Interviews
The Sun Magazine February 2013 - Science Takes a Wrong Turn
Rupert's interview with Mark Leviton
How Science has Lost Its Way
Posted 8th February 2013
Conversando com Rupert Sheldrake: Os desafios da inovação científica
Interview with Daniel Sander Hoffmann
Episteme Número 22, Jul/Dez 2005
Interview in Brazilian Portuguese.
pdf format
AMNAP
Interview with Matthew Cromer
Rupert discusses his current position on the problem of opening skeptical
minds to the possibility of perinormal phenomena.
Posted 3rd November 2005
Bark
Magazine Interview: In Conversation
Bark Magazine No.10. Winter 2000
Dr. Rupert Sheldrake in conversation with Dr. Marc Bekoff, discussing
psychic behavior in pets and the relevance of some recent studies.
Posted 16th March 2000
Quest Magazine Interview:
From Cellular Aging to the Physics of Angels
A Conversation with Rupert Sheldrake -
Interviewed by John David Ebert
In the Vale of Soul-Making
A dialogue between Matthew Fox and Rupert Sheldrake from Resurgence
magazine.
posted 5/10/99
Sheldrake interview
with Hootenanny
In 1986, my cousin, the painter John Macdonald and I were having a very
expansive, wee hours discussion in a shotgun apartment in Hattiesburg,
Mississippi. He was describing something called the "hundredth
monkey principle."
Posted 18th March 1999
The Universal Organism with Rupert Sheldrake, Ph.D.
The so-called "laws of nature" may actually be more like habits
and instincts than immutable and inviolable principles. Rupert Sheldrake,
biologist and author of the controversial A New Science of Life, suggests
that from this perspective all of creation may be viewed as a living
organism. This ancient concept challenges the notion of the universe
as a mechanism with God as the great mechanic.
From the Thinking Allowed
Series with Dr. Jeffrey Mishlove.
Posted 18th March 1999
A New Science of
Life with Rupert Sheldrake Ph.D
Let's begin by talking about the hypothesis of morphic resonance and
morphic fields that you've developed as an alternative to mechanistic
thinking in biology, and then, Rupert, we'll take a look at some of
the philosophical implications of this new view. From the Thinking Allowed
Series with Dr. Jeffrey Mishlove.
Posted
18th March 1999
Mavericks of the
Mind by David Jay Brown
Rupert Sheldrake is best known for his controversial theory of "formative
causation" which implies a non-mechanistic universe, governed by
laws which themselves are subject to change. Born in Newark-on-Trent,
England, Rupert studied natural sciences at Cambridge and philosophy
at Harvard, where he was a Frank Knox Fellow. He took a Ph.D in biochemistry
at Cambridge in 1967, and in the same year became a Fellow of Clare
College, Cambridge. He was Director of Studies in biochemistry and cell
biology there until 1973.
Posted 18th March
1999
Maybe Angels: Interview
with Rupert Sheldrake by Hal Blacker
I met controversial biologist Rupert Sheldrake the night he and theologian
Matthew Fox celebrated the publication of their new collection of dialogues,
The Physics of Angels. I knew that Sheldrake was not afraid to challenge
orthodoxy by entering realms of thought usually eschewed by other scientists.
Posted 18th March 1999