Views : 140,659
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Jun 21, 2021 ^^
Rating : 4.908 (113/4,797 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-03-30T11:26:00.653396Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
I was a science undergraduate. I became completely disillusioned in my late teens with the lack of genuine curiosity and the âpoliticalâ dogma that was apparent in the established science community. Where would we be if real science, inspired by truly open curious minds, were allowed to flourish. Perhaps morphic resonance will enable this to happen ? Thank you for posting your talk
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I have a morphic resonance with the name Rupert of all things . Since the age of 10 os so I remember being attracted to the sound of that name Rupert for no particular reason , I thought I might have made the name up or something at the time . It`s now 52 or so years later and the name still has a resonance with me . I don`t know why , but anyway this is a great lecture , Thank You from Claremont .
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Well done, Rupert. Most great thinkers in history are never really appreciated in their own time! I was struck by the idea of morphic resonance in families -- I'm a lawyer and for years I've had the feeling that the victimizations of today are similar somehow to those of yesterday, especially within highly traumatized families (residential school survivors). Abusers and victims seem caught in similar patterns of behaviour, and seem obliged to re-enact scenes from the past. This would be extremely difficult to prove, but we now accept that trauma can affect genetics and be passed on generationally. I think morphic resonance is an equally plausible explanation. Please carry on!
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When I was about 18 I had a deep conversation with a friend on the fear of freedom. About 5 years later I read The Fear of Freedom by Erich Fromm. To my astonishment, 2 chapters felt like reading our conversation back, the logic, the steps, the points being made. I'd say, Rupert Sheldrake is right.
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Congratulations Dr. Sheldrake! Thank you for your curiosity, diligence and vigilance in your body of research and writing! It creates hope as opposed to the architecture of dread in contemporary science. The living world is ever alive and able to adapt and overcome . You inspire my research and practice of medicine as a physician.
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I am 27 years old, grew up in poverty, in a 3rd world country, witnessing and following you, Dr. Sheldrake, to be my inspiration in terms of scientific endeavors.
I hope that one day I may acquire the skills to explore and experiment on Morphic Resonance myself and continue your work.
Because I think Morphic Resonance is the ultimate version of Science, since it also takes into account the mysteries of the universe, not just the observable particles.
But for now, I'll stick to creating websites for businesses for my day to day food.
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Rupert, It strikes me that your work and ideas are akin to a huge boulder hitting a large lake, sending ripples outward in every direction. Or more accurately sending wonderful, much needed thoughts through the minds of our species. I encourage every reader, starting with myself, to add our own energy to them in whatever way we can.
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The biggest hurdle to progress, understanding, and knowledge in the realm of sciences throughout the many centuries has not been mainstream academics inability to learn or understand, but their unwillingness to investigate new and different ideas, always being quick to, before reviewing the evidence or studying experiments, disregard and even ridicule, other thinkers who present a hypnosis outside their own orthodox understanding. But thank God for people like Dr. Sheldrake who embrace the unknown and are only motivated by actually understanding how our world works and that throughout history, in the end, the new and different ideas in science, the truths, the most rational and probable hypotheses have,(though it may take decades) always prevailed. It would just be nice if everyone were more open minded. How much more could we know today if so? Thanks Dr, and keep it up.
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@Firehorse40
2 years ago
The fact that Dr Sheldrake was denounced as a heretic tells me two things: 1. The hierarchy of the scientific community is identical to the clergy of major religions; and 2. Sheldrake's ideas are likely spot on.
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