Rupert Sheldrake’s theories. Part 1: Morphic Fields and the Memory of Nature.

Rupert Sheldrake’s theories

Part 1: Morphic Fields and the Memory of Nature

Rupert Sheldrake, Ph.D, born 28th June 1942, is a British biologist and author. Drawing on the work of French philosopher Henri Bergson to develop the theory of morphic resonance[1], which makes use of the older notion of morphogenetic fields, he has researched and written on topics such as animal and plant development and behaviour, telepathy, perception and metaphysics.


 


 

According to Sheldrake, habitual and instinctive behavior is organized by behavioral fields, while mental activity, conscious and unconscious, takes place within and through mental fields. Instincts are the behavioral habits of the species and depend on the inheritance of behavioral fields, and with them a collective memory, from previous members of the species by morphic resonance. The building up of an animal's own habits also depends on morphic resonance. It is possible for habits acquired by some animals to facilitate the acquisition of the same habits by other similar animals, even in the absence of any known means of connection or communication. This explains how after rats have learned a new trick in one place, other rats elsewhere seem to be able to learn it more easily.

Memories, then, are impressed on the etheric substance of supraphysical planes, and we gain access to these records by vibrational synchrony, these vibrations being transmitted through the astral light. Sheldrake, however, rejects the idea of morphic resonance being transmitted through a "morphogenetic aether," saying that "a more satisfactory approach may be to think of the past as pressed up, as it were, against the present, and as potentially present everywhere" (The Presence of the Past, p. 112). But it is hard to see why such a hazy notion is more satisfactory than that of nonphysical energies being transmitted through an etheric medium.



Based on:
Rupert Sheldrake: A Theosophical Appraisal
Wikipedia materials

Category: Fields, Science, Theosophy