Then and now
THEN: This video is from a TV program on the physics of mind-matter interaction, shown in the UK in the early 1980s. The interviewer's conclusion:
(Video uploaded by Brian Josephson.)
NOW: This is a talk by Rupert Sheldrake at Cambridge University on February 9, 2011 . (Also uploaded courtesy Brian Josephson.)
"I think a scientist would have to be massively ignorant, or a confirmed bigot, to deny the evidence that the mind can make connections through space, time and matter in ways which probably have nothing to do with the ordinary senses. And also that he would find it difficult to deny that these strange effects are compatible with current thinking in physics, and may in the future become part of an extended science, in which they're no longer regarded as paranormal, but as normal."
(Video uploaded by Brian Josephson.)
NOW: This is a talk by Rupert Sheldrake at Cambridge University on February 9, 2011 . (Also uploaded courtesy Brian Josephson.)
Comments
Tor
But when it comes to science, a complex brew of political winds, economic status, and vigorous skeptical propaganda probably combine to create ebbs and flows that sustain the psi taboo. One can see e.g. in reports written by the NSF, that the wording used to describe the public's belief in ESP comes straight out of the skeptics' handbooks. Fortunately, most of the scientistic spin has disappeared in those documents over the last five years or so, but the taboo persists, at least in the US.
If aspects of consciousness reside outside of space/time, which is suggested by the evidence for psi, then I don't see why not.
Our past does not exist anymore. How could one reincarnate in something that does not exist?
We shouldn't buy too much of scentific spatial representation of time- this is only representation...
http://www.skeptiko.com/134-rupert-sheldrake-on-richard-wiseman-deception/
The robot telepathy experiment might be a pain to run (recapitulating the strong bonds that can form between humans in a robot-human relationship might be hard) it could be run much more simply in chickens. Just imprint the chicks on a robot when they are young then see if they act different when the robot "decides" to enter vs when a stranger decides to enter. The robots decision mechanism could be random or pseudo-random.
Unrelatedly, Sheldrake implies that telepathy evolved. If this is so then telepathy must be a selectable trait. Why don't people then try to breed psychic mice? Mice are social, cheap, breed quickly, have a sequenced genome and partially determined connectome, and are readily available. It might not even be that hard, other researchers have taken wild species and after ten generations or so bred them to have the common traits found in domesticated species. I think that IONS or Sheldrake should start a breeding program and then sell psychic mice as pets.