Morphogenetic Fields
There is mounting evidence that as more and more people learn or
do something it becomes easier for others to learn or do it. In
one experiment, British biologist Rupert Sheldrake took three short,
similar Japanese rhymes -- one a meaningless jumble of disconnected
Japanese words, the second a newly-composed verse and the third
a traditional rhyme known by millions of Japanese. Neither Sheldrake
nor the English schoolchildren he got to memorize these verses knew
which was which, nor did they know any Japanese. The most easily-learned
rhyme turned out to be the one well-known to Japanese. This and
other experiments led Sheldrake
to postulate that there is a field of habitual patterns that links
all people, which influences and is influenced by the habits of
all people. This field contains (among other things) the pattern
of that Japanese rhyme. The more people have a habit pattern --
whether of knowledge, perception or behavior -- the stronger it
is in the field, and the more easily it replicates in a new person.
In fact, it seems such fields exist for other entities too -- for
birds, plants, even crystals. Sheldrake named these phenomena morphogenetic
fields -- fields which influence the pattern or form of things.
Resources
Books
Rupert Sheldrake, A
New Science of Life (1995) and The
Presence of the Past (1995)
Article
"Morphic
Fields and Morphic Resonance: An Introduction" by Rupert
Sheldrake, Feb 2005
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