ]<ref name=maddox2/>
| years_active =
*] (philosophy and history of science), ]
| awards =
*M.A. (]), ]
| spouse = ]
|employer = The ] (2005–2010)
| children = ]<br>]
|occupation = Researcher, author, critic
| website =
|years_active =
|home_town =
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'''Alfred Rupert Sheldrake''' (born 28 June 1942) is an English author and ] researcher. He proposed the concept of morphic resonance,<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name=whitfield/> a conjecture that lacks mainstream acceptance and has been widely criticized as ].<ref name="PracontalPseudoscience2001">{{cite book |last1=Pracontal |first1=Michel de |title=L'imposture scientifique en dix leçons : édition du troisième millénaire |date=2001 |publisher=Editions La Découverte |location=Paris |isbn=2-7071-3293-4}}</ref><ref name="KaufmannMIT">{{cite book |last1=Kaufmann |first1=Allison B. |last2=Kaufmann |first2=James C. |editor-first1=Allison B |editor-first2=James C |editor-last1=Kaufman |editor-last2=Kaufman |title=Pseudoscience: The Conspiracy Against Science |publisher=MIT Press |date=2018 |doi=10.7551/mitpress/10747.001.0001 |isbn=9780262344814 |s2cid=240203967 |url=https://direct.mit.edu/books/book/3620/ |access-date=19 November 2022}}</ref><ref name="Hassani2015Smokescreen">{{cite news |last1=Hassani |first1=Sadri |title='Post-Materialist' Science? A Smokescreen for Woo |work=Skeptical Inquirer|url=https://skepticalinquirer.org/2015/09/post-materialist-science-a-smokescreen-for-woo/ |access-date=19 November 2022 |date=1 September 2015}}</ref><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name="Blancke2017">{{cite journal |last1=Blancke |first1=Stefaan |last2=Boudry |first2=Maarten |last3=Pigliucci |first3=Massimo |title=Why Do Irrational Beliefs Mimic Science? The Cultural Evolution of Pseudoscience: Cultural evolution of pseudoscience |journal=Theoria |date=February 2017 |volume=83 |issue=1 |pages=78–97 |doi=10.1111/theo.12109|s2cid=151706584 |url=https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8500702/file/8500704 }}</ref> He has worked as a biochemist at ], a ] scholar, a researcher at the ], and a ] for ] in India.<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name=chaos/>


Other work by Sheldrake encompasses paranormal subjects such as ], ] into ], and the ].<ref name=hood/><ref name=MarksColwell/> He has been described as a ] author.<ref name="Guardian holistic"/><ref name=gunther/><ref name=frazier/>
'''Alfred Rupert Sheldrake''' is an English author,<ref name=TimAdams/> lecturer, and researcher in the field of ],<ref name=whitfield/> best known for advocating his "morphic resonance" concept. Prior to this, he was a biochemist and ] at ] from 1967 to 1973<ref name=TimAdams/> and principal ] at the ] until 1978.<ref name=chaos/> Since leaving research biology, he has primarily worked on promoting and defending morphic resonance in books, articles, and public appearances.


Conceived during Sheldrake's time at Cambridge, morphic resonance posits that "memory is inherent in nature"<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name=presencepast/> and "natural systems, such as termite colonies, or pigeons, or orchid plants, or insulin molecules, inherit a collective memory from all previous things of their kind".<ref name=presencepast/> Sheldrake proposes that morphic resonance suggests "telepathy is a natural ability of animal groups, to communicate with each other."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/D&C/controversies/RSA_text.html |title=The RSA Telepathy Debate – Text |publisher=sheldrake.org}}</ref> His advocacy of the idea encompasses paranormal subjects such as ], ], and "the sense of being stared at"<ref name=stared/> as well as unconventional explanations of standard subjects in biology such as ], ], and memory.{{r|ansl-reissue}} Sheldrake's morphic resonance posits that "memory is inherent in nature"<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name=presencepast/> and that "natural systems&nbsp;... inherit a collective memory from all previous things of their kind."<ref name=presencepast/> Sheldrake proposes that it is also responsible for "telepathy-type interconnections between organisms."<ref name=bio2/><ref name=hood/> His advocacy of the idea offers idiosyncratic explanations of standard subjects in biology such as ], ], and memory.


The ] considers morphic resonance to be ]. Critics cite a lack of evidence for morphic resonance and an inconsistency of the idea with data from genetics and embryology, and also express concern that popular attention from Sheldrake's books and public appearances undermines the public's understanding of science.{{efn|Sources: Critics cite a lack of evidence for morphic resonance and inconsistencies between its tenets and data from genetics, embryology, neuroscience, and biochemistry. They also express concern that popular attention paid to Sheldrake's books and public appearances undermines the public's understanding of science.{{efn|Sources:
* pseudoscience<ref name=gardner/><ref name=sharma/><ref name=samuel/><ref name="Wolpert 1984"/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=impostures/><ref name="Jones"/><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.newrepublic.com/article/115533/rupert-sheldrake-fools-bbc-deepak-chopra |journal=The New Republic |title=Pseudoscientist Rupert Sheldrake Is Not Being Persecuted, And Is Not Like Galileo |last=Coyne |first=Jerry A. |date=8 November 2013}}</ref> * pseudoscience<ref name=gardner/><ref name=sharma/><ref name=samuel/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=impostures/><ref name="Jones"/><ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/115533/rupert-sheldrake-fools-bbc-deepak-chopra |magazine=The New Republic |title=Pseudoscientist Rupert Sheldrake Is Not Being Persecuted, And Is Not Like Galileo |last=Coyne |first=Jerry A. | author-link = Jerry Coyne|date=8 November 2013}}</ref>
* lack of evidence<ref name=hood/><ref name="Blackmore 2009"/><ref name=Rutherford/><ref name=sciam/><ref name="Rose 1988"/> * lack of evidence<ref name=hood/><ref name="Blackmore 2009"/><ref name=Rutherford/><ref name=sciam/><ref name="Rose 1988"/>
* inconsistency with data from genetics and embryology<ref name="Wolpert 1984"/> * inconsistency with data from genetics and embryology<ref name="Wolpert 1984"/>
* inconsistency with consensus in neuroscience and biochemistry<ref>{{cite news |last1=Shermer |first1=Michael |author-link=Michael Shermer |title=Rupert's Resonance |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ruperts-resonance/ |access-date=6 March 2019 |date=1 November 2005}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Horgan |first1=John |author-link=John Horgan (journalist) |title=Scientific Heretic Rupert Sheldrake on Morphic Fields, Psychic Dogs and Other Mysteries |url=https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/scientific-heretic-rupert-sheldrake-on-morphic-fields-psychic-dogs-and-other-mysteries/ |access-date=6 March 2019 |work=Scientific American Blog Network }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Leviton |first1=Mark |title=Wrong Turn |url=https://www.thesunmagazine.org/issues/446/wrong-turn |access-date=6 March 2019 |work=The Sun Magazine}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Sheldrake-Shermer, Materialism in Science, Opening Statements |url=https://thebestschools.org/sheldrake-shermer-materialism-in-science-opening-statements/ |website=TheBestSchools.org |access-date=6 March 2019 |date=1 May 2015}}</ref>
* undermines the public's understanding of science<ref name=whitfield/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=Rutherford/> * undermines the public's understanding of science<ref name=whitfield/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=Rutherford/>
}}
}} Despite the negative reception Sheldrake's ideas have received from the scientific community, they have found support in the ] movement,<ref name=hanegraaff/> such as from New Age ] ].<ref name=baer>{{cite journal|doi=10.1525/maq.2003.17.2.233|title=The Work of Andrew Weil and Deepak Chopra—Two Holistic Health/New Age Gurus: A Critique of the Holistic Health/New Age Movements|year=2003|last1=Baer|first1=Hans A.|journal=Medical Anthropology Quarterly|volume=17|issue=2|pages=233–50|pmid=12846118}}</ref><ref name=chopra-review/> Sheldrake argues science should incorporate ], ], and a greater focus on ].{{r|ssf}}


==Early life and education==
==Background==
Sheldrake was born in ], Nottinghamshire,<ref name=bio-anglican/> to Doris (née Tebbutt)<ref>Marriage record registered in September 1934, @ FreeBMD Images ref 1934M3-T-0308</ref> and Reginald Alfred Sheldrake (1903–1970) on 28 June 1942.<ref>{{cite web |title=Birth record |publisher=findmypast.co.uk |url=http://www.findmypast.co.uk/search/all/results?recordCount=-1&forenames=Reginald&includeForenamesVariants=true&_includeForenamesVariants=on&surname=sheldrake&includeSurnameVariants=true&_includeSurnameVariants=on&fromYear=1903&toYear=1903 }}</ref><ref>Marriage record registered in September 1934, @ FreeBMD Images ref 1934M3-S-0193</ref> His father graduated from ] with a degree in pharmacy<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.picturethepast.org.uk/frontend.php?keywords=Ref_No_increment;EQUALS;NCCE003693&pos=2&action=zoom |title=Reginald Sheldrake Upon his Graduation, Newark, c 1924 |publisher= Picturethepast.org.uk |accessdate= 3 January 2012}}</ref> and was also an amateur naturalist and microscopist. Sheldrake credits his father with encouraging him to follow his interest in animals, plants<ref name=bio2/> and gardens.<ref>Sheldrake, Rupert, , '']'', 9 October 2013. Retrieved 1 November 2013.</ref> Sheldrake was born on 28 June 1942,<ref name="Arguing Science 2016, p. 1">{{Cite book |last1=Sheldrake |first1=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LWtODQAAQBAJ&pg=PT7 |title=Arguing Science: A Dialogue on the Future of Science and Spirit |last2=Shermer |first2=Michael |publisher=Monkfish Book Publishing |year=2016 |pages=|isbn=9781939681584 }}</ref> in ], Nottinghamshire,<ref name=bio-anglican/> to Reginald Alfred Sheldrake and Doris (née Tebbutt).<ref>Contemporary Authors, vol. 127, Susan M. Trosky, Gale Research International Ltd, 1989, p. 398</ref> His father was a ]-educated pharmacist who ran a chemist's shop on the same road as his parents' wallpaper shop.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.inspirepicturearchive.org.uk/image/9690/Reginald_Sheldrake_Upon_his_Graduation_Newark_c_1924 |title=Reginald Sheldrake Upon his Graduation, Newark, c 1924 |access-date= 12 July 2021}}</ref> Sheldrake credits his father (an amateur naturalist and microscopist)<ref name="Arguing Science 2016, p. 1"/> with supporting his interests in zoology and botany.<ref name=bio2/><ref>Sheldrake, Rupert, , '']'', 9 October 2013. Retrieved 1 November 2013.</ref>


Although his parents were ],<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |last=Leviton |first=Mark |date=February 2013 |title=Wrong Turn |url=https://www.thesunmagazine.org/issues/446/wrong-turn |access-date=2022-11-29 |website=] |language=en}}</ref> they sent him to ], an ] ].<ref name=bio-anglican/> Sheldrake has said:
Although ]s, Sheldrake's parents sent him to ], a ] ].<ref name=bio-anglican/> Sheldrake says,<blockquote>I went through the standard scientific atheist phase when I was about 14.... I bought into that package deal of science equals atheism. I was the only boy at my high Anglican boarding school who refused to get confirmed. When I was a teenager, I was a bit like Dawkins is today, you know: 'If Adam and Eve were created by God, why do they have navels?' That kind of thing.<ref name=TimAdams/></blockquote>


<blockquote>I went through the standard scientific atheist phase when I was about 14 ... I bought into that package deal of science equals atheism. I was the only boy at my ] boarding school who refused to get confirmed.<ref name=TimAdams/></blockquote>
At ], Sheldrake studied biology and biochemistry, and after a year at ] studying philosophy and history of science, he returned to Cambridge where he gained a PhD in biochemistry for his work in plant development and ]s.<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name=bio2/>


In the nine-month period before starting college, Sheldrake worked at the ] pharmacology research lab in London, an experience he described as formative due to the required destruction of lab animals, which he found deeply unsettling.<ref name=":1" /> At ], Sheldrake studied biology and biochemistry. In 1964,<ref name=":1" /> he was awarded a fellowship to study the philosophy and history of science at ].<ref>{{Cite web |last= |date=2013 |title=Interview with Scientist Rupert Sheldrake |url=https://tricycle.org/magazine/rupert-sheldrake/ |access-date=2022-11-20 |website=] |language=en}}</ref> After a year at Harvard, he returned to Cambridge, where he earned a PhD in biochemistry in 1968 for his work in plant development and ].<ref name=phd>{{cite Q|Q124658951}}</ref><ref name=TimAdams/><ref name=bio2/>
==Life and career==
After obtaining his PhD, Sheldrake became a fellow of Clare College,<ref name=overhyped/> working in biochemistry and cell biology with funding from the ] Rosenheim Research Fellowship.<ref>{{cite book |title=Year Book of the Royal Society of London |year=1973 |volume=78 |publisher=Harrison and Sons |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Nn47AQAAIAAJ}}</ref> He investigated ], a ] which plays a role in plant ] ],<ref name="Discover2000"/> and published a number of papers related to the topic.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/auxin/index.html |publisher=sheldrake.org |title=Papers on Auxin Transport in Plants}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/hormone/index.html |publisher=sheldrake.org |title=Papers on Hormone Production in Plants}}</ref> A 2012 profile in ''The Guardian'' described the Sheldrake of that era as "one of the brightest Darwinians of his generation".<ref name=TimAdams/> His development with Philip Rubery of the ] of polar auxin transport has been described as "astonishingly visionary".<ref name="Abel2010"/> Their work in the 1970s was confirmed in the 21st century.<ref name="Abel2010">{{cite journal|last=Abel|first=S.|coauthors=A. Theologis|year=2010|title=Odyssey of Auxin|journal=Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology|volume=2|issue=10|pages=a004572–a004572|issn=1943-0264|doi=10.1101/cshperspect.a004572}}</ref>


== Career ==
Sheldrake says he ended this line of research when he concluded,{{quote|The system is circular, it does not explain how established to start with. After nine years of intensive study, it became clear to me that biochemistry would not solve the problem of why things have the basic shape they do.<ref name="Discover2000" />}} Having an interest in ], ] and ], Sheldrake resigned his position at Clare and went to work on the physiology of tropical crops in ],<ref name=bio2/> as principal plant physiologist at ICRISAT from 1974 to 1978.<ref name=chaos/><ref name=bio2/> There he published a number of papers on crop physiology<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/cropphysio/index.html |title=Papers on Crop Physiology |publisher=sheldrake.org |author=Sheldrake, Rupert}}</ref> and co-authored a book on the anatomy of the ].<ref>{{cite book |author1=Bisen, S. S. |author2=Sheldrake, A. R. |year=1981 |title=The anatomy of the pigeonpea|publisher=ICRISAT}}</ref>
After obtaining his PhD, Sheldrake became a ] of Clare College,<ref name=overhyped/> working in biochemistry and cell biology with funding from the ] Rosenheim Research Fellowship.<ref>{{cite book |title=Year Book of the Royal Society of London |year=1973 |volume=78 |publisher=Harrison and Sons |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Nn47AQAAIAAJ}}</ref> He investigated ]s, a class of ] that plays a role in plant ] ].<ref name="Discover2000" /> Sheldrake and Philip Rubery developed the ] of ].<ref name="Abel2010">{{cite journal|last1=Abel|first1=S.|last2=Theologis|first2=A.|year=2010|title=Odyssey of Auxin|journal=Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology|volume=2|issue=10|pages=a004572|issn=1943-0264|doi=10.1101/cshperspect.a004572|pmid=20739413|pmc=2944356}}</ref>


Sheldrake has said that he ended this line of research when he concluded:
Sheldrake left ICRISAT to focus on writing ''A New Science of Life'', during which time he spent a year and a half in the ashram of ],<ref name=bio2/><ref name=bio1/> a ] monk.<ref name=bio-anglican/> Published in 1981, the book outlines his concept of morphic resonance,<ref name=bio2/> about which he remarks,{{quote|The idea came to me in a moment of insight and was extremely exciting. It interested some of my colleagues at Clare College – philosophers, linguists, and classicists were quite open-minded. But the idea of mysterious telepathy-type interconnections between organisms and of collective memories within species didn't go down too well with my colleagues in the science labs. Not that they were aggressively hostile; they just made fun of it. Whenever I said something like, "I've just got to go and make a telephone call," they said, "Ha, ha, why bother? Do it by morphic resonance!"<ref name=bio2/>}} After writing ''A New Science of Life'' he continued at ICRISAT as a part-time consultant physiologist until 1985.<ref name=chaos/><ref name=bio2/> During his time in India Sheldrake reports "being drawn back to a Christian path" and currently identifies as Anglican.<ref name=bio-anglican/>


{{blockquote|The system is circular. It does not explain how established to start with. After nine years of intensive study, it became clear to me that biochemistry would not solve the problem of why things have the basic shape they do.<ref name="Discover2000" />}}
Since 2004<ref>{{cite web |title=ht_faculty |publisher=archive.org |url=http://www.learn.edu/ht/ht_faculty.htm |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20040530000342/http://www.learn.edu/ht/ht_faculty.htm |archivedate=30 May 2004 |website=The Graduate Institute}}</ref> Sheldrake has been a visiting professor at the Graduate Institute in ],<ref name=bio1/> where he was also academic director of the Holistic Learning and Thinking Program until 2012.<ref name=bio1/> From September 2005 until 2010, Sheldrake was director of the ] Project for ] research.<ref name=overhyped/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/pwfund.html |title=The Perrott-Warrick Project |publisher=Sheldrake.org |accessdate=27 August 2012 |author=Sheldrake, Rupert}}</ref>


From 1968 to 1969,<ref name=":1" /> Sheldrake worked at the ].<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name=":1" />
Sheldrake is married to ], and they have two sons.<ref name=bio1/>


Having an interest in ], ] and ], Sheldrake resigned his position at Clare and went to work on the physiology of tropical crops in ],<ref name="bio2" /> as principal plant physiologist at the ] (ICRISAT) from 1974 to 1978.<ref name="chaos" /><ref name="bio2" /> There he published on crop physiology<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/cropphysio/index.html |title=Papers on Crop Physiology |publisher=sheldrake.org |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131006065504/http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles%26Papers/papers/cropphysio/index.html |archive-date=6 October 2013 }}</ref> and co-authored a book on the anatomy of the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bisen|first1=S. S.|last2=Sheldrake|first2=A. R.|year=1981 |title=The anatomy of the pigeonpea|publisher=ICRISAT}}</ref>
==Selected books==
Sheldrake's books have received both positive and negative reviews, with some reviews being extremely negative regarding the scientific content of his work. In 2009, ], deputy editor of '']'', criticised Sheldrake's books for containing research that was not subjected to the ] process expected for science, and suggested that his books were best "ignored".<ref name=Rutherford/> Sheldrake was also called "a robust and eloquent defender of science" by ] in a 2012 review in the ].<ref>{{cite web |author=Tickell, Crispen |date=6 January 2012 |title=Morphic Man |website=FT.com |url=http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/8ec688c6-3610-11e1-9f98-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2lmVthG6Y}}</ref> A 1987 Guardian article referred to him as "required reading for New Agers".<ref name="Guardian holistic"/>


Sheldrake left ICRISAT to focus on writing ''A New Science of Life'', during which time he spent a year and a half in the ] of ],<ref name=bio2/><ref name=bio1/> a ] monk active in ] with Hinduism.<ref name=bio-anglican/> Published in 1981, the book outlines his concept of morphic resonance,<ref name=bio2/> of which he has said:
=== ''A New Science of Life'' ===

Sheldrake's ''A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Morphic Resonance'' (1981) proposed that through "morphic resonance" various perceived phenomena, particularly biological ones, become more probable the more often they occur, and therefore biological growth and behaviour become guided into patterns laid down by previous similar events. As a result, he suggested, newly acquired behaviours can be passed down to future generations − a biological proposition akin to ]. He generalised this approach to assert that it explains many aspects of science, from ] to the ] which, in Sheldrake's formulation, are merely mutable habits which have been evolving and changing since the ].<ref name=ansl/>
{{blockquote|The idea came to me in a moment of insight and was extremely exciting. It interested some of my colleagues at Clare College—philosophers, linguists, and classicists were quite open-minded. But the idea of mysterious telepathy-type interconnections between organisms and of collective memories within species didn't go down too well with my colleagues in the science labs. Not that they were aggressively hostile; they just made fun of it.<ref name=bio2/>|sign=|source=}}

After writing ''A New Science of Life'', he continued at ICRISAT as a part-time consultant physiologist until 1985.<ref name=chaos/>

Sheldrake published his second book, ''The Presence of the Past,'' in 1988.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UwhFAAAAYAAJ |title=The Presence of the Past: Morphic Resonance and the Habits of Nature |date=1988 |publisher=Collins |isbn=978-0-00-217785-6 |language=en}}</ref> In the 1990s and 2000s, he continued to publish books, which included several joint discussions with ], a mathematician, and ], an ethnobotanist and mystic.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Sheldrake |first1=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2uIPAQAAIAAJ |title=The Evolutionary Mind: Trialogues at the Edge of the Unthinkable |last2=McKenna |first2=Terence K. |last3=Abraham |first3=Ralph |date=1998 |publisher=Trialogue Press |isbn=978-0-942344-13-4 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Sheldrake |first1=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ylwoDwAAQBAJ |title=Chaos, Creativity, and Cosmic Consciousness |last2=McKenna |first2=Terence |last3=Abraham |first3=Ralph |date=2001-11-01 |publisher=Simon and Schuster |isbn=978-1-59477-771-4 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Sheldrake |first1=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iIPHtyQHpTIC&dq=sheldrake%20McKenna%20Abraham&pg=PP1 |title=The Evolutionary Mind: Conversations on Science, Imagination & Spirit |last2=McKenna |first2=Terence |last3=Abraham |first3=Ralph |date=2013-04-02 |publisher=Monkfish Book Publishing |isbn=978-1-939681-10-2 |language=en}}</ref> Sheldrake also collaborated with ], a priest and theologian, on two books in 1996.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Fox |first1=Matthew |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E-IlAQAAIAAJ&q=editions:ISBN0385483562 |title=Natural Grace: Dialogues on Creation, Darkness, and the Soul in Spiritualiy and Science |last2=Sheldrake |first2=Rupert |date=1996 |publisher=Doubleday |isbn=978-0-385-48356-8 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=May 1, 1996 |title=Natural Grace: Dialogs on Creation, Darkness, and the Soul in Spirituality and Science by Mathew Fox and Rupert Sheldrake |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/matthew-fox/natural-grace/ |website=Kirkus Reviews}}</ref>

