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Editorial Reviews

Review

The implications of this theory are staggering, from predicting the course of hurricanes to explaining deja vu. Sheldrake's thinking seems radical because he does not subscribe to orthodox scientific assumptions that the universe operates like a machine; instead, he sees it as much like a living organism. -- Utne Reader, May/June 1999


Review

"As far-reaching in its implications as Darwin's theory of evolution."
(Brain/Mind Bulletin )

"An important scientific inquiry into the nature of biological and physical reality."
(New Scientist )

"Sheldrake is a Cambridge-trained research biologist whose modest proposals. . . have upset scientific orthodoxy"
(Utne Reader )

"An immensely challenging and stimulating hypothesis, which proposes an unorthodox approach to evolution."
(Arthur Koestler, author of The Lotus and the Robot and The Ghost in the Machine )

Product Details

  • Paperback: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Park Street Press (March 1, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0892815353
  • ISBN-13: 978-0892815357
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #133,496 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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42 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beneficial Paradigm Shift of Science - Formative Causation, February 4, 2005
By R. Schwartz (United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is an excellent book, a hypothesis on an unconventional theory that just as well can be completely acknowledged as science, as many of the conventional science theories always started with unproven hypothesis, such as Newton's gravitational fields until proven at a later time. Quantum physics, relativity, and many other ideas are true science without fully documented mechanistically determined answers all tested in line with Karl Popper. If your a science reader and interested in biology, physics and evolution, then this book is a must to read. It is the conventionalists and those who are unable to allow a paradigm shift that have attacked this theory as pseudo science. This book is from 1981 and since then there have been more experiments regarding this theory and also Sheldrake has another book from 1995 on the same with more details called The Presence of the Past.

The theory consists of an addition to the chemical and physical properties of materialism, something in addition to the DNA code in random mutations and non-random natural selection, an additional force what many vitialists have always acknowledged; the idea of higher organizational states. And here it is the theory of morphogenetic fields and formative causation. The idea of morphogenetic fields first developed by embryologists such as Conrad Waddington and later mathematically by theoreticians such as Rene Thomas.

The ideas starts with no answer to what causes the first change, but continues with a theory as to subsequent developments. As each thought is created, enlarged, elaborated on, taught, as each experience develops a certain particular field in a particular person, animal, and all organic and inorganic matter and energy, there is a change in that particular morphogenetic field. As each change takes place in this field, an accumulation takes place and an average is taken as a composite from the whole. Anotherwards each new idea that is learned in a human becomes part of the whole where other humans can now learn this thought much easier as it now exists in the same human morphogenetic field. Rats in London taught will now increase the percentage of other rats around the world completely removed with no contact from those in London. Each morphogenetic field takes in the formation, the ideas, the properties of the whole, where as all those connected in this field experience morphogenetic resonance or the effects that have now been contributed to this field. This is what Sheldrake calls causative formation.

Each cell, each atom, all are formed from these morphogenetic fields in addition to the energy fields, and the chemical and biological properties of mechanistic and causal definitions taught by conventional science. Like a radio receiver that tunes into a particular radio wave, the radio itself acts as a receiver and yet the energy waves that operate it is not the same as the radio waves and can also affect the properties of the sound from these waves. The radio itself can also affect the properties of the sound emitted from radio signals, however both the energy fields and the radio instrument are not the same as the radio waves. And such it is with morphogenetic fields. The mechanics of the biological properties that make up physical being, our cells, bodies, brains, act as receivers to the morphogenetic fields that we connect with. It is here we are changing and choosing to various different morphogenetic fields regarding body motor movement, thought contents and so forth. As each field is affected by others and as we make changes in these fields, all connected with these fields are affected in a composite nature. Past forms affect the current forms.

The last chapter of the book is what brings it on all home with four possible conclusions;one - a modified materialism, two - the idea of the conscious self that interacts with these morphogenetic fields in using the body, which is totally apart from materialism. And this idea is not simply a ghost in a machine with energetic fields/causation but the addition of morphogenetic/formation fields. Three - the idea of creative agencies apart from our conscious selves, which can be defined as inspiration as Plato suggested a tapping into a higher source or creative fields with goals. And four - a transcendent realty or tapping into fields that have no purpose or goals but rather the wholeness of organisms at all levels of complexity as a reflection of a transcendent unity on which they depend and are derived from. This idea then affirms the conscious self and the existence of a hierarchy of creative agencies immanent within nature and the reality of a transcendent source of the universe.

