- Welcome
- Presenters
- Carolyn Aldwin
- Chris M. Bache
- Ed Bastian
- Daryl Bem
- Fariba Bogzaran
- Robert Thomas Browning
- Yassir Chadly
- Sandra de Castro Buffington
- Deepak Chopra
- Dan Booth Cohen
- Thomas Norman DeWolf
- Mickael Drouard
- Saleem Ebrahim
- Lawrence Ellis
- Jane Hughes Gignoux
- Matthew Gilbert
- Mingtong Gu
- Diane Musho Hamilton
- Rick Hanson
- Indigie Femme
- Dana Klisanin
- Pam Kramer
- Osprey Orielle Lake
- Ed Lantz
- Stacey Lawson
- Rick Levenson
- Lee Lipsenthal
- David Lukoff
- Joanna Macy
- Giovanni Mandala
- Kate McCallum
- Richard Miller
- Edgar Mitchell
- Vlad Moskovski
- Jill Purce
- Dean Radin
- Rachel Naomi Remen
- Belvie Rooks
- Barry Robbins
- Shelley Scammell
- Marilyn Mandala Schlitz
- Jonathan Schooler
- Rupert Sheldrake
- Brian Swimme
- Luisah Teish
- Wendy Tokuda
- Cassandra Vieten
- Jean Watson
- Program
- IONS Benefit Lunch
- Temple Awards
- Opportunities to Participate
- Poster Submissions
- Logistics
- Registration / Pricing
- Conference Site
- Contact Us
- Brochure
T1 Morphic Resonance, Collective Memory, and the Extended Mind—Rupert Sheldrake, PhD
Exploring the hypotheses of morphic resonance, this workshop discusses the possibility that our memories are not stored inside our heads; instead, our brains may be more like TV receivers than video recorders. From this perspective, we consider ways in which collective memory links us and other species. Sheldrake makes the case that plants and animals inherit their forms and instincts by morphic fields rather than through genes. He will explain and discuss these radical scientific ideas and show how they connect with our own experience.
Rupert Sheldrake, PhD, is a biologist and author of more than 80 technical papers and 10 books, including Morphic Resonance (2009). He was a fellow of Clare College, Cambridge, a research fellow of the Royal Society and, until 2010, director of the Perrott-Warrick Project, funded from Trinity College, Cambridge.
See more: Thursday Pre-Conference Institutes | Rupert Sheldrake



