Sheldrake was one of six subjects, along with ], ], ], ], ], who were covered in 1993 by the Dutch filmmaker Wim Kayzer in ''],''<ref>{{Cite news |last=Goodman |first=Walter |date=1994-06-10 |title=TV Weekend; Serious Entertainment From a Rare Resource |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/06/10/arts/tv-weekend-serious-entertainment-from-a-rare-resource.html |access-date=2023-01-31 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> a documentary series that posed a series of questions about ] and culminated in a roundtable discussion between the participants.<ref name=":2">{{Cite news |last=Angier |first=Natalie |date=1994-06-12 |title=TELEVISION; Six Smart Guys Sitting Around Talking |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/06/12/arts/television-six-smart-guys-sitting-around-talking.html |access-date=2023-01-30 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> The film was shown on ] ] in 1993, followed by United States PBS member station ] in 1994.<ref name=":2" /> The book ''A Glorious Accident: Understanding Our Place in the Cosmic Puzzle'' was produced from the transcripts of the program and published in both Dutch<ref name=":12">{{cite book |last1=Kayzer |first1=Wim |url=http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/66099260 |title=Een schitterend ongeluk |date=1993 |publisher=Contact |isbn=9789025403959 |location=Amsterdam |oclc=66099260 |accessdate=30 October 2020}}</ref> and English.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kayzer |first=Wim |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AcqAPgAACAAJ&q=editions:ISBN0716731444 |title=A Glorious Accident: Understanding Our Place in the Cosmic Puzzle |date=1997 |publisher=W.H. Freeman |isbn=978-90-254-0725-4 |language=en}}</ref>

Since 2004,<ref>{{cite web |title=ht_faculty |url=http://www.learn.edu/ht/ht_faculty.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040530000342/http://www.learn.edu/ht/ht_faculty.htm |archive-date=30 May 2004 |publisher=The Graduate Institute}}</ref> Sheldrake has been a visiting professor at the Graduate Institute in ],<ref name="bio1" /> where he was also academic director of the Holistic Learning and Thinking Program until 2012.<ref name="bio1" /> From September 2005 until 2010, Sheldrake was director of the ] Project for ] research for research on unexplained human and animal abilities, funded from Trinity College, Cambridge.<ref name="overhyped" /><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/pwfund.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070207231747/http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/pwfund.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=7 February 2007 |title=The Perrott–Warrick Project |publisher=Sheldrake.org |access-date=27 August 2012 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert }}</ref> As of 2014, he was a fellow of the ] in ] and a fellow of ] in ].<ref name="current bio">{{cite web|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/about-rupert-sheldrake/biography|title=Biography of Rupert Sheldrake, Ph.D.|publisher=Rupert Sheldrake|access-date=29 April 2014}}</ref> Since 2014, he has been a fellow of the Temenos Academy, London.<ref>{{Cite web |last=NA |first=NA |date=March 26, 2024 |title=Temenos Academy Fellows |url=https://www.temenosacademy.org/fellows/ |access-date=March 26, 2024 |website=Temenos Academy}}</ref>

In 2017, Sheldrake published a dialog with science writer and skeptic ] titled ''Arguing Science: A Dialogue on the Future of Science and Spirit''.<ref name="Arguing Science 2016, p. 1" /> In 2023, at the How The Light Gets In festival of philosophy in Hay-on-Wye, UK, Sheldrake debated Shermer.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Shermer |first=Michael |date=Oct 12, 2023 |title=Rupert Sheldrake v. Michael Shermer {{!}} On the edges of knowledge {{!}} Full discussion |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4IeQokxHdM |access-date=January 15, 2024 |website=YouTube}}</ref> In 2023, Sheldrake debated the existence of consciousness outside of brains at the University Aula in ], alongside anthropologist ] and neuroscientist ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Malone |first=David |date=December 2, 2023 |title=The 2023 Holberg Debate: 'Does Consciousness Extend Beyond Brains?' |url=https://holbergprize.org/en/2023-holberg-debate-does-consciousness-extend-beyond-brains |access-date=January 31, 2024 |website=Holbergprize.org}}</ref>

Sheldrake has outlined his spiritual practices in two books: ''Science and Spiritual Practices'' (2017)<ref>{{Cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CK8FDgAAQBAJ |title=Science and Spiritual Practices: Reconnecting through direct experience |date=2017-11-02 |publisher=Hodder & Stoughton |isbn=978-1-4736-3010-9 |language=en}}</ref> and ''Ways to Go Beyond and Why They Work'' (2019).<ref>{{Cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0kdIDwAAQBAJ |title=Ways to Go Beyond and Why They Work: Seven Spiritual Practices in a Scientific Age |date=2019-01-24 |publisher=Hodder & Stoughton |isbn=978-1-4736-5342-9 |language=en}}</ref>

==Selected books==
Reviews of Sheldrake's books have at times been extremely negative about their scientific content, but some have been positive. In 2009, ], geneticist and deputy editor of '']'', criticised Sheldrake's books for containing research that was not subjected to the ] process expected for science, and suggested that his books were best "ignored."<ref name=Rutherford/>


=== ''A New Science of Life'' (1981) ===
John Davy wrote in '']'' that the implications of ''A New Science of Life'' were "fascinating and far-reaching, and would turn upside down a lot of orthodox science" and would "merit attention if some of its predictions are supported by experiment".<ref>{{cite news |author=Davy, J. |date=9 August 1981 |title=Old rats and new tricks |newspaper=The Observer}}</ref>
Sheldrake's ''A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Morphic Resonance'' (1981) proposes that through morphic resonance, various perceived phenomena, particularly biological ones, become more probable the more often they occur, and that biological growth and behaviour thus become guided into patterns laid down by previous similar events. As a result, he suggests, newly acquired behaviours can be passed down to future generations—a biological proposition akin to the ] theory. He generalises this approach to assert that it explains many aspects of science, from ] to the ], which, in Sheldrake's formulation, are merely mutable habits that have been evolving and changing since the ].{{citation needed|date=July 2022}}


John Davy wrote in '']'' that the implications of ''A New Science of Life'' were "fascinating and far-reaching, and would turn upside down a lot of orthodox science," and that they would "merit attention if some of its predictions are supported by experiment."<ref>{{cite news |last=Davy|first=J.|date=9 August 1981 |title=Old rats and new tricks |work=The Observer}}</ref>
Sheldrake also wrote a piece for ''The Guardian''<ref>{{cite news|author=Rupert Sheldrake|title=A rat never forgets: Experiments begun sixty years ago may provide evidence for a kind of influence which enables animals to tune in to the experiences of their predecessors|date=18 June 1981|page=19|newspaper=]}}</ref> in which he argued that morphic resonance explained the results of experiments on learning in rats conducted by ] and replicated by Francis Crew and Wilfred Agar, in which the ] had apparently been demonstrated. Since the replications were carried out on unrelated rats, Sheldrake ruled out inheritance on the basis of genetic modification. He concluded that "the hypothesis of formative causation is unlikely to be widely accepted unless it has a considerable body of evidence in its favour. But if experiments... begin to yield results which support it then... there would be good reason to pursue it further. Clearly its implications would be revolutionary."


In subsequent books, Sheldrake continued to promote morphic resonance.
In subsequent books, Sheldrake continued to promote his morphic resonance hypothesis; several of these books, including a revised and expanded edition of ''A New Science of Life'', published in 2009 in the United States under the title ''Morphic Resonance: The Nature of Formative Causation'', present experimental evidence that he says support his hypothesis.<ref name=ansl-reissue>{{cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |year=2009 |title=Morphic resonance: the nature of formative causation |publisher=Inner Traditions/Bear & Co. |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=F75gxeTBgocC&printsec=frontcover}}</ref>


Morphic resonance is rejected by numerous critics on multiple grounds, and has been labelled ] and ]. These grounds include the lack of evidence for the hypothesis and the inconsistency of the hypothesis with established ]. Morphic resonance is also seen as lacking scientific credibility for being overly vague and ]. Further, Sheldrake's experimental methods have been criticised for being poorly designed and subject to ], and his analyses of results have also drawn criticism.{{efn|Sources: The morphic resonance hypothesis is rejected by numerous critics on many grounds, and has been labelled ] and ]. These grounds include the lack of evidence for it and its inconsistency with established ]. The idea of morphic resonance is also seen as lacking scientific credibility because it is overly vague and ]. Sheldrake's experimental methods have been criticised for being poorly designed and subject to ]. His analyses of results have also drawn criticism.{{efn|Sources:
* pseudoscience<ref name=gardner/><ref name=sharma/><ref name=samuel/><ref name="Wolpert 1984"/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=impostures/><ref name="Jones"/> * pseudoscience<ref name=gardner/><ref name=sharma/><ref name=samuel/><ref name="Wolpert 1984"/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=impostures/><ref name="Jones"/>
* magical thinking<ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name="Jones"/><ref name=skepdic/> * magical thinking<ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name="Jones"/><ref name=skepdic/>
Line 72: Line 89:
* overly vague<ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name="Jones"/><ref name="Parkin"/> * overly vague<ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name="Jones"/><ref name="Parkin"/>
* unfalsifiable<ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=sciam/> * unfalsifiable<ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=sciam/>
* experimental methods poorly designed and subject to experimenter bias<ref name=alcock/><ref name="Blackmore 1999"/><ref name=MarksColwell/> * experimental methods poorly designed and subject to experimenter bias<ref name=MarksColwell/><ref name="Blackmore 1999"/><ref name=alcock/>
* analyses of results have also drawn criticism<ref name=rose/><ref name=wiseman2/> * analyses of results have also drawn criticism<ref name=rose/><ref name=wiseman2/>
}} }}


Alex Gomez-Marin denies that Sheldrake's basic idea is unfalsifiable, but no conclusive experiments have been performed since mainstream scientists do not wish to get involved in such experiments.<ref name="Gomez‐Marin 2021 p. 2100055">{{cite journal | last=Gomez-Marin | first=Alex | title=Facing biology's open questions: Rupert Sheldrake's "heretical" hypothesis turns 40 | journal=BioEssays | publisher=Wiley | volume=43 | issue=6 | date=9 March 2021 | issn=0265-9247 | doi=10.1002/bies.202100055 | page=e2100055| pmid=33751607 | hdl=10261/267559 | s2cid=232323375 | hdl-access=free }}</ref>
=== ''The Presence of the Past''===


=== ''The Presence of the Past'' (1988)===
In his next book, ''The Presence of the Past: Morphic Resonance and the Habits of Nature'' (1988), Sheldrake expanded on his morphic resonance hypothesis and marshalled experimental evidence which he said supported the hypothesis.<ref name=presencepast/> The book was reviewed favourably in '']'' by historian ] who called it "engaging, provocative" and "a tour de force".<ref name="Roszak"/> When the book was re-issued in 2011 with these quotes on the front cover, ''New Scientist'' remarked, "Back then, Roszak gave Sheldrake the benefit of the doubt. Today, attitudes have hardened and Sheldrake is seen as standing firmly on the wilder shores of science", and added that if ''New Scientist'' were to review the re-issue, the book's publisher "wouldn't be mining it for promotional purposes".<ref name=newscientist>{{cite journal |journal=New Scientist |url=http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/culturelab/2011/06/did-we-really-say-that.html |author=Lawton, Graham |date=14 June 2011 |title=Sheldrake book: Did we really say that?}}</ref>
In ''The Presence of the Past: Morphic Resonance and the Habits of Nature'' (1988), Sheldrake expands on his morphic resonance hypothesis and marshals experimental evidence that he says supports it.<ref name=presencepast/> The book was reviewed favourably in '']'' by historian ], who called it "engaging, provocative" and "a tour de force."<ref name="Roszak"/> When it was reissued in 2011 with those quotes on the front cover, ''New Scientist'' remarked, "Back then, Roszak gave Sheldrake the benefit of the doubt. Today, attitudes have hardened and Sheldrake is seen as standing firmly on the wilder shores of science," adding that if ''New Scientist'' were to review the reissue, the book's publisher "wouldn't be mining it for promotional purposes."<ref name=newscientist>{{cite journal |journal=New Scientist |url=https://www.newscientist.com/blogs/culturelab/2011/06/did-we-really-say-that.html |last=Lawton|first=Graham |date=14 June 2011 |title=Sheldrake book: Did we really say that?}}</ref>


], reviewing the book in '']'', criticised it as magical thinking and pseudoscience, saying that morphic resonance "is so vast and formless that it could easily be made to explain anything, or to dodge round any opposing argument... Sheldrake has sadly aligned himself with those fantasists who, from the depths of their armchairs, dream up whole new grandiose theories of space and time to revolutionize all science, drape their wooly generalizations over every phenomenon they can think of, and then start looking round for whatever scraps of evidence that seem to them to be in their favour". Jones argued that without confirmatory experimental evidence, "the whole unwieldy and redundant structure of theory falls to ]".<ref name="Jones"/> In a 1988 review of the book in '']'', ] criticised the hypothesis as magical thinking and pseudoscience, saying that morphic resonance "is so vast and formless that it could easily be made to explain anything, or to dodge round any opposing argument ... Sheldrake has sadly aligned himself with those fantasists who, from the depths of their armchairs, dream up whole new grandiose theories of space and time to revolutionize all science, drape their woolly generalizations over every phenomenon they can think of, and then start looking round for whatever scraps of evidence that seem to them to be in their favour." Jones argued that without confirmatory experimental evidence, "the whole unwieldy and redundant structure of theory falls to ]."<ref name="Jones"/>


=== ''The Rebirth of Nature'' === === ''The Rebirth of Nature'' (1991) ===
Published in 1991, Sheldrake's ''The Rebirth of Nature: The Greening of Science and God'' addresses the subject of ] consciousness and related topics.<ref name=rebirth/><ref>{{cite book |last=Sheldon Ferguson |first=Duncan |year=1993 |title=New Age Spirituality: An Assessment |publisher=Westminster John Knox Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aGqPXnDtnzwC&pg=PA204 |page=204 |isbn=9780664252182}}</ref> A column in ''The Guardian'' said that the book "seeks to restore the pre-Enlightenment notion that nature is 'alive'," quoting Sheldrake as saying that "indeterminism, spontaneity and creativity have re-emerged throughout the natural world" and that "mystic, animistic and religious ways of thinking can no longer be kept at bay."<ref>{{cite news|title=The rebirth of mother earth|last=Schwartz |first=Walter |work=]|date=7 January 1991|page=7}}</ref> The book was reviewed by ] in ''Nature'', who argued that "the theory of formative causation makes testable predictions," noting that "nothing has yet been reported which would divert the mainstream of science. ... Even if it is nonsense ... recognizing the need for fruitful errors, I do not regard the book as dangerous."<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Lovelock | first1 = J. E. | year = 1990| title = A danger to science? (review of ''The Rebirth of Nature'' by Rupert Sheldrake) | journal = ] | volume = 348 | issue = 6303| page = 685 | doi = 10.1038/348685a0 | s2cid = 46012105 }}</ref>


===''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World'' (1994) ===
Published in 1991, Sheldrake's ''The Rebirth of Nature: The Greening of Science and God''<ref name=rebirth/> addressed the subject of New Age consciousness and related topics.<ref>{{cite book |last=Sheldon Ferguson |first=Duncan |year=1993 |title=New Age Spirituality: An Assessment |publisher=Westminster John Knox Press |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=aGqPXnDtnzwC&pg=PA204 |page=204 |isbn=9780664252182}}</ref> A column in ''The Guardian'' said the book "seeks to restore the pre-Enlightenment notion that nature is 'alive'", quoting Sheldrake as saying that "indeterminism, spontaneity and creativity have re-emerged throughout the natural world" and that "mystic, animistic and religious ways of thinking can no longer be kept at bay".<ref>{{cite news|title=The rebirth of mother earth|last=Schwartz |first=Walter |newspaper=]|date=7 January 1991|page=7}}</ref> The book was reviewed by ] in ''Nature'', who argued that "the theory of formative causation makes testable predictions" while noting that "nothing has yet been reported which would divert the mainstream of science. ... Even if it is nonsense... ...recognizing the need for fruitful errors, I do not regard the book as dangerous".<ref>Lovelock, J.E., ''A danger to science?'' (review of ''The Rebirth of Nature'' by Rupert Sheldrake), '']'', 348, 685. doi:10.1038/348685a0</ref>
In 1994, Sheldrake proposed a list of ''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World'', subtitled "A do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science." He encouraged laypeople to conduct research and argued that experiments similar to his own could be conducted with limited expense.<ref name=seven-exp/>


Music critic of '']'' Mark Edwards reviewed the book positively, arguing that Sheldrake "challenges the complacent certainty of scientists," and that his ideas "sounded ridiculous ... as long as your thinking is constrained by the current scientific orthodoxy."<ref name="Edwards"/>
===''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World'' ===
In 1994 Sheldrake proposed a list of ''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World'', subtitled "A do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science". He encouraged lay people to conduct research and argued that experiments similar to his own could be conducted on a shoestring budget.<ref name=seven-exp/>


David Sharp, writing in '']'', said that the experiments testing paranormal phenomena carried the "risk of positive ]," and that the scientific community "would have to think again if some of these suggestions were convincingly confirmed." Sharp encouraged readers (medical professionals) to "at least read Sheldrake, even try one of his experiments—but pay very close attention to your methods section." Sharp doubted whether "a bunch of enthusiastic amateurs going to persuade sceptics," and noted that "orthodox science will need a lot of convincing."<ref>The Lancet. 343.8902 (9 April 1994): p. 905.</ref><!--] reviewed the book for '']''.<ref>'']'' 141.1918 (26 March 1994): p42</ref> I have no idea whether this is positive or not, but based on his other review it might be. ~~~~ -->
'']'' music critic Mark Edwards reviewed the book positively, arguing that Sheldrake "challenges the complacent certainty of scientists" and that his ideas "sounded ridiculous... as long as your thinking is constrained by the current scientific orthodoxy".<ref name="Edwards"/>


Science journalist Nigel Hawkes, writing in ''The Times'', said that Sheldrake was "trying to bridge the gap between ] and science," and suggested that dogs could appear to have psychic abilities when they were actually relying on more conventional senses. He concluded: "whether scientists will be willing to take seriously is ... that need not concern most readers. While I do not think this book will change the world, it will cause plenty of harmless fun."<ref name="Hawkes"/>
David Sharp, writing in '']'', said the experiments tested for ] phenomena with "risk of positive ]", and that the ] "would have to think again if some of these suggestions were convincingly confirmed". Sharp encouraged readers (medical professionals) to "at least read Sheldrake, even try one of his experiments—but pay very close attention to your methods section". Sharp doubted "a bunch of enthusiastic amateurs... is going to persuade sceptics" and noted that "orthodox science will need a lot of convincing".<ref>The Lancet. 343.8902 (9 April 1994): p905</ref> <!--] reviewed the book for '']''.<ref>'']'' 141.1918 (26 March 1994): p42</ref> I have no idea whether this is positive or not, but based on his other review it might be. ~~~~ -->


=== ''Dogs That Know When Their Owners are Coming Home'' (1999)===
Science journalist Nigel Hawkes, writing in ''The Times'', said that Sheldrake was "trying to bridge the gap between ] and science", and suggested that dogs could appear to have psychic abilities while actually relying on more conventional senses. He concluded "whether scientists will be willing to take seriously is... that need not concern most readers. While I do not think this book will change the world, it will cause plenty of harmless fun."<ref name="Hawkes"/>
{{see also|Human–canine bond}}
''Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home'', published in 1999, covers his research into proposed ] between humans and animals, particularly dogs. Sheldrake suggests that such interspecies telepathy is a real phenomenon and that morphic fields are responsible for it.<ref name=dogs/>


The book is in three sections, on telepathy, on sense of direction, including ] and the ], and on animal ], including premonitions of earthquakes and tsunamis. Sheldrake examined more than 1,000 case histories of dogs and cats that seemed to anticipate their owners' return by waiting at a door or window, sometimes for half an hour or more ahead of their return. He did a long series of experiments with a dog called Jaytee, in which the dog was filmed continuously during its owner's absence. In 100 filmed tests, on average the dog spent far more time at the window when its owner was on her way home than when she was not. During the main period of her absence, before she started her return journey, the dog was at the window for an average of 24 seconds per 10-minute period (4% of the time), whereas when she was on her way home, during the first ten minutes of her homeward journey, from more than five miles away, the dog was at the window for an average of five minutes 30 seconds (55% of the time). Sheldrake interpreted the result as highly ] statistically. He performed 12 more tests, in which the dog's owner travelled home in a taxi or other unfamiliar vehicle at randomly selected times communicated to her by telephone, to rule out the possibility that the dog was reacting to familiar car sounds or routines.<ref name="the">{{cite web | url=http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/features/if-the-truth-is-out-there-weve-not-found-it-yet/147748.article | title=If the truth is out there, we've not found it yet | work=Times Higher Education | date=30 August 1999 | access-date=19 February 2015 |last=Blackmore|first=Susan}}</ref> He also carried out similar experiments with another dog, Kane, describing the results as similarly positive and significant.<ref name=dogs/>
=== ''Dogs That Know Their Owners are Coming Home''===


Before the publication of ''Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home'', Sheldrake invited ], Matthew Smith, and Julie Milton to conduct an independent experimental study with Jaytee. They concluded that their evidence did not support telepathy as an explanation for the dog's behaviour,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Sheldrake|first1=Rupert|last2=Smart|first2=Pamela |title=A Dog That Seems To Know When His Owner is Coming Home: Videotaped Experiments and Observations |journal=] |date=2000 |volume=14 |pages=233–255 |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/research/animal-powers/a-dog-that-seems-to-know-when-his-owner-is-coming-home-videotaped-experiments-and-observations |access-date=18 February 2015}}</ref> and proposed possible alternative explanations for Sheldrake's conclusions, involving artefacts, bias resulting from ], and ] of unpublished data.<ref name=wiseman2/><ref name=wiseman1/> The group observed that Sheldrake's observed patterns could easily arise if a dog were simply to do very little for a while, before visiting a window with increasing frequency the longer its owner was absent, and that such behaviour would make sense for a dog awaiting its owner's return. Under this behaviour, the final measurement period, ending with the owner's return, would always contain the most time spent at the window.<ref name=wiseman2/> Sheldrake argued that the actual data in his own and in Wiseman's tests did not bear this out, and that the dog went to wait at the window sooner when his owner was returning from a short absence, and later after a long absence, with no tendency for Jaytee to go to the window early in the way that he did for shorter absences.<ref name="Commentary99">{{cite journal | last=Sheldrake | first=Rupert | title=Commentary on a paper by Wiseman, Smith and Milton on the 'psychic pet' phenomenon | journal=Journal of the Society for Psychical Research | date=1999 | volume=63 | pages=306–311 | url=http://www.sheldrake.org/research/animal-powers/commentary-on-wiseman-smith-and-milton | access-date=18 February 2015}}</ref>
''Seven Experiments'' included the seed of Sheldrake's next book, ''Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home'' (1999), which covered his research into proposed telepathy between humans and animals, particularly dogs. Sheldrake suggests that such interspecies telepathy is a real phenomenon and that morphic resonance is responsible for it.<ref name=dogs/>


