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30,172 Views • May 10, 2022 • Click to toggle off description
All cultures, as far as I know, have holy places. Our ancestors were hunter-gatherers, by their very nature nomadic, and seem to have carried out ceremonies at holy places like Lascaux and Chauvet caves. When people settled in the Neolithic, starting twelve thousand years ago, they were building ceremonial structures, including standing stones and stone circles. Some were built before settled agriculture began. Even in atheist regimes where there's an explicit denial of the sacred and of the holy, the need for holy places persists, like the mausoleum of Lenin in Red Square, in Moscow, to which people went on pilgrimages, rather in the same way Christians visit the relics of saints.

Recorded on February the 16th 2022, at the Meditatio Centre London: meditatiocentrelondon.org/
Created by I AM Sound Academy: www.iamsoundacademy.com/


Dr Rupert Sheldrake, PhD, is a biologist and author best known for his hypothesis of morphic resonance. At Cambridge University he worked in developmental biology as a Fellow of Clare College. He was Principal Plant Physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics and From 2005 to 2010 was Director of the Perrott-Warrick project, Cambridge.
www.sheldrake.org/

Latest book
Ways to Go Beyond And Why They Work
www.sheldrake.org/books-by-rupert-sheldrake/ways-t…
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Views : 30,172
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Date of upload: May 10, 2022 ^^


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YouTube Comments - 91 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@Cainofnc

10 months ago

I can't get enough of this man's ideas he has a beautifully practical way of seeing the world

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@oscargustaverejlander.

1 year ago

I love and am so grateful for Rupert Sheldrake. He (amongst a few others) has fundamentally changed my life.

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@WakingUpToday213

1 year ago

We get to morphically resonate with Rupert's warmheartedness and brilliance in this lovely lecture that plumbs the past and the future.

64 |

@landgabriel

1 year ago

magical work, this man does

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@davebutler3905

1 year ago

Brilliant! If the holy place connects heaven and earth, like the trunk of a great tree, the paths of pilgrims are the roots (routes) forming conductors far and wide.

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@ericchristen2623

1 year ago

Simply, the earth is the holiest place of all. It provides for our survival, is chock full of magic and miracle, it is all we should hold sacred...

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@marthaworc7873

1 year ago

imho: Rupert Sheldrake is one of the few people that can talk about religion without mixing his message with politics. I find that to be a very lovely quality in the man.

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@ingenuity168

11 months ago

"Everywhere is holy".... I agree with that.

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@timothytannerandtheamazing5054

2 months ago

Such erudition, eloquence and wisdom. Thanks again Dr Sheldrake for yet another highly informative and wonderful lecture!

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@scottjrowan

4 months ago

Brilliant talk. Thank you 🙏

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@pamelaroebuck1079

1 year ago

I love the idea of taking our ancient sites and using them for dream incubation. This morning upon waking, I wrote my dream from the night before and then went to my e-mail where I found an invitation from Robert Moss to join him in a dream workshop. Then, and I am not certain how I found your talk, but there you were talking about holy places, pilgrimage, and dream incubation. Wonderful synchronicity. Enjoyed your talk so very much. Just completed a carving called 'The Dreaming Women of Malta. Such magic in the world!

17 |

@taghiabiri3489

1 year ago

Going into a church for sight seeing without lighting a candle, -no way! We do that and we think very deeply at the dead, the ill and the needy people we know. It is magic. Greetings from Switzerland!

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@TJ-kk5zf

9 months ago

I always teach sheldrake in my morals and ethics class

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@lynettebishop6295

1 year ago

Use as a place to sleep is a phenomenal use for churches...I think traditionally cathedrals and churches were places of healing, respite and meditation... churches were perhaps used as energy centers as well and maybe the spires were a sort of conductor.

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@RTWest-kn5fr

1 year ago

I actually enjoy congregating around a lighted candle, being with friends, and singing a song... with the notable exception that is that I am always then one year older. Gracias por tu video. RT sends, envĂ­a, Colonia Centro HistĂłrico, Puebla, MĂŠxico...

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@suecondon1685

1 year ago

Love this, from an Archaeological point of view. Numinous is a lovely word. I had never thought about a link between standing stones and spires before, Mr Sheldrake is always so fascinating.

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@sandraboletchek4608

1 year ago

You are awesome and my friends agree!

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@samrowbotham8914

1 year ago

Rupert is a polymath who knows about the work of T.C. Lethbridge and F.W. Holiday who both came up with a similar interesting hypothesis about ley lines and energy and parallel realities. Lethbridge also out of Cambridge University was convinced by Field theories and argued that magnetic fields were associated with water, mountains, deserts and open spaces. He believed that events could be recorded on objects like stones that people experienced accidentally as in seeing ghosts, or deliberately as when engaging in dowsing or psychrometry. Why are Chancels in churches crooked again this leads back to the Sun, Sunrise and the magnetic field of the Sun and how it affects us on earth according to the late Rev Hugh Benson of Plymouth who wrote a letter to the Times explaining why he thought this was about the Sun and Fields.

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@seamusdarcy5513

1 year ago

Anywhere you have people congregating around a candle or the hearth place of a family/tribal fire is the core of wholeness

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@dariushpezhmannia938

1 year ago

There is a sacred fire that is burning for more than 1500 years in a Zoroastrian temple in Iran. Zoroastrianism is one of the world's oldest religions dating back as far as 1,500 BC. Similar to the Abrahamic faiths, Zoroastrianism also makes mention to heaven and hell, judgement after death and free will leading some scholars to believe Zoroastrianism influenced many faiths that came after it.

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