The Sheldrake Vernon Dialogues

By: Rupert Sheldrake and Mark Vernon
  • Summary

  • Dr Rupert Sheldrake is a biologist and author best known for his hypothesis of morphic resonance. Mark Vernon is a psychotherapist and author. Together they discuss: consciousness, prayer, angels, science and spiritual practices, magic, dreams, hell, the unconscious, rituals, enlightenment, atheism, materialism, and more.

    © 2024 The Sheldrake Vernon Dialogues
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Episodes
  • How does memory work?
    Sep 17 2024

    No one knows. Repeated experiments have failed to locate where memories are stored in the brain, casting doubt on the conventional assumption that memories are stored as material traces. In this episode of the Sheldrake-Vernon Dialogues, Rupert Sheldrake and Mark Vernon discuss various kinds of memory, from episodic memory to habits. They consider how memory is linked to emotion and place, drawing on insights from Aristotle to AN Whitehead. Rupert’s own work has led to the theory of morphic fields, within which all self-organising systems dwell. They also ask about Indian ideas of memory and how that is related to ideas about reincarnation and the possibility that everything that exists lives, in some way, in the memory of God.

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    40 mins
  • Randomness and Indeterminism
    Jul 16 2024

    Watch on YouTube https://youtu.be/_TZ-8RMPHM8

    Randomness and luck, fate and providence. How do these facets of life relate to one another? Or is everything, actually, mechanically determined with synchronicities, say, being no more than coincidences? In this episode of the Sheldrake-Vernon Dialogues, Rupert Sheldrake and Mark Vernon discuss the ways in which philosophers and scientists, ancient and modern, have imagined and explored notions of causality and sympathy in nature, alongside fortune and theurgy in relation to the gods. The ideas of Aristotle and Boethius provide a striking background against which to consider more recent scientific work. Rupert also demonstrates how fields can influence seemingly random effects using a Galton Board - a remarkably profound analogue for, say, practices such as prayer.

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    38 mins
  • The Fullness of Life
    Jun 7 2024

    At school, we learn that being alive is to possess certain functions, from respiration to reproduction. But what is life and why can the word “life” be used more widely than referring only to biological life? In the latest episode of the Sheldrake-Vernon Dialogues, Rupert Sheldrake and Mark Vernon consider the meaning of saying that stars have a lifecycle, and that rocks and atoms can be ascribed a biography, in that they undergo processes of becoming. They discuss A.N. Whitehead’s argument that so-called inanimate objects need to be considered as organisms and that life must also include the experience of being alive, which is to say consciousness and mentality. The powers of nature and the connection of all life, not least in terms of the idea of Gaia, lead them to ask how God can be said to be the origin and sustainer of life. Asking what life is dramatically expands the notion of life and the awesome nature of being alive.

    00:00 Introduction
    00:26 Criteria of Life
    01:19 Life Beyond Biology
    02:26 Life Cycle of Stars
    03:03 Theological Perspectives on Life
    04:08 Greek Concepts of Life: Zoe and Bios
    06:18 Life in the Universe
    08:18 Gaia Hypothesis
    10:10 Atoms and Molecules as Life
    12:19 Panpsychism
    14:30 Life and Consciousness
    17:42 God and Life
    19:10 Creative Process and Life
    20:28 Diversity and Unity of Life
    26:42 Modern Mechanistic Materialism vs. Expanded View of Life
    32:57 Conclusion

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    34 mins

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Listen to two people weave magic in conversation.

I hope these guys keep making new episodes. Have you covered the Infinite yet? My go-to listen, early mornings and evenings. Absolutely wonderful.

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Superbly illuminating

Atheists please give these a listen.
Flailing Christians, even more so.
For many years I was an atheist and gradually had to accept that I had to ignore more and more experience and evidence and become very defensive in my arguments. When I finally caved in and accepted that the weird shit did actually happen to me, and then eventually that maybe God exists, I was desperate for this kind of learned and sane and educated discussion. Not evangelical nutters with childish and simplistic arguments and dogmas.
This is a breath of fresh air and fabulously valuable.
Thank you RS and MV

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