Reviewing the book, ] criticised Sheldrake for comparing the 12 tests of random duration—which were all less than an hour long—to the initial tests where the dog may have been responding to patterns in the owner's journeys. Blackmore interpreted the results of the randomised tests as starting with a period where the dog "settles down and does not bother to go to the window," and then showing that the longer the owner was away, the more the dog went to look.<ref name="the"/>{{Unbalanced opinion|title=Sheldrake's rebuttal of these findings has been excluded.|date=February 2024}}
Before the publication of ''Dogs That Know'', ], Mathew Smith, and Julie Milton independently conducted an experimental study with an allegedly telepathic dog mentioned in the book and concluded that the evidence gathered did not support telepathy. They also proposed possible alternative explanations for Sheldrake's positive conclusions involving artefacts and bias resulting from ].<ref name=wiseman2/><ref name=wiseman1/>
<!--Maddox reviewed this book in ''Nature'', describing Sheldrake as "incorrigible" for "persist in error".<ref name=maddox2/>-->


===''The Sense of Being Stared At''=== ===''The Sense of Being Stared At'' (2003)===
In 2003 Sheldrake published ''The Sense of Being Stared At'' which explored telepathy, precognition, and the "]". It included an experiment where blindfolded subjects guessed whether persons were staring at them or at another target. He reported that in thousands of trials, around 60 percent of subjects reported being stared at when being stared at; around 50 percent (even chance) of subjects reported being stared at when they were not being stared at. Sheldrake attributes this effect to morphic resonance.<ref name=stared/> Several independent experimenters were unable to duplicate these results, with some citing design flaws in Sheldrake's experiments.<ref name=sciam/><ref name=MarksColwell/><ref name=baker/> Sheldrake's ''The Sense of Being Stared At'' explores telepathy, precognition, and the "]." It reported on an experiment Sheldrake conducted where blindfolded subjects guessed whether persons were staring at them or at another target. He reported subjects exhibiting a weak sense of being stared at, but no sense of not being stared at,<ref name="sheldrake">Sheldrake, Rupert (2005). The Sense of Being Stared At Part 1: Is it Real or Illusory? ''Journal of Consciousness Studies'', '''12'''(6):10–31. . See ''Tests under ‘real life’ conditions'', pp. 21–22.</ref><ref>Sheldrake, Rupert (2003). ''The Sense of Being Stared At, And Other Aspects of the Extended Mind'', London: Hutchinson. {{ISBN|0-09-179463-3}}.</ref> and attributed the results to morphic resonance.<ref name=stared/> He reported a hit rate of 53.1%, describing two subjects as "nearly always right, scoring way above chance levels."<ref name=JCS>Rupert Sheldrake (2005). The Sense of Being Stared At, and open peer commentary. ''Journal of Consciousness Studies'', '''12''':6, 4–126. . Accessed 28 May 2008.</ref>


Several independent experimenters were unable to find evidence beyond statistical randomness that people could tell they were being stared at, with some saying that there were design flaws in Sheldrake's experiments,<ref name=MarksColwell/><ref name=sciam/><ref name=baker/> such as using test sequences with "relatively few long runs and many alternations" instead of truly ].<ref name=MC>David F. Marks and John Colwell (2000). The Psychic Staring Effect: An Artifact of Pseudo Randomization, ''Skeptical Inquirer'', September/October 2000. . Accessed 28 May 2008.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.csicop.org/si/show/research_on_the_feeling_of_being_stared_at/|title=Sheldrake, Rupert. "Skeptical Inquirer (2000)," March/April, 58–61|date=March 2001 }}</ref> In 2005, ] expressed concern over ] and ] in the tests, and concluded that Sheldrake's claim was ].<ref>Michael Shermer (October 2005). Rupert's Resonance: The theory of "morphic resonance" posits that people have a sense of when they are being stared at. What does the research show? ''Scientific American'', October 2005. . Accessed 27 May 2008.</ref>
=== {{anchor|The Science Delusion}} {{anchor|Science Set Free}} ''The Science Delusion'' (''Science Set Free'')===
''The Science Delusion'', published on 1 January 2012 in the UK and in the US on 4 September 2012 as ''Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery'', summarises much of Sheldrake's previous work and encapsulates it into a broader critique of ], with the title apparently mimicking that of '']'' by one of his critics, ]. In an interview with '']'', Sheldrake denied that Dawkins' book was the inspiration for his own, saying, "The title was at the insistence of my publishers, and the book will be re-titled in the USA as ''Science Set Free''... Dawkins is a passionate believer in materialist dogma, but the book is not a response to him".<ref>{{cite journal |last=Marshall |first=Steve |magazine=] |date=April 2012 |volume=286 |page=38 |url=http://www.forteantimes.com/features/fbi/6421/the_science_delusion.html |title=The Science Delusion}}</ref>


], who conducted some of the experiments for Sheldrake, states that one of the subjects who was reported as having the highest hit rates was under the influence of the drug ] (Ecstasy) during the trials.<ref name="Hancock2015">{{cite book|editor=Graham Hancock|last=Brown|first=David Jay|author-link=David Jay Brown|title=The Divine Spark: Psychedelics, Consciousness and the Birth of Civilization|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=39KlBwAAQBAJ&pg=PT114|access-date=28 June 2015|date=6 April 2015|publisher=Hay House, Inc|isbn=9781781805749|pages=114–}}</ref>
In the book Sheldrake proposes a number of questions as the theme of each chapter which seek to elaborate on his central premise that science is predicated on the belief that the nature of reality is fully understood, with only minor details needing to be filled in. This "delusion" is what Sheldrake argues has turned science into a series of dogmas grounded in philosophical materialism rather than an open-minded approach to investigating phenomena. He argues that there are many powerful taboos that circumscribe what scientists can legitimately direct their attention towards.{{r|ssf|page1=6–12}} The mainstream view of modern science is that it proceeds by ] and does not require philosophical materialism.<ref>{{cite book |title=Nonsense on Stilts: How to Tell Science from Bunk |author=Pigliucci, Massimo |publisher=University of Chicago Press |year=2010 |page=192 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=aC8Baky2qTcC&pg=PA192 |isbn=9780226667874}}</ref>


=== {{anchor|The Science Delusion}} {{anchor|Science Set Free}} ''The Science Delusion'' (''Science Set Free'') (2012)===
Sheldrake questions conservation of energy; he calls it a "standard scientific dogma",{{r|ssf|page1=337}} says that perpetual motion devices and ] should be investigated as possible phenomena,{{r|ssf|page1=72–73}} and has stated that "the evidence for energy conservation in living organisms is weak".{{r|ssf|page1=83}} He argues in favour of ] and ], saying that their recognition as being legitimate is impeded by a "scientific priesthood" with an "authoritarian mentality".{{r|ssf|page1=327}} Citing his earlier "psychic staring effect" experiments and other reasons, he stated that minds are not confined to brains and remarks that "liberating minds from confinement in heads is like being released from prison".{{r|ssf|page1=229}} He suggests that ] is insufficient to explain ], and that inheritance of form and behaviour is mediated through morphic resonance.{{r|ssf|page1=157–186}} He also promotes morphic resonance in broader fashion as an explanation for other phenomena such as memory.{{r|ssf|page1=187–211}}
''The Science Delusion'', published in the US as ''Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery'', summarises much of Sheldrake's previous work and encapsulates it into a broader critique of ], with the title apparently mimicking that of '']'' by one of his critics, ].<ref>In an interview with '']'', Sheldrake denied that Dawkins' book was the inspiration for his own, saying, "The title was at the insistence of my publishers, and the book will be re-titled in the United States as ''Science Set Free''&nbsp;... Dawkins is a passionate believer in materialist dogma, but the book is not a response to him."{{cite journal |last=Marshall |first=Steve |journal=] |date=April 2012 |volume=286 |page=38 |url=http://www.forteantimes.com/features/fbi/6421/the_science_delusion.html |title=The Science Delusion |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120416035555/http://www.forteantimes.com/features/fbi/6421/the_science_delusion.html |archive-date=16 April 2012 }}</ref>


In the book, Sheldrake proposes a number of questions as the theme of each chapter that seek to elaborate on his central premise that science is predicated on the belief that the nature of reality is fully understood, with only minor details needing to be filled in. This "delusion" is what Sheldrake argues has turned science into a series of dogmas grounded in philosophical materialism rather than an open-minded approach to investigating phenomena. He argues that many powerful taboos circumscribe what scientists can legitimately direct their attention towards.{{r|ssf|page1=6–12}} The mainstream view of modern science is that it proceeds by ] and does not require philosophical materialism.<ref>{{cite book |title=Nonsense on Stilts: How to Tell Science from Bunk |last=Pigliucci|first=Massimo |author-link=Massimo Pigliucci |publisher=University of Chicago Press |year=2010 |page=192 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aC8Baky2qTcC&pg=PA192 |isbn=9780226667874}}</ref>
Reviews from outside of the scientific community were often positive. Philosopher ] writing in ''The Guardian'' welcomed it as "a new mind-body paradigm" to address "the unlucky fact that our current form of mechanistic materialism rests on muddled, outdated notions of matter".<ref name="Midgley 2012"/> She also stated that Sheldrake's "analogy between natural regularities and habit" could be found in the writings of ], ], ] and ].<ref name="Midgley 2012"/> <!-- Writer and former Anglican priest ] also reviewed the book positively,<ref name="Vernon 2012"/> as did ] in '']''.<ref name="Tudge"/>--> In another review, ] commended Sheldrake for wanting "to end the breach between science and religion".<ref name=chopra-review/> Philosopher ] in '']'' wrote that "Sheldrake pokes enough holes in such certainties to make this work a valuable contribution, not only to philosophical debates but also to scientific ones, too", although Cohen noted that Sheldrake "goes a bit too far here and there".<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=]|url=http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/books/the-science-delusion-freeing-the-spirit-of-enquiry/419245.article|title=The Science Delusion: Freeing the Spirit of Enquiry|author=]|date=8 March 2012}}</ref>


Sheldrake questions conservation of energy; he calls it a "standard scientific dogma,"{{r|ssf|page1=337}} says that perpetual motion devices and ] should be investigated as possible phenomena,{{r|ssf|page1=72–73}} and has said that "the evidence for energy conservation in living organisms is weak."{{r|ssf|page1=83}} He argues in favour of ] and ], saying that their recognition as legitimate is impeded by a "scientific priesthood" with an "authoritarian mentality."{{r|ssf|page1=327}} Citing his earlier "psychic staring effect" experiments and other reasons, he says that minds are not confined to brains and that "liberating minds from confinement in heads is like being released from prison."{{r|ssf|page1=229}} He suggests that ] is insufficient to explain ], and that inheritance of form and behaviour is mediated through morphic resonance.{{r|ssf|page1=157–186}} He also promotes morphic resonance in broader fashion as an explanation for other phenomena such as memory.{{r|ssf|page1=187–211}}
In a mixed review, ] writing in '']'' commented that Sheldrake was "at his most incisive" when making a "broad critique of contemporary science" and "]", but on Sheldrake's "own scientific theories" Appleyard noted that "morphic resonance is widely derided and narrowly supported. Most of the experimental evidence is contested, though Sheldrake argues there are 'statistically significant' results". Appleyard said "it is certainly highly speculative" and "I simply can't tell whether it makes sense or not".<ref name="Appleyard"/>


Reviews were mixed. ] philosopher ], writing in ''The Guardian'', welcomed it as "a new mind-body paradigm" to address what she called "the unlucky fact that our current form of mechanistic materialism rests on muddled, outdated notions of matter."<ref name="Midgley 2012"/> Philosopher ], a famous critic of esotericism in science, wrote in '']'' that "here is a lot to be said for debunking orthodox science's pretensions to be on the verge of fitting the last grain of information into its towering edifice of universal knowledge", while also noting that Sheldrake "goes a bit too far here and there, as in promoting his morphic resonance theory."<ref>{{cite news |work=]|url=http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/books/the-science-delusion-freeing-the-spirit-of-enquiry/419245.article|title=The Science Delusion: Freeing the Spirit of Enquiry|last=Cohen|first=Martin|author-link=Martin Cohen (philosopher)|date=8 March 2012}}</ref>
Other reviews were less favourable. '']'''s deputy editor Graham Lawton characterised ''Science Set Free'' as "woolly credulousness" and chided Sheldrake for "uncritically embracing all kinds of fringe ideas".<ref>{{cite journal |journal=New Scientist |author=Lawton, Graham |title=Science's greatest critic is no mood to recant |date= 31 August 2012 |url=http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/culturelab/2012/08/the-science-behind-our-weirdest-behaviours.html}}</ref> A review in '']'' called the book "disturbingly eccentric", combining "a disorderly collage of scientific fact and opinion with an intrusive yet disjunctive metaphysical programme".<ref>{{cite journal |title=The Science Delusion by Rupert Sheldrake |url=http://philosophynow.org/issues/93/The_Science_Delusion_by_Rupert_Sheldrake |journal=Philosophy Now |date=July/August 2013 |author=Greenbank, John}}</ref>


] writing in '']'' commented that Sheldrake was "at his most incisive" when making a "broad critique of contemporary science" and "]," but on Sheldrake's "own scientific theories" Appleyard noted that "morphic resonance is widely derided and narrowly supported. Most of the experimental evidence is contested, though Sheldrake argues there are 'statistically significant' results." Appleyard called it "highly speculative" and was unsure "whether it makes sense or not."<ref name="Appleyard"/>
== In the media and in public ==


Other reviews were less favourable. '']'''s deputy editor Graham Lawton characterised ''Science Set Free'' as "woolly credulousness" and chided Sheldrake for "uncritically embracing all kinds of fringe ideas."<ref>{{cite journal |journal=New Scientist |last=Lawton|first=Graham|title=Science's greatest critic is no mood to recant |date= 31 August 2012 |url=https://www.newscientist.com/blogs/culturelab/2012/08/the-science-behind-our-weirdest-behaviours.html}}</ref> A review in '']'' called the book "disturbingly eccentric," combining "a disorderly collage of scientific fact and opinion with an intrusive yet disjunctive metaphysical programme."<ref>{{cite journal |title=The Science Delusion by Rupert Sheldrake |url=http://philosophynow.org/issues/93/The_Science_Delusion_by_Rupert_Sheldrake |journal=Philosophy Now |date=July–August 2013 |last=Greenbank|first=John}}</ref>
Sheldrake has received popular coverage through newspapers, radio, television and speaking engagements. The attention he receives has raised concerns that it adversely affects the public understanding of science.<ref name=whitfield/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=Rutherford/> Some have accused Sheldrake of self-promotion,<ref name=Rutherford/> with one commenting, "for the inventors of such hypotheses the rewards include a degree of instant fame which is harder to achieve by the humdrum pursuit of more conventional science."<ref name=rose/>


=== ''Science and Spiritual Practices'' (2017) ===
=== On television ===
Reviews for the book were mostly positive. '']'' described it as a "grounded and inspiring approach to appreciating the benefits of both science and religion".<ref>{{Cite web |date=June 15, 2018 |title=Science and Spiritual Practices by Rupert Sheldrake |url=https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/rupert-sheldrake/science-and-spiritual-practices/ |website=]}}</ref> Adam Ford, reviewing the book for the '']'', describes it as a "useful and very clear introduction to the practice of meditation" combined with a how-to guide on the "healing and happiness-creating power of gratitude".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Ford |first1=Adam |date=August 24, 2018 |title=Science and Spiritual Practices by Rupert Sheldrake |url=https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2018/24-august/books-arts/book-reviews/science-and-spiritual-practices-rupert-sheldrake |access-date=13 December 2018 |website=Church Times}}</ref>
An experiment involving measuring the time for subjects to recognise hidden images, with morphic resonance being posited to aid in recognition, was conducted in 1984 by the ] popular science programme '']''.<ref name=ansl-reissue/> In the outcome of the experiment, one set of data yielded positive results and another set yielded negative results.<ref name=heretics/>


'']'' reviewed the book as having "accessible suggestions" and "clear arguments", while noting that "a few fuzzy moments, including reliance on many...overly speculative accounts" do not prevent the work from being "otherwise convincing" and "a good case for reincorporating bygone spiritual habits."<ref name="PubWeekly2018">{{cite news |title=Science and Spiritual Practices by Rupert Sheldrake |url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/9781640091177 |access-date=1 December 2022 |work=www.publishersweekly.com |date=11 June 2018}}</ref>
Sheldrake was the subject of an episode of ''Heretics of Science'', a six-part documentary series broadcast on ] in 1994.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.episodecalendar.com/show/heretics-of-science |title=Heretics of Science |publisher=episodecalendar.com}}</ref> On this episode, John Maddox discussed "A book for burning?", his 1981 ''Nature'' editorial review of Sheldrake's book, ''A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Morphic Resonance''. Maddox said that morphic resonance "is not a scientific theory. Sheldrake is putting forward magic instead of science, and that can be condemned with exactly the language that the popes used to condemn Galileo, and for the same reasons: it is heresy."<ref name=heretics/> The broadcast repeatedly displayed footage of book burning, sometimes accompanied by audio of a crowd chanting "heretic".<ref name=heretics/> Biologist ] criticised the broadcast for focusing on Maddox's rhetoric as if it was "all that mattered". "There wasn't much sense of the scientific or metascientific issues at stake", Rose said.<ref name="Rose 1994"/>


===Debating and lecturing=== ===''Ways to Go Beyond and Why They Work'' (2019)===
Reviews for the book were mixed. In '']'', journalist ] called Sheldrake's writing "very engaging" and said his defense of prayer worked "sometimes, but not always" and was "not really good enough".<ref name="PooleTelegraph2019">{{cite news |last1=Poole |first1=Steven |title=Ways to Go Beyond and Why They Work review: Can science and spirituality mix? |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/ways-go-beyond-work-review-can-science-spirituality-mix/ |access-date=1 December 2022 |work=The Telegraph |date=5 April 2019}}</ref> Veterinary surgeon and barrister ], writing in ], called the book "a very mixed bag" but also "funny, wise, full of whimsical weirdness".<ref name="FosterLiteraryReview">{{cite news |last1=Foster |first1=Charles A. |title=More Morphic Resonances |url=https://literaryreview.co.uk/more-morphic-resonances |work=Literary Review |language=en}}</ref>
Sheldrake debated biologist ] on the existence of telepathy in 2004 at the ] in London.<ref name=new-scientist-wolpert/> Sheldrake marshalled evidence for telepathy while Wolpert argued that telepathy fits ]'s definition of ] and that the evidence for telepathy has not been persuasive.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/D&C/controversies/RSA_text.html |title=The RSA Telepathy Debate – Text |publisher=sheldrake.org}}</ref> Reporting on the event, ''New Scientist'' said "it was clear the audience saw Wolpert as no more than a killjoy. (...) There are sound reasons for doubting Sheldrake's data. One is that some parapsychology experimenters have an uncanny knack of finding the effect they are looking for. There is no suggestion of fraud, but something is going on, and science demands that it must be understood before conclusions can be drawn about the results".<ref name=new-scientist-wolpert/>


Writing in the '']'', anthropologist Jonathan Benthall called the book "an affable, erudite manual to show how life need not be boring", and Sheldrake's arguments "soft at the edges, sometimes presenting his hypotheses as facts".<ref name="BenthallTLS2019">{{cite news |last1=Benthall |first1=Jonathan |title=Rupert Sheldrake" Ways to Go Beyond and Why They Work |url=http://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A631649843/AONE |access-date=1 December 2022 |work=Times Literary Supplement |date=12 April 2019 |page=31}}</ref>
In 2006, Sheldrake spoke at a meeting of the ] about experimental results on telepathy replicated by "a 1980s girl band", drawing criticism from ], ], and ]. The Royal Society also reacted to the event saying, "Modern science is based on a rigorous evidence-based process involving experiment and observation. The results and interpretations should always be exposed to robust peer review."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1528150/Festival-attacked-over-paranormal-nonsense.html |title=Festival attacked over paranormal 'nonsense' |date=6 September 2006 |newspaper=The Telegraph |author1=Highfield, Roger |author2=Fleming, Nic}}</ref>


== Public reception ==
In April 2008, Sheldrake was stabbed in the leg by a mentally ill man during a lecture in ]. Sheldrake subsequently recovered.<ref name=SFNM/><ref>{{cite news |author=Sharpe, Tom |date=5 December 2008 |title=Judge orders mental-health help for man who insists his mind is being controlled |newspaper=Santa Fe New Mexican}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.albuquerquejournal.com/news/state/apguilty11-08-08.htm |title=Jury Finds Japanese Attacker Guilty, Mentally Ill |work=] |date=8 November 2008 |accessdate=6 November 2013}}</ref>
Sheldrake's ideas have been discussed in academic journals and books. His work has also received popular coverage through newspapers, radio, television and speaking engagements. The attention he receives has raised concerns that it adversely affects the public understanding of science.<ref name=whitfield/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/><ref name=rose/><ref name=Rutherford/> Some have accused Sheldrake of self-promotion,<ref name=Rutherford/> with Steven Rose commenting, "for the inventors of such hypotheses the rewards include a degree of instant fame which is harder to achieve by the humdrum pursuit of more conventional science."<ref name=rose/>


=== Academic debate ===
In January 2013, Sheldrake gave a ] lecture at TEDxWhitechapel in ] roughly summarising ideas from his book, ''The Science Delusion''. In his talk, Sheldrake stated that modern science rests on ten dogmas which "fall apart" upon examination and promoted his hypothesis of morphic resonance. According to a statement issued by TED staff, TED's scientific advisors "questioned whether his list is a fair description of scientific assumptions" and believed that "there is little evidence for some of Sheldrake's more radical claims, such as his theory of morphic resonance". The advisors recommended that the talk "should not be distributed without being framed with caution". The video of the talk was moved from the TEDx YouTube channel to the TED blog accompanied by the framing language called for by the advisors. The move and framing prompted accusations of censorship, to which TED responded by saying the accusations were "simply not true" and that Sheldrake's talk was "up on our website".<ref name=tedblog/><ref name=independent>{{cite news |author=Bignell, Paul |newspaper=The Independent |url=http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/ted-conference-censorship-row-8563105.html |title=TED conference censorship row |publisher=Independent Print Limited |date=7 April 2013}}</ref>
A variety of responses to Sheldrake's ideas have appeared in prominent scientific publications.