The end of the book appendix has both positive and negative reviews on the book and a enlightening conversation between Sheldrake and David Bohm, Wholeness and the Implicate Order.
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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A new twist on the evolutionary debate, February 8, 1998
By A Customer
Sheldrake's hypothesis of morphic resonance is an expansion of the evolutionary debate into the larger problem of morphogenesis (ie, the evolution of all form), implying that the forces which shape a polypeptide molecule or the structure of galaxies are the same as those that determine the shape of a dog's tooth or the behavior of nudibranchs. The implicite heresy here is that something bigger is afoot than Darwin ever imagined, and that natural selection has little or nothing to do with the evolution of species and life. Yet Sheldrake, a bona fide scientist, is far from invoking god as the grand designer of nature. Morphic resonance is a hypothesis which will appear decidedly far-fetched and psychedelic for readers already dyed in the naturally selected wool of evolutionary theory. It will make mad-dog reductionists like Richard Dawkins positively foam at the mouth (eg: the prestigious journal 'Nature' suggests burning Sheldrake's books). This is a book for scientific minds who have come to recognize the limitations of the Darwinian doctrine yet are horrified at the creationist alternative. Sheldrake's largely speculative but compelling hypothesis, even if proved totally false, is a welcome breath of fresh air in a tired debate. I found it a fascinating read.
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35 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Synchronicity tastes good, February 23, 2002
Sheldrake is adept at drawing theoretical correlations between various realms of science and life itself in a manner that simultaneously alienates both the poet and the scientist. How can you not love that?

Dealing with those thoughts that transcend modern language and modern scientific methodology will appeal to those readers who really want to gravitate to the cutting edge and not miss a beat.

Anything by Sheldrake is worth the price of admission into a world usually not discussed but often experienced.

Stay curious, be patient, and peer into this man's mind. He is willing to venture into those most curious areas of thought and does so with authority and humor.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Keep Looking for Signs of Life
I think there might be some very good ideas buried somewhere in this dense, pompous prose. The book's writing style is very archaic and inaccessible for the average reader... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Julie Martin

1.0 out of 5 stars BLAH.DOUBLE BLAH

IF THIS GUY HAD ANYTHING TO SAY HE WOULDN'T NEED TO USE A FULL PAGE

OF BIG WORDS TO SAY THAT PUTTING YOUR FINGER IN HOT WATER MAY FEEL... Read more
Published 21 months ago by GENE ADDINGTON

4.0 out of 5 stars An interesting hypothesis...
There's really not much to say about the content of the book that others haven't covered just as well. Read more
Published on October 19, 2005 by Evolver

5.0 out of 5 stars Also read Penrose, Emperor's New Mind
I strongly recommend mathematician and physicist Roger Penrose and his book "The Emperor's New Mind" for a completely different approach to the conclusion that Mind, at... Read more
Published on January 14, 2003 by Jeffrey Benner

3.0 out of 5 stars HARD TO READ
I HAVE READ ABOUT 3/4 OF THE BOOK, AND IT'S BEEN REALLY HARD TO GO THROUGH IT. THE SUBJECT IS FASCINATING, I WONDER IF MR. Read more
Published on December 7, 1999 by Patricia Acosta

5.0 out of 5 stars wow
Sheldrake's theory of morphic resonance may be the missing piece in the giant puzzle we call developmental biology.
Published on February 11, 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars To reframe your mind to meet todays challenges, read this.
I can't say much more about this book than others have. But if you want to get at the nub of things and get past the hype about quantum this and chaos that, this book is for you.
Published on April 19, 1998 by Ned Hamson

5.0 out of 5 stars Begging the question
To say that the leopard got its spots from its mother not only begs the question of morphogenesis but in some ways simply reintroduces a petrified egg and fossilized chicken. Read more
Published on December 13, 1997

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