Morphogenetic Resonance
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Another short-coming of traditional Western science is its inability to
explain the existence of forms in nature. No matter how we magnify or
manipulate the material world, no mechanical model explains the
emergence of the variety of unique and semi-unique forms in nature.
Every type of rock, plant, animal, organism, bacteria, all aggregate
themselves into distinct and definite types with traits/characteristics
semi-unique to their form and completely unique to them individually.
For example each oak tree has many semi-unique features that
characterize it clearly as an oak and not a pine, like the shape of its
leaves, being non-coniferous, etc. These features are semi-unique as all
oak trees share them, however on another level, no two oak trees are
exactly alike either. Exact size, shape, dimensions, growth patterns,
ring patterns etc. are completely unique to each tree. So what is the
mechanism in nature which constantly creates these unique and
semi-unique forms? Newton’s model, nor the 300 subsequent years of
material science since have been able to explain this. British biologist
Rupert Sheldrake’s concept of morphogenetic resonance, however, seems
to be our best current theory.
Morphogenetic Resonance was taken from my book, "Spiritual Science" available on Lulu and Amazon:
http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/ericdubay
https://www.amazon.com/author/ericdubay
http://www.EricDubay.com
http://www.AtlanteanConspiracy.com
http://www.IFERS.123.st
explain the existence of forms in nature. No matter how we magnify or
manipulate the material world, no mechanical model explains the
emergence of the variety of unique and semi-unique forms in nature.
Every type of rock, plant, animal, organism, bacteria, all aggregate
themselves into distinct and definite types with traits/characteristics
semi-unique to their form and completely unique to them individually.
For example each oak tree has many semi-unique features that
characterize it clearly as an oak and not a pine, like the shape of its
leaves, being non-coniferous, etc. These features are semi-unique as all
oak trees share them, however on another level, no two oak trees are
exactly alike either. Exact size, shape, dimensions, growth patterns,
ring patterns etc. are completely unique to each tree. So what is the
mechanism in nature which constantly creates these unique and
semi-unique forms? Newton’s model, nor the 300 subsequent years of
material science since have been able to explain this. British biologist
Rupert Sheldrake’s concept of morphogenetic resonance, however, seems
to be our best current theory.
Morphogenetic Resonance was taken from my book, "Spiritual Science" available on Lulu and Amazon:
http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/ericdubay
https://www.amazon.com/author/ericdubay
http://www.EricDubay.com
http://www.AtlanteanConspiracy.com
http://www.IFERS.123.st