Sheldrake and theoretical physicist ] published a dialogue in 1982 in which they compared Sheldrake's ideas to Bohm's ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Sheldrake|first1=R.|last2=Bohm|first2=D.|year=1982 |title=Morphogenetic fields and the implicate order |journal=ReVision |volume=5 |page=41}}</ref> In 1997, physicist ] speculated about Sheldrake's work in relation to ].<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Dürr|editor-first=H. P.|year=1997 |title=Rupert Sheldrake in der Diskussion |publisher=Scherz}}</ref>
In November 2013, Sheldrake gave a lecture at the ] outlining his claims, made in ''The Science Delusion'', that modern science has become constrained by dogma. Sheldrake argued that these dogmatic constraints are particularly evident in physics. Despite the fact, he said, that scientists around the world consistently get different measurements for such "constants" as the ] or the ], they insist that the variation is attributable to experimental error or they "make up" proportions of dark energy and matter, assuring that the variations they've observed can be made to fit into the established paradigm. "What if the laws of nature vary throughout the day," Sheldrake asked.<ref name=OxStu>Gillett, George, , 28 November 2013, '']''. Retrieved 25 December 2013.</ref>


Following the publication of ''A New Science of Life'', '']'' sponsored a competition to devise empirical tests for morphic resonance.<ref name="Roszak"/> The winning idea involved learning Turkish nursery rhymes, with psychologist and broadcaster ]'s entry involving babies' behaviour coming second.<ref name="Blackmore 2009"/> Blackmore found the results did not support morphic resonance.<ref name="Blackmore 2009"/>
== Prominent criticism ==
A variety of responses to Sheldrake's ideas have appeared in prominent scientific publications.


In 2005, the '']'' devoted a special issue to Sheldrake's work on the sense of being stared at.<ref name=sciam/> For this issue, the editor could not follow the journal's standard peer-review process because "making successful blind peer review a condition of publication would in this case have killed the project at the outset."<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.imprint.co.uk/Editorial12_6.pdf |title=The Sense of Being Glared At- What Is It Like to be a Heretic? |author= Anthony Freeman |access-date=12 December 2013 |archive-date=28 July 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130728012154/http://www.imprint.co.uk/Editorial12_6.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> The issue thus featured several articles by Sheldrake, followed by the open peer review, to which Sheldrake then responded.<ref name=sciam/> Writing in ''Scientific American'', Michael Shermer rated the peer commentaries, and noted that the more supportive reviews came from those who had affiliations with less mainstream institutions.<ref name=sciam/>
Sheldrake and theoretical physicist ] published a dialogue in 1982 in which they compared Sheldrake's ideas to Bohm's ].<ref>{{cite journal |author=Sheldrake, R., & Bohm, D. |year=1982 |title=Morphogenetic fields and the implicate order |journal=ReVision |volume=5 |page=41}}</ref> In 1997, physicist ] speculated about Sheldrake's work in relation to ].<ref>{{cite book |author=Dürr, H. P. (Ed.) |year=1997 |title=Rupert Sheldrake in der Diskussion |publisher=Scherz}}</ref>


Sheldrake denies that DNA contains a recipe for ]. He and developmental biologist Lewis Wolpert have made a ] about the importance of ] in the developing organism. Wolpert bet Sheldrake "a case of fine port" that "By 1 May 2029, given the genome of a fertilised egg of an animal or plant, we will be able to predict in at least one case all the details of the organism that develops from it, including any abnormalities." The Royal Society will be asked to determine the winner if the result is not obvious.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20327161.100-what-can-dna-tell-us-place-your-bets-now.html |title=What can DNA tell us? Place your bets now |journal=New Scientist |date=8 July 2009 |last1=Wolpert|first1=L.|last2=Sheldrake|first2=R. }}</ref>
Following the publication of ''A New Science of Life'', '']'' sponsored a competition to devise empirical tests for morphic resonance.<ref name="Roszak"/> The winning idea involved learning Turkish nursery rhymes, with psychologist and broadcaster ]'s entry involving babies' behaviour coming second.<ref name="Blackmore 2009"/> Blackmore found the results did not support the theory however Sheldrake disagreed,<ref name="Blackmore 2009"/> and detailed the experiments in his next book, ''The Presence of the Past''.


===="A book for burning?"====
In 2005, the '']'' devoted a special issue to Sheldrake's work on the sense of being stared at.<ref name=sciam/> For this issue, the editor could not follow the journal's standard peer review process because "making successful blind peer review a condition of publication would in this case have killed the project at the outset".<ref></ref> The issue thus featured several articles by Sheldrake, followed by the open peer-review to which Sheldrake then responded.<ref name=sciam/> Writing in ''Scientific American'', Michael Shermer rated the peer commentaries, and noted that the more supportive reviews came from those who had affiliations with less mainstream institutions.<ref name=sciam/>
In September 1981, ''Nature'' published an editorial about ''A New Science of Life'' entitled "A book for burning?"<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/> Written by the journal's senior editor, ], the editorial commented:


{{blockquote|Sheldrake's book is a splendid illustration of the widespread public misconception of what science is about. In reality, Sheldrake's argument is in no sense a scientific argument but is an exercise in pseudo-science ... Many readers will be left with the impression that Sheldrake has succeeded in finding a place for magic within scientific discussion—and this, indeed, may have been a part of the objective of writing such a book.<ref name="Maddox 1981"/>}}
Sheldrake and developmental biologist Lewis Wolpert have made a ] about the importance of ] in the developing organism. Wolpert bet Sheldrake "a case of fine port" that "By 1 May 2029, given the genome of a fertilised egg of an animal or plant, we will be able to predict in at least one case all the details of the organism that develops from it, including any abnormalities." Sheldrake denies that DNA contains a recipe for ]. The Royal Society will be asked to determine the winner if the result is not obvious.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20327161.100-what-can-dna-tell-us-place-your-bets-now.html |title=What can DNA tell us? Place your bets now |journal=New Scientist |date=8 July 2009 |author=Wolpert, L.; Sheldrake, R.}}</ref>


Maddox argued that Sheldrake's hypothesis was not ] or "falsifiable in Popper's sense," referring to the philosopher ]. He said Sheldrake's proposals for testing his hypothesis were "time-consuming, inconclusive in the sense that it will always be possible to account for another morphogenetic field and impractical."<ref name="Maddox 1981" /> In the editorial, Maddox ultimately rejected the suggestion that the book should be burned.<ref name="Maddox 1981" /> Nonetheless, the title of the piece garnered widespread publicity.<ref name="maddox2" /><ref name="Rutherford" /><ref name="Rose 1988" /> In a subsequent issue, ''Nature'' published several letters expressing disapproval of the editorial,<ref name="josephson">{{cite journal |last=Josephson|first=B. D.|year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |page=594 |doi=10.1038/293594b0 |issue=5833|bibcode=1981Natur.293..594J|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Clarke|first=C. J. S. |year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |page=594 |doi=10.1038/293594a0 |issue=5833|bibcode=1981Natur.293..594C |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Hedges|first=R. |year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |page=506 |doi=10.1038/293506d0 |issue=5833|bibcode=1981Natur.293..506H |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Cousins|first=F. W. |year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |pages=506–594 |doi=10.1038/293506e0 |issue=5833 |bibcode=1981Natur.293..506C |doi-access=free }}</ref> including one from physicist ], who criticised Maddox for "a failure to admit even the possibility that genuine physical facts may exist which lie outside the scope of current scientific descriptions."<ref name="josephson" /><!--Additional citations needed: Other letters called for Sheldrake's ideas to be tested scientifically to determine their validity.-->
==="A book for burning?"===
In September 1981, ''Nature'' published an editorial about ''A New Science of Life'' entitled "A book for burning?"<ref name=TimAdams/><ref name="Maddox 1981"/> Written by the journal's senior editor, ], the editorial said
{{quote|...Sheldrake's book is a splendid illustration of the widespread public misconception of what science is about. In reality, Sheldrake's argument is in no sense a scientific argument but is an exercise in pseudo-science... Many readers will be left with the impression that Sheldrake has succeeded in finding a place for magic within scientific discussion – and this, indeed, may have been a part of the objective of writing such a book.<ref name="Maddox 1981"/>}}


In 1983, an editorial in ''The Guardian''<!-- possibly by Brian Inglis --> compared the "petulance of wrath of the scientific establishment" aimed against Sheldrake with the ] and ].<ref name="Galileo">''Being more than sorry about Galileo'', '']'', 14 May 1983, p. 10</ref> Responding in the same paper, ] defended the scientific establishment, affirming that "the ultimate test of a scientific theory is its conformity with the observations and experiments" and that "vitalistic and Lamarckian ideas which seem to regard so highly have repeatedly failed this test."<ref name="Charlesworth">], ''The Holy See—but it takes a long time to admit it'', '']'', 19 May 1983, p. 12.</ref>
Maddox argued that Sheldrake's hypothesis was not ] or "falsifiable in Popper's sense", referring to the work of philosopher ]. He said Sheldrake's proposals for testing his hypothesis were "time-consuming, inconclusive in the sense that it will always be possible to account for another morphogenetic field and impractical".<ref name="Maddox 1981"/> In the editorial, Maddox ultimately rejected the suggestion that the book should be burned.<ref name="Maddox 1981"/> Nonetheless, the title of the piece garnered widespread publicity.<ref name=maddox2/><ref name=Rutherford/><ref name="Rose 1988"/> In a subsequent issue, ''Nature'' published several letters expressing disapproval of the editorial,<ref name=josephson>{{cite journal |author=Josephson, B. D. |year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |page=594 |doi=10.1038/293594b0 |issue=5833}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Clarke, C. J. S. |year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |page=594 |doi=10.1038/293594a0 |issue=5833}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Hedges, R. |year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |page=506 |doi=10.1038/293506d0 |issue=5833}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Cousins, F. W. |year=1981 |title=Incendiary subject |journal=Nature |volume=293 |pages=506–594 |doi=10.1038/293506e0 |issue=5833}}</ref> including one from physicist ], who criticised Maddox for "a failure to admit even the possibility that genuine physical facts may exist which lie outside the scope of current scientific descriptions."<ref name=josephson/><!--Additional citations needed: Other letters called for Sheldrake's ideas to be tested scientifically to determine their validity.-->


In a letter to ''The Guardian'' in 1988, a scientist from ]<!-- that is David P. Leader, Glasgow University--> referred to the title "A book for burning?" as "posing the question to attract attention" and criticised the "perpetuation of the myth that Maddox ever advocated the burning of Sheldrake's book."<ref name="Leader"/> In 1999, Maddox characterised his 1981 editorial as "injudicious," saying that even though it concluded that Sheldrake's book
In 1983, an editorial in ''The Guardian''<!-- possibly by Brian Inglis --> compared the "petulance of wrath of the scientific establishment" aimed against Sheldrake with the ] and ].<ref name="Galileo">''Being more than sorry about Galileo'', '']'', 14 May 1983, p. 10</ref> Responding in the same paper, ] defended the scientific establishment, describing Sheldrake as an "eccentric figure" and commenting that "the ultimate test of a scientific theory is its conformity with the observations and experiments" and that "vitalistic and Lamarckian ideas which seem to regard so highly have repeatedly failed this test".<ref name="Charlesworth">], ''The Holy See—but it takes a long time to admit it'', '']'', 19 May 1983, p. 12.</ref>


In a letter to ''The Guardian'' in 1988, a scientist from ]<!-- that is David P. Leader, Glasgow University--> referred to the title "A book for burning?" as "posing the question to attract attention" and criticised the "perpetuation of the myth that Maddox ever advocated the burning of Sheldrake's book".<ref name="Leader"/> In 1999, Maddox characterised his 1981 editorial as "injudicious", saying that even though it concluded that Sheldrake's book <blockquote>...should not be burned... but put firmly in its place among the literature of intellectual aberration.... The publicists for Sheldrake's publishers were nevertheless delighted with the piece, using it to suggest that the Establishment (''Nature'') was again up to its old trick of suppressing uncomfortable truths."<ref name=maddox2/></blockquote> An editor for ''Nature'' said in 2009 that Maddox's reference to ] backfired.<ref name=Rutherford/> <blockquote>should not be burned ... but put firmly in its place among the literature of intellectual aberration. ... The publicists for Sheldrake's publishers were nevertheless delighted with the piece, using it to suggest that the Establishment (''Nature'') was again up to its old trick of suppressing uncomfortable truths.<ref name=maddox2/></blockquote> An editor for ''Nature'' said in 2009 that Maddox's reference to ] backfired.<ref name=Rutherford/>


In 2012, Sheldrake described his experiences after publication of Maddox's editorial review as being "exactly like a papal excommunication. From that moment on, I became a very dangerous person to know for scientists."<ref name=TimAdams/> In 2012, Sheldrake described his time after Maddox's review as being "exactly like a papal excommunication. From that moment on, I became a very dangerous person to know for scientists."<ref name=TimAdams/>


===Sheldrake and Steven Rose=== ====Sheldrake and Steven Rose====
From 1987 to 1988 Sheldrake contributed several pieces to ''The Guardian'''s "Body and Soul" column. In one of these, he wrote that the idea that "memories were stored in our brains" was "only a theory" and "despite decades of research, the phenomenon of memory remains mysterious".<ref>{{cite news|title=Resonace (sic) of memory: Body and soul|author=Sheldrake, Rupert|newspaper=The Guardian|date=6 April 1988|page=21}}</ref> This provoked a response by Professor ], a neuroscientist from the ], who criticised Sheldrake for being "a researcher trained in another discipline" (botany) for not "respect the data collected by neuroscientists before begin to offer us alternative explanations", and accused Sheldrake of "ignoring or denying" "massive evidence", and arguing that "neuroscience over the past two decades has shown that memories are stored in specific changes in brain cells". Giving an example of experiments on ], Rose asserted "egregious errors that Sheldrake makes to bolster his case that demands a new vague but all-embracing theory to resolve.".<ref name="Rose 1988"/> During 1987 and 1988 Sheldrake contributed several pieces to ''The Guardian'''s "Body and Soul" column. In one of these, he wrote that the idea that "memories were stored in our brains" was "only a theory" and "despite decades of research, the phenomenon of memory remains mysterious."<ref>{{cite news|title=Resonace of memory: Body and soul|last=Sheldrake|first=Rupert|work=The Guardian|date=6 April 1988|page=21}}</ref> This provoked a response by ], a neuroscientist from the ], who criticised Sheldrake for being "a researcher trained in another discipline" (botany) for not "respect the data collected by neuroscientists before begin to offer us alternative explanations," and accused Sheldrake of "ignoring or denying" "massive evidence," and arguing that "neuroscience over the past two decades has shown that memories are stored in specific changes in brain cells." Giving an example of experiments on chicks, Rose asserted "egregious errors that Sheldrake makes to bolster his case that demands a new vague but all-embracing theory to resolve."<ref name="Rose 1988"/>


Sheldrake responded to Rose's article, stating that there was experimental evidence that showed that "memories can survive the destruction of the putative memory traces".<ref>{{cite news|title=The chick and egg of morphic resonance|author=Rupert Sheldrake|newspaper=The Guardian|date=20 April 1988|page=23}}</ref> Rose subsequently responded, asking Sheldrake to "get his facts straight", explaining the research and concluding that "there is no way that this straightforward and impressive body of evidence can be taken to imply that memories are not in the brain, still less that the brain is tuning into some indeterminate, undefined, resonating and extra-corporeal field".<ref>{{cite news|title=No proof that the brain is tuned in|author=Steven Rose|date=27 April 1988|newspaper=The Guardian|page=23}}</ref> Sheldrake responded to Rose's article, stating that there was experimental evidence that showed that "memories can survive the destruction of the putative memory traces."<ref>{{cite news|title=The chick and egg of morphic resonance|last=Sheldrake|first=Rupert|work=The Guardian|date=20 April 1988|page=23}}</ref> Rose responded, asking Sheldrake to "get his facts straight," explaining the research and concluding that "there is no way that this straightforward and impressive body of evidence can be taken to imply that memories are not in the brain, still less that the brain is tuning into some indeterminate, undefined, resonating and extra-corporeal field."<ref>{{cite news|title=No proof that the brain is tuned in|last=Rose|first=Steven| date=27 April 1988|work=The Guardian|page=23}}</ref>


In his next column, Sheldrake again attacked Rose for following "]", and argued that ] had "overturned" materialism, and suggested that "memories may turn out to depend on morphic resonance rather than memory traces".<ref>Memory over matter: Body and Soul The Guardian 4 May 1988, p 21</ref> Philosopher ] of the ], responding to what he called Sheldrake's "latest muddled diatribe", defended materialism, argued that Sheldrake dismissed Rose's explanation with an "absurd rhetorical comparison", asserted that quantum physics was compatible with materialism and argued that "being roughly right about great many things has given the confidence to be far more open minded than he is prepared to give them credit for"<ref>Alan Malachowski, A bum note in morphic resonance, The Guardian 11 May 1988</ref> In his next column, Sheldrake again attacked Rose for following "]," and argued that ] had "overturned" materialism, and suggested that "memories may turn out to depend on morphic resonance rather than memory traces."<ref>Memory over matter: Body and Soul The Guardian 4 May 1988, p 21</ref> Philosopher Alan Malachowski of the ], responding to what he called Sheldrake's "latest muddled diatribe," defended materialism, argued that Sheldrake dismissed Rose's explanation with an "absurd rhetorical comparison," asserted that quantum physics was compatible with materialism, and argued that "being roughly right about great many things has given the confidence to be far more open minded than he is prepared to give them credit for."<ref>Alan Malachowski, A bum note in morphic resonance, The Guardian 11 May 1988</ref>


They subsequently agreed to and arranged a test of the morphic resonance hypothesis using chicks. Sheldrake published his paper stating that the results matched his prediction that day-old chicks would be influenced by the experiences of previous batches of day-old chicks. "From the point of view of the hypothesis of formative causation, the results of this experiment are encouraging" and called for further research.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Rupert Sheldrake|journal=Rivista di Biologia|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/morphic/pdf/formative.pdf|title=An experimental test of the hypothesis of formative causation|year=1992}}</ref> Rose published separately, stating that morphic resonance was a "hypothesis disconfirmed".<ref name=rose/> He also made further criticisms of morphic resonance, and stated that "the experience of this collaboration has convinced me in practice, Sheldrake is so committed to his hypothesis that it is very hard to envisage the circumstances in which he would accept its disconfirmation".<ref name=rose/> Rose requested Professor ] ] to analyse the data, and Bateson offered his opinion that Sheldrake's interpretation of the data was "misleading" and attributable to experimenter effects.<ref name=rose/> In 1990, Sheldrake and Rose agreed to and arranged a test of the morphic resonance hypothesis using chicks.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SyeKFT9hPTUC&dq=rupert+sheldrake+steven+rose+chicks&pg=PT204 |title=The Presence of the Past: Morphic Resonance and the Habits of Nature |date=2011-07-01 |publisher=Icon Books Ltd |isbn=978-1-84831-313-2 |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Rose |first=Steven |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9SM3lw_4wTcC&dq=rupert+sheldrake+chicks&pg=PA49 |title=Lifelines: Life beyond the Gene |date=2003-10-09 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-803424-7 |language=en}}</ref> They were unable to agree on the intended joint research paper reporting their results,<ref name=":0" /> instead publishing separate and conflicting interpretations. Sheldrake published a paper stating that the results matched his prediction that day-old chicks would be influenced by the experiences of previous batches of day-old chicks—"From the point of view of the hypothesis of formative causation, the results of this experiment are encouraging"—and called for further research.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |journal=Rivista di Biologia |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/morphic/pdf/formative.pdf |title=An experimental test of the hypothesis of formative causation |year=1992 |volume=85 |issue=3–4 |pages=431–43 |pmid=1341836 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130727181657/http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles%26Papers/papers/morphic/pdf/formative.pdf |archive-date=27 July 2013 }}</ref> Rose wrote that morphic resonance was a "hypothesis disconfirmed."<ref name=rose/> He also made further criticisms of morphic resonance, and stated that "the experience of this collaboration has convinced me in practice, Sheldrake is so committed to his hypothesis that it is very hard to envisage the circumstances in which he would accept its disconfirmation."<ref name=rose/> Rose asked ] to analyse the data, and Bateson offered his opinion that Sheldrake's interpretation of the data was "misleading" and attributable to experimenter effects.<ref name=rose/>


Sheldrake responded to Rose's paper by describing it as "polemic" and "aggressive tone and extravagant rhetoric" and concluding that "The results of this experiment do not disconfirm the hypothesis of formative causation, as Rose claims. They are consistent with it."<ref>{{cite journal|title=Rose Refuted|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/morphic/Rose_refuted.html|journal=Rivista di Biologia}}</ref> Sheldrake responded to Rose's paper by describing it as "polemic" and "aggressive tone and extravagant rhetoric" and concluding: "The results of this experiment do not disconfirm the hypothesis of formative causation, as Rose claims. They are consistent with it."<ref>{{cite journal|title=Rose Refuted|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/morphic/Rose_refuted.html|journal=Rivista di Biologia|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130921153139/http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles%26Papers/papers/morphic/Rose_refuted.html|archive-date=21 September 2013}}</ref>


=== On television ===
==In scientific and popular culture==
Sheldrake was the subject of an episode of ''Heretics of Science'', a six-part documentary series broadcast on ] in 1994.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.episodecalendar.com/show/heretics-of-science |title=Heretics of Science |publisher=episodecalendar.com}}</ref> In this episode, John Maddox discussed "A book for burning?," his 1981 ''Nature'' editorial review of Sheldrake's book, ''A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Morphic Resonance''. Maddox said that morphic resonance "is not a scientific theory. Sheldrake is putting forward magic instead of science, and that can be condemned with exactly the language that the popes used to condemn Galileo, and for the same reasons: it is heresy."<ref name=heretics/> The broadcast repeatedly displayed footage of book burning, sometimes accompanied by audio of a crowd chanting "heretic."<ref name=heretics/> Biologist ] criticised the broadcast for focusing on Maddox's rhetoric as if it was "all that mattered." "There wasn't much sense of the scientific or metascientific issues at stake," Rose said.<ref name="Rose 1994"/>


An experiment involving measuring the time for subjects to recognise hidden images, with morphic resonance being posited to aid in recognition, was conducted in 1984 by the ] popular science programme '']''. In the outcome of the experiment, one set of data yielded positive results and another set yielded negative results.<ref name=heretics/>
Between 1989 and 1999 Sheldrake and his friends ] and ] recorded a series of trialogues exploring diverse topics relating to the "world soul" and evolution.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=sheldrake.org |title=The Sheldrake - McKenna - Abraham Trialogues |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Trialogues/}}</ref> These also resulted in a number of books based on these discussions: ''Trialogues at the Edge of the West: Chaos, Creativity and the Resacralization of the World'' (1992), ''The Evolutionary Mind: Trialogues at the Edge of the Unthinkable'' (1998), and ''The Evolutionary Mind: Conversations on science, imagination & spirit'' (2005). In an interview for the book ''Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse'', Sheldrake states he believes the use of ] "can reveal a world of consciousness and interconnection" which he says he has experienced.<ref name="Brown2005">{{cite book|last=Brown|first=David Jay|title=Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse: Contemplating the Future with Noam Chomsky, George Carlin, Deepak Chopra, Rupert Sheldrake, and Others|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=uCF5SBj0EmUC&pg=PA75|accessdate=13 December 2013|date=6 June 2005|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|isbn=9781403965325|pages=75–}}</ref>


