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A book by Rupert Sheldrake that introduces his controversial theory of morphic resonance, which proposes that self-organizing systems inherit a collective memory from previous similar systems, influencing their form and behavior across space and time.
Like you interviewed Rupert Sheldrake I remember a few years ago. A lot of that kind of lines up with that sort of anecdotal it's not anecdotal I mean experimental findings. He doesn't have amazing theories. I I would say the morphic resonance stuff is it's a sort of a placeholder theory, but he's not a bad empiricist.
""Rupert Sheldrake is mentioned, and his "morphic resonance" theory is discussed, which is the central theme of his most well-known book."