===Public debates and lectures===
Sheldrake's work was amongst those cited in a faux research paper written by ] and submitted to '']''.<ref name=Hoax>{{cite book |editor=Sokal, A. D. |year=2000 |title=The Sokal Hoax: The Sham that Shook the Academy |publisher=U of Nebraska Press.|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=QkcuQFBXLFQC&q=Sheldrake#v=snippet&q=Sheldrake&f=false |isbn=0803219245}}</ref> In 1996, the journal published the paper as if it represented real scientific research,<ref name=Will>Will, George, , ], 30 May 1996. Republished in ''The Sokal Hoax: The Sham that Shook the Academy'', edited by Alan Sokal. University of Nebraska Press (2000). Retrieved 10 November 2013.</ref> an event which has come to be known as the ]. Sokal later said he had suggested in the hoax paper that "the 'morphogenetic field' – a bizarre New Age idea proposed by Rupert Sheldrake – constitute a cutting-edge theory of quantum gravity. This connection pure invention; even Sheldrake makes no such claim."<ref name=Hoax />
Sheldrake debated with biologist ] on the existence of telepathy in 2004 at the ] in London.<ref name=new-scientist-wolpert/> Sheldrake argued for telepathy while Wolpert argued that telepathy fits ]'s definition of ] and that the evidence for telepathy has not been persuasive.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/D&C/controversies/RSA_text.html |title=The RSA Telepathy Debate – Text |publisher=sheldrake.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131101173044/http://www.sheldrake.org/D%26C/controversies/RSA_text.html |archive-date=1 November 2013 }}</ref> Reporting on the event, ''New Scientist'' said "it was clear the audience saw Wolpert as no more than a killjoy. (...) There are sound reasons for doubting Sheldrake's data. One is that some parapsychology experimenters have an uncanny knack of finding the effect they are looking for. There is no suggestion of fraud, but something is going on, and science demands that it must be understood before conclusions can be drawn about the results."<ref name=new-scientist-wolpert/>


In 2006, Sheldrake spoke at a meeting of the ] about experimental results on telepathy replicated by "a 1980s girl band," drawing criticism from ], ], and ]. The Royal Society also reacted to the event, saying, "Modern science is based on a rigorous evidence-based process involving experiment and observation. The results and interpretations should always be exposed to robust peer review."<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1528150/Festival-attacked-over-paranormal-nonsense.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1528150/Festival-attacked-over-paranormal-nonsense.html |archive-date=12 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |title=Festival attacked over paranormal 'nonsense' |date=6 September 2006 |work=The Telegraph |last1=Highfield|first1=Roger|last2=Fleming|first2=Nic}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
Sheldrake has been described as a New Age author<ref name="Guardian holistic"/><ref name=gunther/><ref name=frazier/> and is popular among many in the New Age movement who view him as lending scientific credibility to their beliefs,<ref name=hanegraaff/><ref name=heretics/> though Sheldrake does not necessarily endorse certain New Age interpretations of his ideas.<ref name=hanegraaff/>


In April 2008, Sheldrake was stabbed by a man during a lecture in ]. The man told a reporter that he thought Sheldrake had been using him as a "guinea pig" in telepathic mind control experiments for over five years.<ref name=SFNM/> Sheldrake suffered a wound to the leg and has recovered,<ref name=SFNM/><ref>{{cite news |last=Sharpe|first=Tom|date=5 December 2008 |title=Judge orders mental-health help for man who insists his mind is being controlled |work=Santa Fe New Mexican}}</ref> while his assailant was found "guilty but mentally ill."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.albuquerquejournal.com/news/state/apguilty11-08-08.htm |title=Jury Finds Japanese Attacker Guilty, Mentally Ill |work=] |date=8 November 2008 |access-date=6 November 2013 |archive-date=12 November 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131112052039/http://www.albuquerquejournal.com/news/state/apguilty11-08-08.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>
In the ] episode of ] spinoff ], morphic fields are given as the reason that all humans have suddenly become immortal.<ref>{{cite news |title=The science behind Torchwood: Morphic Fields |last=Debnath |first=Neela |url=http://blogs.independent.co.uk/2011/09/19/the-science-behind-%E2%80%98torchwood%E2%80%99-morphic-fields/ |accessdate=7 December 2013 |newspaper=The Independent |date=19 September 2011}}</ref>


In January 2013, Sheldrake gave a ] lecture at TEDxWhitechapel in ] roughly summarising ideas from his book, ''The Science Delusion''. In his talk, he said that modern science rests on ten dogmas that "fall apart" upon examination and promoted his hypothesis of morphic resonance. According to a statement by TED staff, TED's scientific advisors "questioned whether his list is a fair description of scientific assumptions" and believed that "there is little evidence for some of Sheldrake's more radical claims, such as his theory of morphic resonance." The advisors recommended that the talk "not be distributed without being framed with caution." The video of the talk was moved from the TEDx YouTube channel to the TED blog accompanied by the framing language called for by the advisors. The move and framing prompted accusations of censorship, to which TED responded by saying the accusations were "simply not true" and that Sheldrake's talk was "up on our website."<ref name=tedblog/><ref name=independent>{{cite news |last=Bignell|first=Paul |work=The Independent |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/ted-conference-censorship-row-8563105.html |title=TED conference censorship row |publisher=Independent Print Limited |date=7 April 2013}}</ref>
Psychic ] while ] her ] "Francine" said that morphic resonance carries emotional trauma and physical ailments from ] which may be released through ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Browne |first=Sylvia |title=Psychic Healing: Using the Tools of a Medium to Cure Whatever Ails You |year=2009 |publisher=Hay House, Inc. |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=64u6Q3MvmxkC}}</ref>

In November 2013, Sheldrake gave a lecture at the ] outlining his claims, made in ''The Science Delusion'', that modern science has become constrained by dogma, particularly in physics.<ref name=OxStu>Gillett, George, , 28 November 2013, '']''. Retrieved 25 December 2013.</ref>

===In popular culture===
Between 1989 and 1999, Sheldrake, ] ] and mathematician ] recorded a series of discussions exploring diverse topics relating to the "]" and evolution.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=sheldrake.org |title=The Sheldrake–McKenna–Abraham Trialogues |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Trialogues/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131128060018/http://www.sheldrake.org/Trialogues/ |archive-date=28 November 2013 }}</ref> These resulted in a number of books based on the discussions: ''Trialogues at the Edge of the West: Chaos, Creativity and the Resacralization of the World'' (1992), ''The Evolutionary Mind: Trialogues at the Edge of the Unthinkable'' (1998), and ''The Evolutionary Mind: Conversations on Science, Imagination & Spirit'' (2005). In an interview for the book ''Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse'', Sheldrake says he believes the use of ] "can reveal a world of consciousness and interconnection", which he says he has experienced.<ref name="Brown2005">{{cite book|last=Brown|first=David Jay|title=Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse: Contemplating the Future with Noam Chomsky, George Carlin, Deepak Chopra, Rupert Sheldrake, and Others|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uCF5SBj0EmUC&pg=PA75|access-date=13 December 2013|date=6 June 2005|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|isbn=9781403965325|pages=75–}}</ref> Alternative medicine advocate ] is a supporter of Sheldrake's work.<ref name=baer>{{cite journal|doi=10.1525/maq.2003.17.2.233|title=The Work of Andrew Weil and Deepak Chopra—Two Holistic Health/New Age Gurus: A Critique of the Holistic Health/New Age Movements|year=2003|last1=Baer|first1=Hans A.|journal=Medical Anthropology Quarterly|volume=17|issue=2|pages=233–50|pmid=12846118|s2cid=28219719}}</ref><ref name=chopra-review/>

Sheldrake's work was amongst those cited in a faux research paper written by ] and submitted to '']''.<ref name=Hoax>{{cite book |editor=Sokal, A. D. |year=2000 |title=The Sokal Hoax: The Sham that Shook the Academy |publisher=University of Nebraska Press.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QkcuQFBXLFQC&q=Sheldrake |isbn=978-0803219243}}</ref> In 1996, the journal published the paper as if it represented real scientific research,<ref name=Will>Will, George, , ], 30 May 1996. Republished in ''The Sokal Hoax: The Sham that Shook the Academy'', edited by Alan Sokal. University of Nebraska Press (2000). Retrieved 10 November 2013.</ref> an event that has come to be known as the ]. Sokal later said that he had suggested in the hoax paper that 'morphogenetic fields' constituted a cutting-edge theory of quantum gravity, adding that "This connection pure invention; even Sheldrake makes no such claim."<ref name=Hoax />

Sheldrake has been described as a New Age author,<ref name="Guardian holistic"/><ref name=gunther/><ref name=frazier/> but does not endorse certain New Age interpretations of his ideas.<ref name=hanegraaff/>

The 2009 '']'' video game '']'' was inspired by Sheldrake's morphogenetic field theories.<ref name="Oswald2016">{{cite journal |last1=Somerdin |first1=Melissa |title=The game debate: Video games as innovative storytelling |journal=The Oswald Review |date=2016 |volume=18 |issue=1 |page=7 |url=https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1165&context=tor |access-date=5 November 2022}}</ref><ref name="Siliconera2010">{{cite news |title=999: 9 Hours, 9 Persons, 9 Doors Interview Gets Philosophical, Then Personal |url=https://www.siliconera.com/999-9-hours-9-persons-9-doors-interview-gets-philosophical-then-personal/ |access-date=5 November 2022 |work=Siliconera |date=3 September 2010}}</ref>


==Origin and philosophy of morphic resonance== ==Origin and philosophy of morphic resonance==
Among his early influences Sheldrake cites '']'' by ]. Sheldrake says the book led him to view contemporary scientific understanding of life as a ], which he called "the mechanistic theory of life". Reading Kuhn's work, Sheldrake says, fixed his focus on how scientific paradigms can change.<ref name=bio2/> Among his early influences Sheldrake cites '']'' (1962) by ]. He has said the book led him to view contemporary scientific understanding of life as simply a ], which he called "the mechanistic theory of life." Reading Kuhn's work, Sheldrake says, focused his mind on how scientific paradigms can change.<ref name=bio2/>

Sheldrake says that although there are similarities between morphic resonance and Hinduism's ],<ref name=Leviton/> he first conceived of the idea while at Cambridge, before his travel to India, where he later developed it. He attributes the origin of his idea to two influences: his studies of the ] tradition in biology, and French philosopher ]'s 1896 book '']''. He says he took Bergson's concept of memories not being materially embedded in the brain and generalised it to morphic resonance, where memories are not only immaterial but also under the influence of the collective memories of similar organisms. While his colleagues at Cambridge were not receptive to the idea, Sheldrake found the opposite to be true in India. He recounts his Indian colleagues saying, "There's nothing new in this, it was all known millennia ago to the ancient ]." Sheldrake thus characterises morphic resonance as a convergence between Western and ] thought, yet found by himself first in Western philosophy.<ref name=presencepast/><ref>{{cite journal |last=Ebert |first=John David |title=From Cellular Aging to the Physics of Angels: A Conversation with Rupert Sheldrake |journal=The Quest |date=Spring 1998 |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/D&C/interviews/Quest.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131022014635/http://www.sheldrake.org/D%26C/interviews/Quest.html |archive-date=22 October 2013 }}</ref>

Sheldrake has also noted similarities between morphic resonance and ]'s ], with regard to collective memories being shared across individuals and the coalescing of particular behaviours through repetition, which Jung called ].<ref name=presencepast/> But whereas Jung assumed that archetypal forms were transmitted through physical inheritance, Sheldrake attributes collective memories to morphic resonance, and rejects any explanation of them involving what he terms "mechanistic biology."


], one of Sheldrake's critics, has described morphic resonance as an updated ] ].<ref name="Wolpert 1984"/><ref>{{cite news|last=Cape|first=Jonathan|title=The believer and the sceptic|date=18 June 1986|page=11|work=The Guardian}}</ref>
Although there are similarities between morphic resonance and Hinduism's ],<ref name=Leviton/> Sheldrake says he first conceived of the idea while at Cambridge, before his travel to India where he would later develop it. He attributes the origin of his morphic resonance idea to two influences: his studies of the ] tradition in biology, and French philosopher ]'s book '']''. He says he took Bergson's concept of memories not being materially embedded in the brain and generalised it to morphic resonance, where memories are not only immaterial but also under the influence of the collective past memories of similar organisms. While his colleagues at Cambridge were not receptive to the idea, Sheldrake found the opposite to be true in India. He recounts his Indian colleagues saying, "There's nothing new in this, it was all known millennia ago to the ancient ]." Sheldrake thus characterises morphic resonance as a convergence between Western and ] thought, having originated in the West and developed in the East.<ref name=presencepast/><ref>{{cite journal |author=Ebert, John David |title=From Cellular Aging to the Physics of Angels: A Conversation with Rupert Sheldrake |magazine=The Quest |date=Spring 1998 |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/D&C/interviews/Quest.html |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131022014635/http://www.sheldrake.org/D&C/interviews/Quest.html |archivedate=22 October 2013}}</ref>


== Personal life ==
Sheldrake has also noted similarities between morphic resonance and ]'s ] with regard to collective memories being shared across individuals and to the coalescing of particular behaviours through repetition, described by Jung as ].<ref name=presencepast/> However, where Jung assumed archetypal forms were transmitted through physical inheritance, Sheldrake attributes collective memories to morphic resonance and rejects any explanation of them involving what he terms "mechanistic biology".<ref name=ansl-reissue/>
Sheldrake is married to therapist, voice teacher and author ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=May |first=Meredith |date=2012-09-30 |title=Esalen Institute turns 50 this year |url=https://www.sfgate.com/living/article/Esalen-Institute-turns-50-this-year-3906021.php |access-date=2022-08-18 |website=SFGATE |language=en-US}}</ref> They have two sons,<ref name="bio1" /> biologist ] and musician ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/2113347781_Merlin_Sheldrake|title=Merlin Sheldrake's research works &#124; University of Cambridge, Cambridge (Cam) and other places}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.cosmosheldrake.com/|title=Cosmo Sheldrake|website=Cosmo Sheldrake}}</ref> Merlin Sheldrake is a mycologist and author of ''Entangled Life: How fungi make our worlds, change our minds and shape our futures.''<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kerridge |first=Richard |date=August 27, 2020 |title=Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake review – a brilliant 'door opener' book |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/aug/27/entangled-life-by-merlin-sheldrake-review-a-brilliant-door-opener-book |access-date=January 7, 2024 |website=The Guardian}}</ref>


Sheldrake is a practising ].<ref>Benthall, Jonathan (April 12, 2019). ''TLS. Times Literary Supplement'', no. 6054, p. 31. ''Gale Academic OneFile''. Accessed 27 Nov. 2022.</ref> He has said that he studied with a Sufi teacher and practised ] while he was in India.<ref name="Arguing Science 2016, p. 1" /> Sheldrake reported "being drawn back to a Christian path" during his time in India.<ref name="bio-anglican" />
Lewis Wolpert, one of Sheldrake's critics, has described morphic resonance as being an updated ] ].<ref name="Wolpert 1984"/><ref>{{cite news|author=Jonathan Cape|title=The believer and the sceptic|date=18 June 1986|page=11|newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref>


== Full list of books == == Bibliography ==
* ''A New Science of Life: the hypothesis of formative causation'', Los Angeles, CA: J.P. Tarcher, 1981 (second edition 1985, third edition 2009). ISBN 978-1-84831-042-1. * ''A New Science of Life: the hypothesis of formative causation'', Los Angeles: J.P. Tarcher, 1981 (second edition 1985, third edition 2009). {{ISBN|978-1-84831-042-1}}.
* ''The Presence of the Past: morphic resonance and the habits of nature'', New York, NY: Times Books, 1988. ISBN 0-8129-1666-2. * ''The Presence of the Past: morphic resonance and the habits of nature'', New York: Times Books, 1988. {{ISBN|0-8129-1666-2}}.
* ''The Rebirth of Nature: The greening of science and God'', New York, NY: ], 1991. ISBN 0-553-07105-X. * ''The Rebirth of Nature: The greening of science and God'', New York: ], 1991. {{ISBN|0-553-07105-X}}.
* ''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World: a do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science'', New York, NY: ], 1995. ISBN 1-57322-014-0. * ''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World: a do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science'', New York: ], 1995. {{ISBN|1-57322-014-0}}.
* ''Dogs that Know When Their Owners are Coming Home: and other unexplained powers of animals'', New York, NY: Crown, 1999 (second edition 2011). ISBN 978-0-307-88596-8. * ''Dogs that Know When Their Owners are Coming Home: and other unexplained powers of animals'', New York: Crown, 1999 (second edition 2011). {{ISBN|978-0-307-88596-8}}.
* ''The Sense of Being Stared At: and other aspects of the extended mind'', New York, NY: ], 2003. ISBN 0-609-60807-X. * ''The Sense of Being Stared At: and other aspects of the extended mind'', New York: ], 2003. {{ISBN|0-609-60807-X}}.
* ''The Science Delusion: Freeing the spirit of enquiry'', London: Coronet, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4447-2795-1. * ''The Science Delusion: Freeing the spirit of enquiry'', London: Coronet, 2012. {{ISBN|978-1-4447-2795-1}} (U. S. Title: ''Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery'').
* ''Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery''. ], 2012. ISBN 978-0770436704. * ''Science and Spiritual Practices'', London: Coronet, 2017. {{ISBN|978-1-444-72792-0}}
* ''Ways To Go Beyond, And Why They Work: Seven Spiritual Practices in a Scientific Age'', London: Coronet, 2019. {{ISBN|978-1-473-63007-9}}.
With ] and ]:
With ] and ]:
* ''Trialogues at the Edge of the West: chaos, creativity, and the resacralisation of the world'', Santa Fe, NM: Bear & Co. Pub., 1992. ISBN 0-939680-97-1.
* ''The Evolutionary Mind: trialogues at the edge of the unthinkable'', Santa Cruz, CA: Dakota Books, 1997. ISBN 0-9632861-1-0. * ''Trialogues at the Edge of the West: chaos, creativity, and the resacralisation of the world'', Santa Fe, NM: Bear & Co. Pub., 1992. {{ISBN|0-939680-97-1}}.
* ''Chaos, Creativity and Cosmic Consciousness'', Rochester, VT: ], 2001. ISBN 0-89281-977-4. * ''The Evolutionary Mind: trialogues at the edge of the unthinkable'', Santa Cruz, CA: Dakota Books, 1997. {{ISBN|0-9632861-1-0}}.
* ''The Evolutionary Mind: conversations on science, imagination & spirit'', Rhinebeck, NY: Monkfish Book Pub. Co., 2005. ISBN 0-9749359-7-2. * ''Chaos, Creativity and Cosmic Consciousness'', Rochester, VT: ], 2001. {{ISBN|0-89281-977-4}}.
* ''The Evolutionary Mind: Conversations on Science, Imagination & Spirit'', Rhinebeck, NY: Monkfish Book Pub. Co., 2005. {{ISBN|0-9749359-7-2}}.
With ]: With ]:
* ''Natural Grace: dialogues on creation, darkness, and the soul in spirituality and science'', New York, NY: ], 1996. ISBN 0-385-48356-2. * ''Natural Grace: dialogues on creation, darkness, and the soul in spirituality and science'', New York: ], 1996. {{ISBN|0-385-48356-2}}.
* ''The Physics of Angels: exploring the realm where science and spirit meet'', San Francisco, CA: ], 1996. ISBN 0-06-062864-2. * ''The Physics of Angels: exploring the realm where science and spirit meet'', San Francisco, CA: ], 1996. {{ISBN|0-06-062864-2}}.
With ]:
* ''Boy's Best Friend'', New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2015. {{ISBN|9780374380083}}.
With ]:
* ''Arguing Science: A Dialogue on the Future of Science and Spirit'', Rhinebeck, NY: Farrar, Monkfish Books, 2016. {{ISBN|978-1-939681-57-7}}.


==See also== ==See also==
* ] * ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ] * ]
*{{annotated link|Water memory}}


== Explanatory notes ==
==Notes==
{{notelist}} {{notelist}}


==References== ==References==
{{reflist|2|refs= {{reflist|30em|refs=


<!-- self --> <!-- self -->


<ref name=ansl>{{cite book |title=A New Science of Life: the hypothesis of formative causation |location=Los Angeles, CA |publisher=J.P. Tarcher |year=1981 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert}}</ref> <ref name=presencepast>{{cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |year=2011 |title=The presence of the past: Morphic resonance and the habits of nature |publisher=Icon Books |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SyeKFT9hPTUC&pg=PT13 |isbn=9781848313132}}</ref>


<ref name=presencepast>{{cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |year=2011 |title=The presence of the past: Morphic resonance and the habits of nature |publisher=Icon Books |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=SyeKFT9hPTUC&pg=PT13 |isbn=9781848313132}}</ref> <ref name=seven-exp>{{cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |title=Seven experiments that could change the world: a do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781573225649 |url-access=registration |location=New York |publisher=Riverhead Books |year=1995|isbn=9781573225649 }}</ref>


<ref name=seven-exp>{{cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |title=Seven experiments that could change the world: a do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science |location=New York, NY |publisher=Riverhead Books |year=1995}}</ref> <ref name=dogs>{{cite book |title=Dogs that Know When Their Owners are Coming Home: and other unexplained powers of animals |location=New York |publisher=Crown |year=1999 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert}}</ref>


<ref name=dogs>{{cite book |title=Dogs that Know When Their Owners are Coming Home: and other unexplained powers of animals |location=New York, NY |publisher=Crown |year=1999 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert}}</ref> <ref name=stared>{{cite book |title=The Sense of Being Stared At: and other aspects of the extended mind |url=https://archive.org/details/senseofbeingstar00shel |url-access=registration |location=New York |publisher=Crown Publishers |year=2003 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert|isbn=9780609608074 }}</ref>


<ref name=stared>{{cite book |title=The Sense of Being Stared At: and other aspects of the extended mind |location=New York, NY |publisher=Crown Publishers |year=2003 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert}}</ref> <ref name=ssf>{{cite book |title=Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery |publisher=Deepak Chopra Books |location=New York |year=2012 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q13qPII2VDUC|isbn=9780770436711 }}</ref>


<ref name=ssf>{{cite book |title=Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery |publisher=Deepak Chopra Books |location=New York, NY |year=2012 |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Q13qPII2VDUC}}</ref> <ref name=bio1>{{cite web|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/|title=Biography of Rupert Sheldrake, PhD|publisher=sheldrake.org|access-date=18 March 2013 |last=Sheldrake|first=Rupert|url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131204222558/http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/ |archive-date=4 December 2013}}</ref>


<ref name=bio1>{{cite web|url=http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/|title=Biography of Rupert Sheldrake, PhD|publisher=sheldrake.org|accessdate=18 March 2013 |author=Sheldrake, Rupert |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131204222558/http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/ |archivedate=4 December 2013}}</ref> <ref name=bio2>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/about-rupert-sheldrake/autobiography |title=Autobiography of Rupert Sheldrake|publisher=Sheldrake.org |access-date=28 May 2008 |last=Sheldrake|first=Rupert}}</ref>


<ref name=bio2>{{cite web |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/About/biography/biography2.html |title=Biography of Rupert Sheldrake, PhD Part II |publisher=Sheldrake.org |accessdate=28 May 2008 |author=Sheldrake, Rupert}}</ref> <ref name=bio-anglican>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Doijy63RIgAC&pg=PA119 |editor=Chartres, Caroline |title=Why I Am Still an Anglican: Essays and Conversations |publisher=Continuum |date=June 2006 |isbn=9780826481436}}</ref>


<ref name=bio-anglican>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Doijy63RIgAC&pg=PA119 |editor=Chartres, Caroline |title=Why I Am Still an Anglican: Essays and Conversations |publisher=Continuum |date=June 2006 |isbn=9780826481436}}</ref> <ref name=chaos>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EViCc75ndV4C&pg=PA182 |last1=Sheldrake|first1=Rupert|last2=McKenna|first2=Terence K. |last3=Abraham|first3=Ralph |title=Chaos, Creativity, and Cosmic Consciousness |publisher=Inner Traditions / Bear & Co |year=2011 |pages=181–182 |isbn=9781594777714}}</ref>


<ref name=chaos>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=EViCc75ndV4C&pg=PA182 |author1=Sheldrake, Rupert |author2=McKenna, Terence K. |author3=Abraham, Ralph |title=Chaos, Creativity, and Cosmic Consciousness |publisher=Inner Traditions / Bear & Co |year=2011 |pages=181–182 |isbn=9781594777714}}</ref> <ref name=rebirth>{{cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |title=The Rebirth of Nature: The greening of science and God |location=New York |publisher=Bantam Books |year=1991 |isbn=978-0-553-07105-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/rebirthofnatureg00shel }}</ref>

<ref name=rebirth>{{cite book |last=Sheldrake |first=Rupert |title=The Rebirth of Nature: The greening of science and God |location=New York, NY |publisher=Bantam Books |year=1991 |isbn=0-553-07105-X}}</ref>


<!-- news --> <!-- news -->


<ref name=SFNM>{{cite news|url=http://www.santafenewmexican.com/Local%20News/Trial-planned-for-alleged-assailant |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20120217115757/http://www.santafenewmexican.com/Local%20News/Trial-planned-for-alleged-assailant |archivedate=17 February 2012 |title=Alleged assailant says he's not crazy |author=Sharpe, Tom |newspaper=The Santa Fe New Mexican |date=20 September 2008 |accessdate=25 March 2012}}</ref> <ref name=SFNM>{{cite news|url=http://www.santafenewmexican.com/Local%20News/Trial-planned-for-alleged-assailant |archive-url=http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20120130051112/http://www.santafenewmexican.com/Local%20News/Trial-planned-for-alleged-assailant |url-status=dead |archive-date=30 January 2012 |title=Alleged assailant says he's not crazy |last=Sharpe|first=Tom |work=The Santa Fe New Mexican |date=20 September 2008 |access-date=25 March 2012}}</ref>


<ref name=Leviton>Leviton, Mark, , ], February 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2013.</ref> <ref name=Leviton>Leviton, Mark, , ], February 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2013.</ref>
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<!-- new age --> <!-- new age -->


<ref name=hanegraaff>{{cite book |last=Hanegraaff |first=Wouter Jacobus |title=New Age religion and Western culture: esotericism in the mirror of secular thought |publisher=Universiteit Utrecht, Faculteit Godgeleerdheid |year=1995 |page=352 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xnrT97nXzgQC&pg=PA352 |isbn=9780791438541}}</ref> <ref name=hanegraaff>{{cite book |last=Hanegraaff |first=Wouter Jacobus |title=New Age religion and Western culture: esotericism in the mirror of secular thought |publisher=Universiteit Utrecht, Faculteit Godgeleerdheid |year=1995 |page=352 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xnrT97nXzgQC&pg=PA352 |isbn=9780791438541}}</ref>


<ref name=frazier>{{cite book |editor=Frazier, K. |title=The Hundredth Monkey and other Paradigms of the Paranormal |publisher=Prometheus |location=Buffalo |year=1991 |page=171 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=iJ1v3bggyr8C&pg=PA171 |isbn=9781615924011}}</ref> <ref name=frazier>{{cite book |editor-last=Frazier|editor-first=K.|title=The Hundredth Monkey and other Paradigms of the Paranormal |publisher=Prometheus |location=Buffalo |year=1991 |page=171 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iJ1v3bggyr8C&pg=PA171 |isbn=9781615924011}}</ref>


<ref name=gunther>{{cite book |title=The Vital Dimension: A Quest for Mind, Memory and God in the Thickness of Time |year=2006 |last=Gunther |first=Carl T. |publisher=iUniverse |location=Lincoln, NE |page=60 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ecKk3JMVVNQC&pg=PA60 |isbn=9780595402977}}</ref> <ref name=gunther>{{cite book |title=The Vital Dimension: A Quest for Mind, Memory and God in the Thickness of Time |year=2006 |last=Gunther |first=Carl T. |publisher=iUniverse |location=Lincoln, NE |page=60 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ecKk3JMVVNQC&pg=PA60 |isbn=9780595402977}}</ref>


<ref name="Guardian holistic">{{cite news |title=A holistic sense of place in the quagmire of history |newspaper=The Guardian |date=19 August 1987 |page=11}}</ref> <ref name="Guardian holistic">{{cite news |title=A holistic sense of place in the quagmire of history |work=The Guardian |date=19 August 1987 |page=11}}</ref>


<!-- media --> <!-- media -->
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<ref name=heretics>{{cite episode |series=Heretics of Science |title=Rupert Sheldrake |network=BBC |date=19 July 1994}}</ref> <ref name=heretics>{{cite episode |series=Heretics of Science |title=Rupert Sheldrake |network=BBC |date=19 July 1994}}</ref>


<!--unused<ref name=Bekoff>{{cite journal |author=Bekoff, Marc |date=14 November 2013 |title=Why Dogs Hump and Rupert Sheldrake's Morphogenic Fields |journal=Psychology Today |url=http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/201311/why-dogs-hump-and-rupert-sheldrakes-morphogenic-fields}}</ref>--> <!--unused<ref name=Bekoff>{{cite journal |last=Bekoff|first=Marc |date=14 November 2013 |title=Why Dogs Hump and Rupert Sheldrake's Morphogenic Fields |journal=Psychology Today |url=http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/201311/why-dogs-hump-and-rupert-sheldrakes-morphogenic-fields}}</ref>-->


<ref name=whitfield>{{cite journal |author=Whitfield, J. |date=22 January 2004 |title=Telepathic charm seduces audience at paranormal debate |journal=Nature |volume=427(6972) |page=277 |url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v427/n6972/full/427277b.html |bibcode=2004Natur.427..277W}}</ref> <ref name=whitfield>{{cite journal |last=Whitfield|first=J.|date=22 January 2004 |title=Telepathic charm seduces audience at paranormal debate |journal=Nature |volume=427 |page=277 |bibcode=2004Natur.427..277W |issue=6972 |doi=10.1038/427277b |pmid=14737136|doi-access=free }}</ref>


<ref name=overhyped>{{cite journal |journal=Nature |date=14 September 2006 |volume=443 |page=132 |title=Overhyped |url=http://www.scribd.com/doc/36163552/NPG-nature-vol-443-Issue-7108-Sep |doi=10.1038/443132a |issue=7108}}</ref> <ref name=overhyped>{{cite journal |journal=Nature |date=14 September 2006 |volume=443 |page=132 |title=Overhyped |doi=10.1038/443132a |issue=7108 |bibcode=2006Natur.443..132. |doi-access=free }}</ref>


<ref name=new-scientist-wolpert>{{cite journal |journal=New Scientist |title=When science meets the paranormal |url=http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18124380.200-when-science-meets-the-paranormal.html |date=13 March 2004 |volume=2438}}</ref> <ref name=new-scientist-wolpert>{{cite journal |journal=New Scientist |title=When science meets the paranormal |url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18124380.200-when-science-meets-the-paranormal.html |date=13 March 2004 |volume=2438}}</ref>


<ref name=tedblog>{{cite web |url=http://blog.ted.com/2013/03/19/the-debate-about-rupert-sheldrakes-talk/ |title=The debate about Rupert Sheldrake's talk |publisher=TED |date=19 March 2013}}</ref> <ref name=tedblog>{{cite web |url=http://blog.ted.com/2013/03/19/the-debate-about-rupert-sheldrakes-talk/ |title=The debate about Rupert Sheldrake's talk |publisher=TED |date=19 March 2013}}</ref>


<ref name=TimAdams>{{cite news |author=Adams, Tim |url=http://www.theguardian.com/science/2012/feb/05/rupert-sheldrake-interview-science-delusion |title=Rupert Sheldrake: the 'heretic' at odds with scientific dogma |newspaper=The Guardian |date=4 February 2012 |accessdate=2 November 2013}}</ref> <ref name=TimAdams>{{cite news |last=Adams|first=Tim |url=https://www.theguardian.com/science/2012/feb/05/rupert-sheldrake-interview-science-delusion |title=Rupert Sheldrake: the 'heretic' at odds with scientific dogma |work=The Guardian |date=4 February 2012 |access-date=2 November 2013}}</ref>


<!-- criticism --> <!-- criticism -->


<ref name="Maddox 1981">{{Cite journal|journal=Nature|volume=293|pages=245–246|date=24 September 1981|title=A book for burning?|doi=10.1038/293245b0|issue=5830|bibcode=1981Natur.293R.245. |quote=...Sheldrake's argument is in no sense a scientific argument but is an exercise in pseudo-science. |url=http://www.project-reason.org/images/uploads/contest/Maddox1981.pdf |author=Maddox, John}}</ref> <ref name="Maddox 1981">{{Cite journal|journal=Nature|volume=293|pages=245–246|date=24 September 1981|title=A book for burning?|doi=10.1038/293245b0|issue=5830|bibcode=1981Natur.293R.245. |quote=...Sheldrake's argument is in no sense a scientific argument but is an exercise in pseudo-science. |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/293245b0 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140823004046/http://www.project-reason.org/images/uploads/contest/Maddox1981.pdf|last=Maddox|first=John|s2cid=4330931|archive-date=23 August 2014}}</ref>


<ref name=Rutherford>{{cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2009/feb/05/evolution|author=]|title=A book for ignoring: Sheldrake persists in his claims, despite the fact that there's no evidence for them. This is bad science |newspaper=The Guardian |date=6 February 2009 |accessdate=13 July 2013}}</ref> <ref name=Rutherford>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/belief/2009/feb/05/evolution|last=Rutherford|first=Adam|author-link=Adam Rutherford|title=A book for ignoring: Sheldrake persists in his claims, despite the fact that there's no evidence for them. This is bad science |work=The Guardian |date=6 February 2009 |access-date=13 July 2013}}</ref>
<!-- <!--
<ref name=vinge>{{cite journal |author=Vinge, J. D. |year=2000 |title=Murphy's cat |journal=Nature |volume=408(6813) |pages=649 |url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v408/n6813/full/408649a0.html |quote=Rupert Sheldrake? Oh ''please''. Leave 'morphic resonance' in the dustbin where it belongs. No experiment ever found his 'mystery force field'.|bibcode = 2000Natur.408..649V |doi=10.1038/35047185 |issue=6813 }}</ref>--> <ref name=vinge>{{cite journal |last=Vinge|first=J. D.|year=2000 |title=Murphy's cat |journal=Nature |volume=408 |pages=649 |url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v408/n6813/full/408649a0.html |quote=Rupert Sheldrake? Oh ''please''. Leave 'morphic resonance' in the dustbin where it belongs. No experiment ever found his 'mystery force field'.|bibcode = 2000Natur.408..649V |doi=10.1038/35047185 |issue=6813 }}</ref>-->


<ref name="Rose 1988">{{cite news|author=]|newspaper=The Guardian|date=13 April 1988|page=27|title=Some facts that just don't resonate: Second opinion}}</ref> <ref name="Rose 1988">{{cite news|last=Rose|first=Steven|author-link=Steven Rose|work=The Guardian|date=13 April 1988|page=27|title=Some facts that just don't resonate}}</ref>
<ref name=rose>{{cite journal |journal=Riv. Biol./Biol. Forum |last=Rose |first=S. |date=March 1992 |title=So-called "Formative Causation". A Hypothesis Disconfirmed. Response to Rupert Sheldrake |volume=85 |pages=445–453 |url=http://mres.gmu.edu/pmwiki/uploads/Main/Rose1992.pdf |format=PDF |quote=Along with parapsychology, corn circles, creationism, ley-lines and "deep ecology", "formative causation", or "morphic resonance" has many of the characteristics of such pseudosciences...}}</ref> <ref name=rose>{{cite journal |journal=Rivista di Biologia |last=Rose |first=S. |date=March 1992 |title=So-called "Formative Causation." A Hypothesis Disconfirmed. Response to Rupert Sheldrake |volume=85 |issue=3/4|pages=445–453 |pmid=1341837 |url=http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles&Papers/papers/morphic/Rose_response.html |quote=Along with parapsychology, corn circles, creationism, ley-lines and "deep ecology," "formative causation," or "morphic resonance" has many of the characteristics of such pseudosciences... |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140807105012/http://www.sheldrake.org/Articles%26Papers/papers/morphic/Rose_response.html |archive-date=7 August 2014 }}</ref>
<ref name="Rose 1994">{{cite news|author=]|newspaper=The Guardian|date=8 September 1994|title=Heresy at stake|page=B11}}</ref> <ref name="Rose 1994">{{cite news|last=Rose|first=Steven|author-link=Steven Rose|work=The Guardian|date=8 September 1994|title=Heresy at stake|page=B11}}</ref>


<ref name=maddox2>{{cite journal |author=Maddox, J. |year=1999 |title=Dogs, telepathy and quantum mechanics |journal=Nature |volume=401(6756) |pages=849–850 |url=http://www.scribd.com/doc/36079004/NPG-nature-vol-401-Issue-6756-Oct#page=18|bibcode = 1999Natur.401..849M |doi = 10.1038/44696 |issue=6756 }}</ref> <ref name=maddox2>{{cite journal |last=Maddox |first=J. |year=1999 |title=Dogs, telepathy and quantum mechanics |journal=Nature |volume=401 |pages=849–850 |bibcode=1999Natur.401..849M |doi=10.1038/44696 |issue=6756 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


<ref name=gardner>{{cite book |author=Gardner, M. |year=1988 |title=The New Age: notes of a fringe-watcher |publisher=Prometheus books |quote=Almost all scientists who have looked into Sheldrake's theory consider it balderdash. |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=2ECKIASfKa8C&lpg=PA1&pg=PA112 |isbn=9781615925773}}</ref> <ref name=gardner>{{cite book|last=Gardner|first=M. |year=1988 |title=The New Age: notes of a fringe-watcher |publisher=Prometheus books |quote=Almost all scientists who have looked into Sheldrake's theory consider it balderdash. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2ECKIASfKa8C&pg=PA112 |isbn=9781615925773}}</ref>


<ref name=alcock>{{cite book |year=2003 |title=Psi wars: Getting to grips with the paranormal |publisher=Imprint Academic |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=JyfbUvuJbbYC&pg=PA231 |quote=Rupert Sheldrake's (1994) popular book ''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World'' is more of a collection of seven deadly sins of science and, from a philosophy of science standpoint, a documentation of the reasons why parapsychology is regarded as pseudoscience. |author=Alcock, J. E., Burns, J. E., & Freeman, A. (Eds.) |isbn=9780907845485}}</ref> <ref name=alcock>{{cite book |year=2003 |title=Psi wars: Getting to grips with the paranormal |publisher=Imprint Academic |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JyfbUvuJbbYC&pg=PA231 |quote=Rupert Sheldrake's (1994) popular book ''Seven Experiments That Could Change the World'' is more of a collection of seven deadly sins of science and, from a philosophy of science standpoint, a documentation of the reasons why parapsychology is regarded as pseudoscience. |editor-last1=Alcock|editor-first1=J. E.|editor-last2=Burns|editor-first2=J. E.|editor-last3=Freeman|editor-first3=A.|isbn=9780907845485}}</ref>


<ref name=wiseman1>{{cite journal |author1=Wiseman, R. |author2=Smith, M. |author3=Milton, J. |year=1998 |title=Can animals detect when their owners are returning home? An experimental test of the 'psychic pet' phenomenon |journal=British Journal of Psychology |volume=89(3) |pages=453–462 |url=http://uhra.herts.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/2299/2285/902380.pdf?sequence=1 |format=PDF |doi=10.1111/j.2044-8295.1998.tb02696.x |issue=3}}</ref> <ref name=wiseman1>{{cite journal |last1=Wiseman|first1=R. |last2=Smith|first2=M.|last3=Milton|first3=J.|year=1998 |title=Can animals detect when their owners are returning home? An experimental test of the 'psychic pet' phenomenon |journal=British Journal of Psychology |volume=89 |pages=453–462 |url=http://uhra.herts.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/2299/2285/902380.pdf?sequence=1 |format=PDF |doi=10.1111/j.2044-8295.1998.tb02696.x |issue=3|pmid=9734300 |hdl=2299/2285 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>


<ref name=wiseman2>{{cite journal |author1=Wiseman, Richard |author2=Smith, Matthew |author3=Milton, Julie |title=The 'psychic pet' phenomenon: a reply to Rupert Sheldrake |journal=Journal of the Society for Psychical Research |year=2000 |url=http://uhra.herts.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/2299/2282/902377.pdf?sequence=1 |format=PDF}}</ref> <ref name=wiseman2>{{cite journal |last1=Wiseman|first1=Richard|last2=Smith|first2=Matthew|last3=Milton|first3=Julie|title=The 'psychic pet' phenomenon: a reply to Rupert Sheldrake |journal=Journal of the Society for Psychical Research |year=2000 |url=http://uhra.herts.ac.uk/bitstream/handle/2299/2282/902377.pdf?sequence=1 |format=PDF}}</ref>


<ref name=sciam>{{cite web|url=http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=ruperts-resonance|author=Shermer, Michael|title=Rupert's Resonance|work=Scientific American|accessdate=13 July 2013}}</ref> <ref name=sciam>{{cite journal|last=Shermer|first=Michael|title=Rupert's Resonance|journal=Scientific American|volume=293|issue=5|pages=38|doi=10.1038/scientificamerican1105-38|pmid = 16318024|year=2005|bibcode=2005SciAm.293e..38S}}</ref>


<ref name=baker>{{cite journal |author=Baker, R. A. |year=2000 |title=Can We Tell When Someone is Staring at Us? |journal=Skeptical Inquirer |volume=24(2) |pages=34–40 |url=http://www.csicop.org/si/show/can_we_tell_when_someone_is_staring_at_us/}}</ref> <ref name=baker>{{cite journal |last=Baker|first=R. A.|year=2000 |title=Can We Tell When Someone is Staring at Us? |journal=Skeptical Inquirer |volume=24 | issue = 2 |pages=34–40 |url=http://www.csicop.org/si/show/can_we_tell_when_someone_is_staring_at_us/}}</ref>


<ref name="Discover2000">{{Cite journal |author=Lemley, B. |year=2000 |title=Heresy |journal=Discover |volume=21(8) |pages=60–65 |url=http://discovermagazine.com/2000/aug/featheresy}}</ref> <ref name="Discover2000">{{Cite journal |last=Lemley|first=B.|year=2000 |title=Heresy |journal=Discover |volume=21 | issue = 8 |pages=60–65 |url=https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-earth/heresy}}</ref>


<ref name=impostures>{{cite book |author=de Pracontal, M. |year=1986 |title=L'imposture scientifique en dix leçons |publisher=Editions La Découverte}}</ref> <ref name=impostures>{{cite book |last=de Pracontal|first=M.|year=1986 |title=L'imposture scientifique en dix leçons |publisher=Editions La Découverte}}</ref>


<ref name=skepdic>{{cite web|url=http://skepdic.com/morphicres.html |title=Morphic Resonance |publisher=Skepdic.com |author=Carroll, Robert Todd |accessdate=27 August 2012}}</ref> <ref name=skepdic>{{cite web|url=http://skepdic.com/morphicres.html |title=Morphic Resonance |publisher=Skepdic.com |last=Carroll|first=Robert Todd |access-date=27 August 2012}}</ref>


<ref name=samuel>{{cite book |author=Samuel, L. R. |year=2011 |title=Supernatural America: A Cultural History: A Cultural History |publisher=ABC-CLIO |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Tg4RNh0XREgC&pg=PA163#v=onepage&q&f=false |quote=...most biologists considered Sheldrake's theory of morphic resonance hogwash... |isbn=9780313398995}}</ref> <ref name=samuel>{{cite book |last=Samuel|first=L. R. |year=2011 |title=Supernatural America: A Cultural History |publisher=ABC-CLIO |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Tg4RNh0XREgC&pg=PA163 |quote=...most biologists considered Sheldrake's theory of morphic resonance hogwash... |isbn=9780313398995}}</ref>


<ref name="Blackmore 1999">{{cite journal |author=Blackmore, S. |title=If the truth is out there, we've not found it yet |journal=The Times Higher Education Supplement |date=27 August 1999 |volume= 18 |url=http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/147748.article}}</ref> <ref name="Blackmore 1999">{{cite journal |last=Blackmore|first=S.|title=If the truth is out there, we've not found it yet |journal=The Times Higher Education Supplement |date=27 August 1999 |volume= 18 |url=http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/147748.article}}</ref>


<ref name="Blackmore 2009">{{cite news |author=]|title=An idea with resonance: More than anything, Sheldrake's continuing popularity is rooted in our need to believe|url=http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/feb/04/morphic-paranormal-science-sheldrake|date=4 February 2009|newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref> <ref name="Blackmore 2009">{{cite news |last=Blackmore|first=Susan|author-link=Susan Blackmore|title=An idea with resonance: More than anything, Sheldrake's continuing popularity is rooted in our need to believe|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2009/feb/04/morphic-paranormal-science-sheldrake|date=4 February 2009|work=The Guardian}}</ref>


<ref name=sharma>{{cite book |author=Sharma, Ruchir |title=Breakout Nations: In Pursuit of the Next Economic Miracles |publisher=WW Norton & Company |year=2012 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ZhNEg2Abnr8C&pg=PT185 |quote=Despite Sheldrake's legitimate scientific credentials, his peers have roundly dismissed his theory as pseudoscience. |isbn=9780393083835}}</ref> <ref name=sharma>{{cite book|last=Sharma|first=Ruchir|author-link=Ruchir Sharma|title=Breakout Nations: In Pursuit of the Next Economic Miracles |publisher=W. W. Norton & Company |year=2012 |quote=Despite Sheldrake's legitimate scientific credentials, his peers have roundly dismissed his theory as pseudoscience. |isbn=9780393083835|title-link=Breakout Nations: In Pursuit of the Next Economic Miracles}}</ref>


<ref name="Wolpert 1984">{{Cite news|title=A matter of fact or fancy?: SECOND OPINION|author=Wolpert, Lewis|newspaper=The Guardian|date=11 January 1984|page=11}}</ref> <ref name="Wolpert 1984">{{Cite news|title=A matter of fact or fancy?|last=Wolpert|first=Lewis|author-link=Lewis Wolpert|work=The Guardian|date=11 January 1984|page=11}}</ref>


<ref name=MarksColwell>{{cite journal |author=Marks, D., & Colwell, J. |date=September/October 2000 |title=The psychic staring effect: An artifact of pseudo-randomization |journal=Skeptical Inquirer |volume=41 |page=49 |url=http://www.csicop.org/si/show/psychic_staring_effect_an_artifact_of_pseudo_randomization/}}</ref> <ref name=MarksColwell>{{cite journal |last1=Marks|first1=D.|last2=Colwell|first2=J.|date=September–October 2000 |title=The psychic staring effect: An artifact of pseudo-randomization |journal=Skeptical Inquirer |volume=24 |issue=5 |page=49 |url=http://www.csicop.org/si/show/psychic_staring_effect_an_artifact_of_pseudo_randomization/}}</ref>


<ref name=hood>{{cite book |last=Hood |first=Bruce M |title=Supersense: Why we believe in the unbelievable |publisher=HarperOne |year=2009 |page=232 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=_ijERHh6DFUC&pg=PA232 |quote="The trouble is that, whereas electric and magnetic fields are easily measurable and obey laws, morphic resonance remains elusive and has no demonstrable laws. No other area of science would accept such lawless, weak evidence as proof, which is why the majority of the scientific community has generally dismissed this theory and the evidence." |isbn=9780061867934}}</ref> <ref name=hood>{{cite book|last=Hood|first=Bruce|author-link=Bruce Hood (psychologist)|title=Supersense: Why We Believe in the Unbelievable |publisher=HarperOne |year=2009 |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/supersensewhyweb00hood |url-access=registration|quote=Sheldrake proposes that the sense of being stared at and other aspects of paranormal ability, such as telepathy and knowing about events in the future before they happen, are all evidence for a new field theory that he calls 'morphic resonance.' ... The trouble is that, whereas electric and magnetic fields are easily measurable and obey laws, morphic resonance remains elusive and has no demonstrable laws. No other area of science would accept such lawless, weak evidence as proof, which is why the majority of the scientific community has generally dismissed this theory and the evidence. |isbn=9780061867934}}</ref>


<ref name="Jones">{{cite news|author=Jones, David|newspaper=]|date=4 July 1988|title=Books: Captain Morphic – Review of 'THE PRESENCE OF THE PAST' By Rupert Sheldrake}}</ref> <ref name="Jones">{{cite news|last=Jones|first=David|work=]|date=4 July 1988|title=Books: Captain Morphic – Review of 'The Presence of the Past' By Rupert Sheldrake}}</ref>


<ref name="Leader">{{cite news|author=Leader, David P. |newspaper=The Guardian|date=20 April 1988|title=Letter to the editor}}</ref> <ref name="Leader">{{cite news|last=Leader|first=David P.|work=The Guardian|date=20 April 1988|title=Letter to the editor}}</ref>


<ref name="Parkin">{{cite news|author=Dr Alan J. Parkin, Sussex University|title=When a little learning is a dangerous thing|newspaper=The Guardian|date=16 December 1985|page=12}}</ref> <ref name="Parkin">{{cite news|last=Parkin|first=Alan J.|title=When a little learning is a dangerous thing|work=The Guardian|date=16 December 1985|page=12}}</ref>


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<ref name="Edwards">{{cite news|author=]|title=Knowing what to think; Science|newspaper=]|date=15 May 1994|page=11}}</ref> <ref name="Edwards">{{cite news|last=Edwards|first=Mark|title=Knowing what to think; Science|work=]|date=15 May 1994|page=11}}</ref>


<ref name="Midgley 2012">{{cite news|author=Midgley, Mary| title=The Science Delusion by Rupert Sheldrake – review|url=http://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jan/27/science-delusion-rupert-sheldrake-review| date=27 January 2012 |newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref> <ref name="Midgley 2012">{{cite news|last=Midgley|first=Mary| title=The Science Delusion by Rupert Sheldrake – review|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jan/27/science-delusion-rupert-sheldrake-review| date=27 January 2012 |work=The Guardian}}</ref>


<!--<ref name="Vernon 2012">{{cite news|author=Vernon, Mark| title= It's time for science to move on from materialism|url=http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/jan/28/science-move-away-materialism-sheldrake| date=28 January 2012 |newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref>--> <!--<ref name="Vernon 2012">{{cite news|last=Vernon|first=Mark| title= It's time for science to move on from materialism|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/jan/28/science-move-away-materialism-sheldrake| date=28 January 2012 |work=The Guardian}}</ref>-->


<!--<ref name="Tudge">{{cite news|author=]|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-science-delusion-freeing-the-spirit-of-enquiry-by-rupert-sheldrake-6285286.html|title=The Science Delusion: Freeing the Spirit of Enquiry, By Rupert Sheldrake|date=6 January 2012|newspaper=]}}</ref>--> <!--<ref name="Tudge">{{cite news|last=Tudge|first=Colin|author-link=Colin Tudge|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-science-delusion-freeing-the-spirit-of-enquiry-by-rupert-sheldrake-6285286.html|title=The Science Delusion: Freeing the Spirit of Enquiry, By Rupert Sheldrake|date=6 January 2012|work=]}}</ref>-->


<ref name="Appleyard">{{cite news|author=]|title=Dogmas under the microscope; The rogue scientist who dares to challenge the idea that science alone explains everything in the world|newspaper=]|date=19 February 2012|page=38}}</ref> <ref name="Appleyard">{{cite news|last=Appleyard|first=Bryan|author-link=Bryan Appleyard|title=Dogmas under the microscope; The rogue scientist who dares to challenge the idea that science alone explains everything in the world|work=]|date=19 February 2012|page=38}}</ref>


<ref name="Roszak">{{cite journal|journal=New Scientist|url=http://www.newscientist.com/data/doc/teaser/blog/201106/nsreview.pdf|date=21 July 1988|title=Habits of nature|author=]|page=63}}</ref> <ref name="Roszak">{{cite journal|journal=New Scientist|url=https://www.newscientist.com/data/doc/teaser/blog/201106/nsreview.pdf|date=21 July 1988|title=Habits of nature|last=Roszak|first=Theodore|author-link=Theodore Roszak (scholar)|page=63}}</ref>


<ref name=chopra-review>{{cite news |url=http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/chopra/article/Science-Set-Free-Good-News-for-Lumbering-Robots-3834730.php |newspaper=San Francisco Chronicle |date=2 November 2012 |author=Chopra, Deepak |title=Science Set Free – Good News for Lumbering Robots}}</ref> <ref name=chopra-review>{{cite news |url=http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/chopra/article/Science-Set-Free-Good-News-for-Lumbering-Robots-3834730.php |work=San Francisco Chronicle |date=2 November 2012 |last=Chopra|first=Deepak|author-link=Deepak Chopra|title=Science Set Free – Good News for Lumbering Robots}}</ref>


<!-- British Association controversy --> <!-- British Association controversy -->


<!--unused <!--unused
<ref name="Connor Independent 2006">{{cite news|author=]|title=Scientists angry after platform is given to 'charlatan's fantasy'|url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/scientists-angry-after-platform-is-given-to-charlatans-fantasy-414803.html|date=6 September 2006|newspaper=]}}</ref> <ref name="Connor Independent 2006">{{cite news|last=Connor|first=Steve|author-link=Steve Connor (journalist)|title=Scientists angry after platform is given to 'charlatan's fantasy'|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/scientists-angry-after-platform-is-given-to-charlatans-fantasy-414803.html|date=6 September 2006|work=]}}</ref>
unused--> unused-->


<ref name="Hawkes">{{cite news|title=Tricks of the tongue; Books|newspaper=]|date=9 April 1994|page=14|author=Nigel Hawkes}}</ref> <ref name="Hawkes">{{cite news|title=Tricks of the tongue; Books|work=]|date=9 April 1994|page=14|last=Hawkes|first=Nigel}}</ref>

<!-- misc -->


}} <!--end reflist --> }} <!--end reflist -->


==External links== ==External links==
{{Wikiquote}}
* {{Official website|http://www.sheldrake.org/}}
{{Commons category}}
* ''Belief'' with ], ], 2 January 2012. (30 minutes)
* {{Official website|https://www.sheldrake.org/}}
{{Commons category|Rupert Sheldrake}}
* "] 1:31:05 in film ''],'' VPRO, 1993.
* ''Autour de la question'' with Jean-Yves Casgha, ], 8 November 2013. In French with Sheldrake speaking English and being simultaneously translated. (19.5 minutes).
* {{IMDb name|0791102}}{{cbignore}}


{{Authority control}}
{{Parapsychology}}


{{Authority control|VIAF=68941307|LCCN=n/82/3324|BNF=120174024|GND=11903526X}}

{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see ]. -->
| NAME =Sheldrake, Rupert
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = British biologist
| DATE OF BIRTH =1942-06-28
| PLACE OF BIRTH =], Nottinghamshire
| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sheldrake, Rupert}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Sheldrake, Rupert}}
] ]
]
]
]
] ]
]
] ]
] ]
] ]
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]
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]
]

Latest revision as of 10:51, 11 November 2024

English author and parapsychological researcher This article is about Rupert Sheldrake and his theory of morphic fields. For the concept in developmental biology, see Morphogenetic field.

Rupert Sheldrake
Sheldrake in 2008
Born (1942-06-28) 28 June 1942 (age 82)
Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, England
NationalityBritish
EducationClare College, Cambridge (MA)
Harvard University
University of Cambridge (PhD)
Occupation(s)Researcher, author, critic
EmployerThe Perrott-Warrick Fund (2005–2010)
SpouseJill Purce
ChildrenCosmo Sheldrake
Merlin Sheldrake
Websitewww.sheldrake.org

Alfred Rupert Sheldrake (born 28 June 1942) is an English author and parapsychology researcher. He proposed the concept of morphic resonance, a conjecture that lacks mainstream acceptance and has been widely criticized as pseudoscience. He has worked as a biochemist at Cambridge University, a Harvard scholar, a researcher at the Royal Society, and a plant physiologist for ICRISAT in India.

Other work by Sheldrake encompasses paranormal subjects such as precognition, empirical research into telepathy, and the psychic staring effect. He has been described as a New Age author.

Sheldrake's morphic resonance posits that "memory is inherent in nature" and that "natural systems ... inherit a collective memory from all previous things of their kind." Sheldrake proposes that it is also responsible for "telepathy-type interconnections between organisms." His advocacy of the idea offers idiosyncratic explanations of standard subjects in biology such as development, inheritance, and memory.

Critics cite a lack of evidence for morphic resonance and inconsistencies between its tenets and data from genetics, embryology, neuroscience, and biochemistry. They also express concern that popular attention paid to Sheldrake's books and public appearances undermines the public's understanding of science.

Early life and education

Sheldrake was born on 28 June 1942, in Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, to Reginald Alfred Sheldrake and Doris (née Tebbutt). His father was a University of Nottingham-educated pharmacist who ran a chemist's shop on the same road as his parents' wallpaper shop. Sheldrake credits his father (an amateur naturalist and microscopist) with supporting his interests in zoology and botany.

Although his parents were Methodists, they sent him to Worksop College, an Anglican boarding school. Sheldrake has said:

I went through the standard scientific atheist phase when I was about 14 ... I bought into that package deal of science equals atheism. I was the only boy at my high Anglican boarding school who refused to get confirmed.

In the nine-month period before starting college, Sheldrake worked at the Parke-Davis pharmacology research lab in London, an experience he described as formative due to the required destruction of lab animals, which he found deeply unsettling. At Clare College, Cambridge, Sheldrake studied biology and biochemistry. In 1964, he was awarded a fellowship to study the philosophy and history of science at Harvard University. After a year at Harvard, he returned to Cambridge, where he earned a PhD in biochemistry in 1968 for his work in plant development and plant hormones.

Career

After obtaining his PhD, Sheldrake became a fellow of Clare College, working in biochemistry and cell biology with funding from the Royal Society Rosenheim Research Fellowship. He investigated auxins, a class of plant hormone that plays a role in plant vascular cell differentiation. Sheldrake and Philip Rubery developed the chemiosmotic model of polar auxin transport.

Sheldrake has said that he ended this line of research when he concluded:

The system is circular. It does not explain how established to start with. After nine years of intensive study, it became clear to me that biochemistry would not solve the problem of why things have the basic shape they do.

From 1968 to 1969, Sheldrake worked at the University of Malaya.

Having an interest in Indian philosophy, Hinduism and transcendental meditation, Sheldrake resigned his position at Clare and went to work on the physiology of tropical crops in Hyderabad, India, as principal plant physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) from 1974 to 1978. There he published on crop physiology and co-authored a book on the anatomy of the pigeonpea.

Sheldrake left ICRISAT to focus on writing A New Science of Life, during which time he spent a year and a half in the Saccidananda Ashram of Bede Griffiths, a Benedictine monk active in interfaith dialogue with Hinduism. Published in 1981, the book outlines his concept of morphic resonance, of which he has said:

The idea came to me in a moment of insight and was extremely exciting. It interested some of my colleagues at Clare College—philosophers, linguists, and classicists were quite open-minded. But the idea of mysterious telepathy-type interconnections between organisms and of collective memories within species didn't go down too well with my colleagues in the science labs. Not that they were aggressively hostile; they just made fun of it.

After writing A New Science of Life, he continued at ICRISAT as a part-time consultant physiologist until 1985.

Sheldrake published his second book, The Presence of the Past, in 1988. In the 1990s and 2000s, he continued to publish books, which included several joint discussions with Ralph Abraham, a mathematician, and Terence McKenna, an ethnobotanist and mystic. Sheldrake also collaborated with Matthew Fox, a priest and theologian, on two books in 1996.

Sheldrake was one of six subjects, along with Oliver Sacks, Daniel Dennett, Stephen Jay Gould, Freeman Dyson, Stephen Toulmin, who were covered in 1993 by the Dutch filmmaker Wim Kayzer in A Glorious Accident, a documentary series that posed a series of questions about consciousness and culminated in a roundtable discussion between the participants. The film was shown on Dutch public broadcasting system VPRO in 1993, followed by United States PBS member station WNET in 1994. The book A Glorious Accident: Understanding Our Place in the Cosmic Puzzle was produced from the transcripts of the program and published in both Dutch and English.

Since 2004, Sheldrake has been a visiting professor at the Graduate Institute in Bethany, Connecticut, where he was also academic director of the Holistic Learning and Thinking Program until 2012. From September 2005 until 2010, Sheldrake was director of the Perrott–Warrick Project for psychical research for research on unexplained human and animal abilities, funded from Trinity College, Cambridge. As of 2014, he was a fellow of the Institute of Noetic Sciences in California and a fellow of Schumacher College in Devon, England. Since 2014, he has been a fellow of the Temenos Academy, London.

In 2017, Sheldrake published a dialog with science writer and skeptic Michael Shermer titled Arguing Science: A Dialogue on the Future of Science and Spirit. In 2023, at the How The Light Gets In festival of philosophy in Hay-on-Wye, UK, Sheldrake debated Shermer. In 2023, Sheldrake debated the existence of consciousness outside of brains at the University Aula in Bergen, Norway, alongside anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann and neuroscientist Anil Seth.

Sheldrake has outlined his spiritual practices in two books: Science and Spiritual Practices (2017) and Ways to Go Beyond and Why They Work (2019).

Selected books

Reviews of Sheldrake's books have at times been extremely negative about their scientific content, but some have been positive. In 2009, Adam Rutherford, geneticist and deputy editor of Nature, criticised Sheldrake's books for containing research that was not subjected to the peer-review process expected for science, and suggested that his books were best "ignored."

A New Science of Life (1981)

Sheldrake's A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Morphic Resonance (1981) proposes that through morphic resonance, various perceived phenomena, particularly biological ones, become more probable the more often they occur, and that biological growth and behaviour thus become guided into patterns laid down by previous similar events. As a result, he suggests, newly acquired behaviours can be passed down to future generations—a biological proposition akin to the Lamarckian inheritance theory. He generalises this approach to assert that it explains many aspects of science, from evolution to the laws of nature, which, in Sheldrake's formulation, are merely mutable habits that have been evolving and changing since the Big Bang.

John Davy wrote in The Observer that the implications of A New Science of Life were "fascinating and far-reaching, and would turn upside down a lot of orthodox science," and that they would "merit attention if some of its predictions are supported by experiment."

In subsequent books, Sheldrake continued to promote morphic resonance.

The morphic resonance hypothesis is rejected by numerous critics on many grounds, and has been labelled pseudoscience and magical thinking. These grounds include the lack of evidence for it and its inconsistency with established scientific theories. The idea of morphic resonance is also seen as lacking scientific credibility because it is overly vague and unfalsifiable. Sheldrake's experimental methods have been criticised for being poorly designed and subject to experimenter bias. His analyses of results have also drawn criticism.

Alex Gomez-Marin denies that Sheldrake's basic idea is unfalsifiable, but no conclusive experiments have been performed since mainstream scientists do not wish to get involved in such experiments.

The Presence of the Past (1988)

In The Presence of the Past: Morphic Resonance and the Habits of Nature (1988), Sheldrake expands on his morphic resonance hypothesis and marshals experimental evidence that he says supports it. The book was reviewed favourably in New Scientist by historian Theodore Roszak, who called it "engaging, provocative" and "a tour de force." When it was reissued in 2011 with those quotes on the front cover, New Scientist remarked, "Back then, Roszak gave Sheldrake the benefit of the doubt. Today, attitudes have hardened and Sheldrake is seen as standing firmly on the wilder shores of science," adding that if New Scientist were to review the reissue, the book's publisher "wouldn't be mining it for promotional purposes."

In a 1988 review of the book in The Times, David E. H. Jones criticised the hypothesis as magical thinking and pseudoscience, saying that morphic resonance "is so vast and formless that it could easily be made to explain anything, or to dodge round any opposing argument ... Sheldrake has sadly aligned himself with those fantasists who, from the depths of their armchairs, dream up whole new grandiose theories of space and time to revolutionize all science, drape their woolly generalizations over every phenomenon they can think of, and then start looking round for whatever scraps of evidence that seem to them to be in their favour." Jones argued that without confirmatory experimental evidence, "the whole unwieldy and redundant structure of theory falls to Occam's Razor."

The Rebirth of Nature (1991)

Published in 1991, Sheldrake's The Rebirth of Nature: The Greening of Science and God addresses the subject of New Age consciousness and related topics. A column in The Guardian said that the book "seeks to restore the pre-Enlightenment notion that nature is 'alive'," quoting Sheldrake as saying that "indeterminism, spontaneity and creativity have re-emerged throughout the natural world" and that "mystic, animistic and religious ways of thinking can no longer be kept at bay." The book was reviewed by James Lovelock in Nature, who argued that "the theory of formative causation makes testable predictions," noting that "nothing has yet been reported which would divert the mainstream of science. ... Even if it is nonsense ... recognizing the need for fruitful errors, I do not regard the book as dangerous."

Seven Experiments That Could Change the World (1994)

In 1994, Sheldrake proposed a list of Seven Experiments That Could Change the World, subtitled "A do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science." He encouraged laypeople to conduct research and argued that experiments similar to his own could be conducted with limited expense.

Music critic of The Sunday Times Mark Edwards reviewed the book positively, arguing that Sheldrake "challenges the complacent certainty of scientists," and that his ideas "sounded ridiculous ... as long as your thinking is constrained by the current scientific orthodoxy."

David Sharp, writing in The Lancet, said that the experiments testing paranormal phenomena carried the "risk of positive publication bias," and that the scientific community "would have to think again if some of these suggestions were convincingly confirmed." Sharp encouraged readers (medical professionals) to "at least read Sheldrake, even try one of his experiments—but pay very close attention to your methods section." Sharp doubted whether "a bunch of enthusiastic amateurs going to persuade sceptics," and noted that "orthodox science will need a lot of convincing."

Science journalist Nigel Hawkes, writing in The Times, said that Sheldrake was "trying to bridge the gap between phenomenalism and science," and suggested that dogs could appear to have psychic abilities when they were actually relying on more conventional senses. He concluded: "whether scientists will be willing to take seriously is ... that need not concern most readers. While I do not think this book will change the world, it will cause plenty of harmless fun."

Dogs That Know When Their Owners are Coming Home (1999)

See also: Human–canine bond

Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home, published in 1999, covers his research into proposed telepathy between humans and animals, particularly dogs. Sheldrake suggests that such interspecies telepathy is a real phenomenon and that morphic fields are responsible for it.

The book is in three sections, on telepathy, on sense of direction, including animal migration and the homing of pigeons, and on animal precognition, including premonitions of earthquakes and tsunamis. Sheldrake examined more than 1,000 case histories of dogs and cats that seemed to anticipate their owners' return by waiting at a door or window, sometimes for half an hour or more ahead of their return. He did a long series of experiments with a dog called Jaytee, in which the dog was filmed continuously during its owner's absence. In 100 filmed tests, on average the dog spent far more time at the window when its owner was on her way home than when she was not. During the main period of her absence, before she started her return journey, the dog was at the window for an average of 24 seconds per 10-minute period (4% of the time), whereas when she was on her way home, during the first ten minutes of her homeward journey, from more than five miles away, the dog was at the window for an average of five minutes 30 seconds (55% of the time). Sheldrake interpreted the result as highly significant statistically. He performed 12 more tests, in which the dog's owner travelled home in a taxi or other unfamiliar vehicle at randomly selected times communicated to her by telephone, to rule out the possibility that the dog was reacting to familiar car sounds or routines. He also carried out similar experiments with another dog, Kane, describing the results as similarly positive and significant.

Before the publication of Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home, Sheldrake invited Richard Wiseman, Matthew Smith, and Julie Milton to conduct an independent experimental study with Jaytee. They concluded that their evidence did not support telepathy as an explanation for the dog's behaviour, and proposed possible alternative explanations for Sheldrake's conclusions, involving artefacts, bias resulting from experimental design, and post hoc analysis of unpublished data. The group observed that Sheldrake's observed patterns could easily arise if a dog were simply to do very little for a while, before visiting a window with increasing frequency the longer its owner was absent, and that such behaviour would make sense for a dog awaiting its owner's return. Under this behaviour, the final measurement period, ending with the owner's return, would always contain the most time spent at the window. Sheldrake argued that the actual data in his own and in Wiseman's tests did not bear this out, and that the dog went to wait at the window sooner when his owner was returning from a short absence, and later after a long absence, with no tendency for Jaytee to go to the window early in the way that he did for shorter absences.

Reviewing the book, Susan Blackmore criticised Sheldrake for comparing the 12 tests of random duration—which were all less than an hour long—to the initial tests where the dog may have been responding to patterns in the owner's journeys. Blackmore interpreted the results of the randomised tests as starting with a period where the dog "settles down and does not bother to go to the window," and then showing that the longer the owner was away, the more the dog went to look.

The Sense of Being Stared At (2003)

Sheldrake's The Sense of Being Stared At explores telepathy, precognition, and the "psychic staring effect." It reported on an experiment Sheldrake conducted where blindfolded subjects guessed whether persons were staring at them or at another target. He reported subjects exhibiting a weak sense of being stared at, but no sense of not being stared at, and attributed the results to morphic resonance. He reported a hit rate of 53.1%, describing two subjects as "nearly always right, scoring way above chance levels."

Several independent experimenters were unable to find evidence beyond statistical randomness that people could tell they were being stared at, with some saying that there were design flaws in Sheldrake's experiments, such as using test sequences with "relatively few long runs and many alternations" instead of truly randomised patterns. In 2005, Michael Shermer expressed concern over confirmation bias and experimenter bias in the tests, and concluded that Sheldrake's claim was unfalsifiable.

David Jay Brown, who conducted some of the experiments for Sheldrake, states that one of the subjects who was reported as having the highest hit rates was under the influence of the drug MDMA (Ecstasy) during the trials.

The Science Delusion (Science Set Free) (2012)

The Science Delusion, published in the US as Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery, summarises much of Sheldrake's previous work and encapsulates it into a broader critique of philosophical materialism, with the title apparently mimicking that of The God Delusion by one of his critics, Richard Dawkins.

In the book, Sheldrake proposes a number of questions as the theme of each chapter that seek to elaborate on his central premise that science is predicated on the belief that the nature of reality is fully understood, with only minor details needing to be filled in. This "delusion" is what Sheldrake argues has turned science into a series of dogmas grounded in philosophical materialism rather than an open-minded approach to investigating phenomena. He argues that many powerful taboos circumscribe what scientists can legitimately direct their attention towards. The mainstream view of modern science is that it proceeds by methodological naturalism and does not require philosophical materialism.

Sheldrake questions conservation of energy; he calls it a "standard scientific dogma," says that perpetual motion devices and inedia should be investigated as possible phenomena, and has said that "the evidence for energy conservation in living organisms is weak." He argues in favour of alternative medicine and psychic phenomena, saying that their recognition as legitimate is impeded by a "scientific priesthood" with an "authoritarian mentality." Citing his earlier "psychic staring effect" experiments and other reasons, he says that minds are not confined to brains and that "liberating minds from confinement in heads is like being released from prison." He suggests that DNA is insufficient to explain inheritance, and that inheritance of form and behaviour is mediated through morphic resonance. He also promotes morphic resonance in broader fashion as an explanation for other phenomena such as memory.

Reviews were mixed. Anti-reductionist philosopher Mary Midgley, writing in The Guardian, welcomed it as "a new mind-body paradigm" to address what she called "the unlucky fact that our current form of mechanistic materialism rests on muddled, outdated notions of matter." Philosopher Martin Cohen, a famous critic of esotericism in science, wrote in The Times Higher Education Supplement that "here is a lot to be said for debunking orthodox science's pretensions to be on the verge of fitting the last grain of information into its towering edifice of universal knowledge", while also noting that Sheldrake "goes a bit too far here and there, as in promoting his morphic resonance theory."

Bryan Appleyard writing in The Sunday Times commented that Sheldrake was "at his most incisive" when making a "broad critique of contemporary science" and "scientism," but on Sheldrake's "own scientific theories" Appleyard noted that "morphic resonance is widely derided and narrowly supported. Most of the experimental evidence is contested, though Sheldrake argues there are 'statistically significant' results." Appleyard called it "highly speculative" and was unsure "whether it makes sense or not."

Other reviews were less favourable. New Scientist's deputy editor Graham Lawton characterised Science Set Free as "woolly credulousness" and chided Sheldrake for "uncritically embracing all kinds of fringe ideas." A review in Philosophy Now called the book "disturbingly eccentric," combining "a disorderly collage of scientific fact and opinion with an intrusive yet disjunctive metaphysical programme."

Science and Spiritual Practices (2017)

Reviews for the book were mostly positive. Kirkus Reviews described it as a "grounded and inspiring approach to appreciating the benefits of both science and religion". Adam Ford, reviewing the book for the Church Times, describes it as a "useful and very clear introduction to the practice of meditation" combined with a how-to guide on the "healing and happiness-creating power of gratitude".

Publishers Weekly reviewed the book as having "accessible suggestions" and "clear arguments", while noting that "a few fuzzy moments, including reliance on many...overly speculative accounts" do not prevent the work from being "otherwise convincing" and "a good case for reincorporating bygone spiritual habits."

Ways to Go Beyond and Why They Work (2019)

Reviews for the book were mixed. In The Daily Telegraph, journalist Steven Poole called Sheldrake's writing "very engaging" and said his defense of prayer worked "sometimes, but not always" and was "not really good enough". Veterinary surgeon and barrister Charles A. Foster, writing in Literary Review, called the book "a very mixed bag" but also "funny, wise, full of whimsical weirdness".

Writing in the Times Literary Supplement, anthropologist Jonathan Benthall called the book "an affable, erudite manual to show how life need not be boring", and Sheldrake's arguments "soft at the edges, sometimes presenting his hypotheses as facts".

Public reception

Sheldrake's ideas have been discussed in academic journals and books. His work has also received popular coverage through newspapers, radio, television and speaking engagements. The attention he receives has raised concerns that it adversely affects the public understanding of science. Some have accused Sheldrake of self-promotion, with Steven Rose commenting, "for the inventors of such hypotheses the rewards include a degree of instant fame which is harder to achieve by the humdrum pursuit of more conventional science."

Academic debate

A variety of responses to Sheldrake's ideas have appeared in prominent scientific publications.

Sheldrake and theoretical physicist David Bohm published a dialogue in 1982 in which they compared Sheldrake's ideas to Bohm's implicate order. In 1997, physicist Hans-Peter Dürr speculated about Sheldrake's work in relation to modern physics.

Following the publication of A New Science of Life, New Scientist sponsored a competition to devise empirical tests for morphic resonance. The winning idea involved learning Turkish nursery rhymes, with psychologist and broadcaster Sue Blackmore's entry involving babies' behaviour coming second. Blackmore found the results did not support morphic resonance.

In 2005, the Journal of Consciousness Studies devoted a special issue to Sheldrake's work on the sense of being stared at. For this issue, the editor could not follow the journal's standard peer-review process because "making successful blind peer review a condition of publication would in this case have killed the project at the outset." The issue thus featured several articles by Sheldrake, followed by the open peer review, to which Sheldrake then responded. Writing in Scientific American, Michael Shermer rated the peer commentaries, and noted that the more supportive reviews came from those who had affiliations with less mainstream institutions.

Sheldrake denies that DNA contains a recipe for morphological development. He and developmental biologist Lewis Wolpert have made a scientific wager about the importance of DNA in the developing organism. Wolpert bet Sheldrake "a case of fine port" that "By 1 May 2029, given the genome of a fertilised egg of an animal or plant, we will be able to predict in at least one case all the details of the organism that develops from it, including any abnormalities." The Royal Society will be asked to determine the winner if the result is not obvious.

"A book for burning?"

In September 1981, Nature published an editorial about A New Science of Life entitled "A book for burning?" Written by the journal's senior editor, John Maddox, the editorial commented:

Sheldrake's book is a splendid illustration of the widespread public misconception of what science is about. In reality, Sheldrake's argument is in no sense a scientific argument but is an exercise in pseudo-science ... Many readers will be left with the impression that Sheldrake has succeeded in finding a place for magic within scientific discussion—and this, indeed, may have been a part of the objective of writing such a book.

Maddox argued that Sheldrake's hypothesis was not testable or "falsifiable in Popper's sense," referring to the philosopher Karl Popper. He said Sheldrake's proposals for testing his hypothesis were "time-consuming, inconclusive in the sense that it will always be possible to account for another morphogenetic field and impractical." In the editorial, Maddox ultimately rejected the suggestion that the book should be burned. Nonetheless, the title of the piece garnered widespread publicity. In a subsequent issue, Nature published several letters expressing disapproval of the editorial, including one from physicist Brian Josephson, who criticised Maddox for "a failure to admit even the possibility that genuine physical facts may exist which lie outside the scope of current scientific descriptions."

In 1983, an editorial in The Guardian compared the "petulance of wrath of the scientific establishment" aimed against Sheldrake with the Galileo affair and Lysenkoism. Responding in the same paper, Brian Charlesworth defended the scientific establishment, affirming that "the ultimate test of a scientific theory is its conformity with the observations and experiments" and that "vitalistic and Lamarckian ideas which seem to regard so highly have repeatedly failed this test."

In a letter to The Guardian in 1988, a scientist from Glasgow University referred to the title "A book for burning?" as "posing the question to attract attention" and criticised the "perpetuation of the myth that Maddox ever advocated the burning of Sheldrake's book." In 1999, Maddox characterised his 1981 editorial as "injudicious," saying that even though it concluded that Sheldrake's book

should not be burned ... but put firmly in its place among the literature of intellectual aberration. ... The publicists for Sheldrake's publishers were nevertheless delighted with the piece, using it to suggest that the Establishment (Nature) was again up to its old trick of suppressing uncomfortable truths.

An editor for Nature said in 2009 that Maddox's reference to book burning backfired.

In 2012, Sheldrake described his time after Maddox's review as being "exactly like a papal excommunication. From that moment on, I became a very dangerous person to know for scientists."

Sheldrake and Steven Rose

During 1987 and 1988 Sheldrake contributed several pieces to The Guardian's "Body and Soul" column. In one of these, he wrote that the idea that "memories were stored in our brains" was "only a theory" and "despite decades of research, the phenomenon of memory remains mysterious." This provoked a response by Steven Rose, a neuroscientist from the Open University, who criticised Sheldrake for being "a researcher trained in another discipline" (botany) for not "respect the data collected by neuroscientists before begin to offer us alternative explanations," and accused Sheldrake of "ignoring or denying" "massive evidence," and arguing that "neuroscience over the past two decades has shown that memories are stored in specific changes in brain cells." Giving an example of experiments on chicks, Rose asserted "egregious errors that Sheldrake makes to bolster his case that demands a new vague but all-embracing theory to resolve."

Sheldrake responded to Rose's article, stating that there was experimental evidence that showed that "memories can survive the destruction of the putative memory traces." Rose responded, asking Sheldrake to "get his facts straight," explaining the research and concluding that "there is no way that this straightforward and impressive body of evidence can be taken to imply that memories are not in the brain, still less that the brain is tuning into some indeterminate, undefined, resonating and extra-corporeal field."

In his next column, Sheldrake again attacked Rose for following "materialism," and argued that quantum physics had "overturned" materialism, and suggested that "memories may turn out to depend on morphic resonance rather than memory traces." Philosopher Alan Malachowski of the University of East Anglia, responding to what he called Sheldrake's "latest muddled diatribe," defended materialism, argued that Sheldrake dismissed Rose's explanation with an "absurd rhetorical comparison," asserted that quantum physics was compatible with materialism, and argued that "being roughly right about great many things has given the confidence to be far more open minded than he is prepared to give them credit for."

In 1990, Sheldrake and Rose agreed to and arranged a test of the morphic resonance hypothesis using chicks. They were unable to agree on the intended joint research paper reporting their results, instead publishing separate and conflicting interpretations. Sheldrake published a paper stating that the results matched his prediction that day-old chicks would be influenced by the experiences of previous batches of day-old chicks—"From the point of view of the hypothesis of formative causation, the results of this experiment are encouraging"—and called for further research. Rose wrote that morphic resonance was a "hypothesis disconfirmed." He also made further criticisms of morphic resonance, and stated that "the experience of this collaboration has convinced me in practice, Sheldrake is so committed to his hypothesis that it is very hard to envisage the circumstances in which he would accept its disconfirmation." Rose asked Patrick Bateson to analyse the data, and Bateson offered his opinion that Sheldrake's interpretation of the data was "misleading" and attributable to experimenter effects.

Sheldrake responded to Rose's paper by describing it as "polemic" and "aggressive tone and extravagant rhetoric" and concluding: "The results of this experiment do not disconfirm the hypothesis of formative causation, as Rose claims. They are consistent with it."

On television

Sheldrake was the subject of an episode of Heretics of Science, a six-part documentary series broadcast on BBC2 in 1994. In this episode, John Maddox discussed "A book for burning?," his 1981 Nature editorial review of Sheldrake's book, A New Science of Life: The Hypothesis of Morphic Resonance. Maddox said that morphic resonance "is not a scientific theory. Sheldrake is putting forward magic instead of science, and that can be condemned with exactly the language that the popes used to condemn Galileo, and for the same reasons: it is heresy." The broadcast repeatedly displayed footage of book burning, sometimes accompanied by audio of a crowd chanting "heretic." Biologist Steven Rose criticised the broadcast for focusing on Maddox's rhetoric as if it was "all that mattered." "There wasn't much sense of the scientific or metascientific issues at stake," Rose said.

An experiment involving measuring the time for subjects to recognise hidden images, with morphic resonance being posited to aid in recognition, was conducted in 1984 by the BBC popular science programme Tomorrow's World. In the outcome of the experiment, one set of data yielded positive results and another set yielded negative results.

Public debates and lectures

Sheldrake debated with biologist Lewis Wolpert on the existence of telepathy in 2004 at the Royal Society of Arts in London. Sheldrake argued for telepathy while Wolpert argued that telepathy fits Irving Langmuir's definition of pathological science and that the evidence for telepathy has not been persuasive. Reporting on the event, New Scientist said "it was clear the audience saw Wolpert as no more than a killjoy. (...) There are sound reasons for doubting Sheldrake's data. One is that some parapsychology experimenters have an uncanny knack of finding the effect they are looking for. There is no suggestion of fraud, but something is going on, and science demands that it must be understood before conclusions can be drawn about the results."

In 2006, Sheldrake spoke at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science about experimental results on telepathy replicated by "a 1980s girl band," drawing criticism from Peter Atkins, Lord Winston, and Richard Wiseman. The Royal Society also reacted to the event, saying, "Modern science is based on a rigorous evidence-based process involving experiment and observation. The results and interpretations should always be exposed to robust peer review."

In April 2008, Sheldrake was stabbed by a man during a lecture in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The man told a reporter that he thought Sheldrake had been using him as a "guinea pig" in telepathic mind control experiments for over five years. Sheldrake suffered a wound to the leg and has recovered, while his assailant was found "guilty but mentally ill."

In January 2013, Sheldrake gave a TEDx lecture at TEDxWhitechapel in East London roughly summarising ideas from his book, The Science Delusion. In his talk, he said that modern science rests on ten dogmas that "fall apart" upon examination and promoted his hypothesis of morphic resonance. According to a statement by TED staff, TED's scientific advisors "questioned whether his list is a fair description of scientific assumptions" and believed that "there is little evidence for some of Sheldrake's more radical claims, such as his theory of morphic resonance." The advisors recommended that the talk "not be distributed without being framed with caution." The video of the talk was moved from the TEDx YouTube channel to the TED blog accompanied by the framing language called for by the advisors. The move and framing prompted accusations of censorship, to which TED responded by saying the accusations were "simply not true" and that Sheldrake's talk was "up on our website."

In November 2013, Sheldrake gave a lecture at the Oxford Union outlining his claims, made in The Science Delusion, that modern science has become constrained by dogma, particularly in physics.

In popular culture

Between 1989 and 1999, Sheldrake, ethnobotanist Terence McKenna and mathematician Ralph Abraham recorded a series of discussions exploring diverse topics relating to the "world soul" and evolution. These resulted in a number of books based on the discussions: Trialogues at the Edge of the West: Chaos, Creativity and the Resacralization of the World (1992), The Evolutionary Mind: Trialogues at the Edge of the Unthinkable (1998), and The Evolutionary Mind: Conversations on Science, Imagination & Spirit (2005). In an interview for the book Conversations on the Edge of the Apocalypse, Sheldrake says he believes the use of psychedelic drugs "can reveal a world of consciousness and interconnection", which he says he has experienced. Alternative medicine advocate Deepak Chopra is a supporter of Sheldrake's work.

Sheldrake's work was amongst those cited in a faux research paper written by Alan Sokal and submitted to Social Text. In 1996, the journal published the paper as if it represented real scientific research, an event that has come to be known as the Sokal affair. Sokal later said that he had suggested in the hoax paper that 'morphogenetic fields' constituted a cutting-edge theory of quantum gravity, adding that "This connection pure invention; even Sheldrake makes no such claim."

Sheldrake has been described as a New Age author, but does not endorse certain New Age interpretations of his ideas.

The 2009 Zero Escape video game Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors was inspired by Sheldrake's morphogenetic field theories.

Origin and philosophy of morphic resonance

Among his early influences Sheldrake cites The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) by Thomas Kuhn. He has said the book led him to view contemporary scientific understanding of life as simply a paradigm, which he called "the mechanistic theory of life." Reading Kuhn's work, Sheldrake says, focused his mind on how scientific paradigms can change.

Sheldrake says that although there are similarities between morphic resonance and Hinduism's akashic records, he first conceived of the idea while at Cambridge, before his travel to India, where he later developed it. He attributes the origin of his idea to two influences: his studies of the holistic tradition in biology, and French philosopher Henri Bergson's 1896 book Matter and Memory. He says he took Bergson's concept of memories not being materially embedded in the brain and generalised it to morphic resonance, where memories are not only immaterial but also under the influence of the collective memories of similar organisms. While his colleagues at Cambridge were not receptive to the idea, Sheldrake found the opposite to be true in India. He recounts his Indian colleagues saying, "There's nothing new in this, it was all known millennia ago to the ancient rishis." Sheldrake thus characterises morphic resonance as a convergence between Western and Eastern thought, yet found by himself first in Western philosophy.

Sheldrake has also noted similarities between morphic resonance and Carl Jung's collective unconscious, with regard to collective memories being shared across individuals and the coalescing of particular behaviours through repetition, which Jung called archetypes. But whereas Jung assumed that archetypal forms were transmitted through physical inheritance, Sheldrake attributes collective memories to morphic resonance, and rejects any explanation of them involving what he terms "mechanistic biology."

Lewis Wolpert, one of Sheldrake's critics, has described morphic resonance as an updated Drieschian vitalism.

Personal life

Sheldrake is married to therapist, voice teacher and author Jill Purce. They have two sons, biologist Merlin Sheldrake and musician Cosmo Sheldrake. Merlin Sheldrake is a mycologist and author of Entangled Life: How fungi make our worlds, change our minds and shape our futures.

Sheldrake is a practising Anglican. He has said that he studied with a Sufi teacher and practised Sufism while he was in India. Sheldrake reported "being drawn back to a Christian path" during his time in India.

Bibliography

  • A New Science of Life: the hypothesis of formative causation, Los Angeles: J.P. Tarcher, 1981 (second edition 1985, third edition 2009). ISBN 978-1-84831-042-1.
  • The Presence of the Past: morphic resonance and the habits of nature, New York: Times Books, 1988. ISBN 0-8129-1666-2.
  • The Rebirth of Nature: The greening of science and God, New York: Bantam Books, 1991. ISBN 0-553-07105-X.
  • Seven Experiments That Could Change the World: a do-it-yourself guide to revolutionary science, New York: Riverhead Books, 1995. ISBN 1-57322-014-0.
  • Dogs that Know When Their Owners are Coming Home: and other unexplained powers of animals, New York: Crown, 1999 (second edition 2011). ISBN 978-0-307-88596-8.
  • The Sense of Being Stared At: and other aspects of the extended mind, New York: Crown Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0-609-60807-X.
  • The Science Delusion: Freeing the spirit of enquiry, London: Coronet, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4447-2795-1 (U. S. Title: Science Set Free: 10 Paths to New Discovery).
  • Science and Spiritual Practices, London: Coronet, 2017. ISBN 978-1-444-72792-0
  • Ways To Go Beyond, And Why They Work: Seven Spiritual Practices in a Scientific Age, London: Coronet, 2019. ISBN 978-1-473-63007-9.

With Ralph Abraham and Terence McKenna:

  • Trialogues at the Edge of the West: chaos, creativity, and the resacralisation of the world, Santa Fe, NM: Bear & Co. Pub., 1992. ISBN 0-939680-97-1.
  • The Evolutionary Mind: trialogues at the edge of the unthinkable, Santa Cruz, CA: Dakota Books, 1997. ISBN 0-9632861-1-0.
  • Chaos, Creativity and Cosmic Consciousness, Rochester, VT: Park Street Press, 2001. ISBN 0-89281-977-4.
  • The Evolutionary Mind: Conversations on Science, Imagination & Spirit, Rhinebeck, NY: Monkfish Book Pub. Co., 2005. ISBN 0-9749359-7-2.

With Matthew Fox:

With Kate Banks:

With Michael Shermer:

  • Arguing Science: A Dialogue on the Future of Science and Spirit, Rhinebeck, NY: Farrar, Monkfish Books, 2016. ISBN 978-1-939681-57-7.

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. Sources:
    • pseudoscience
    • lack of evidence
    • inconsistency with data from genetics and embryology
    • inconsistency with consensus in neuroscience and biochemistry
    • undermines the public's understanding of science
  2. Sources:
    • pseudoscience
    • magical thinking
    • lack of evidence
    • inconsistency with established scientific theories
    • overly vague
    • unfalsifiable
    • experimental methods poorly designed and subject to experimenter bias
    • analyses of results have also drawn criticism

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