Can Morphic Fields Help Explain Telepathy and the Sense of Being Stared At?
📄 Original study ↗📌 Appears in:
Plain English Summary
What if telepathy isn't something spooky and paranormal, but just a natural part of how living things connect? That's the bold idea Rupert Sheldrake lays out here through his concept of "morphic fields" — invisible organizing patterns that surround and shape self-organizing systems like flocks of birds, families, or social groups. He proposes that our minds aren't locked inside our skulls but actually extend outward through perceptual fields, linking us to the things and people we pay attention to. Telepathy, in this view, happens when emotionally bonded members of a group interact through their shared morphic field. He backs this up with a range of evidence: people detecting when they're being stared at (even through closed-circuit TV, where their skin conductance — basically a stress response measure — spikes without conscious awareness), dogs that seem to know when their owners are heading home, and even a parrot that appeared to pick up on its owner's thoughts about specific words. What makes this framework different from quantum physics-based explanations of psychic phenomena is that it starts from biology, not physics. It predicts that these effects depend on attention, intention, and emotional closeness rather than fading with distance — which lines up nicely with the experimental results from Sheldrake's telephone and email telepathy studies. It's a sweeping attempt to reframe decades of research under one unifying biological theory.
Related Papers
Cites
- The Sense of Being Stared At, Part 1: Is It Real or Illusory? — Sheldrake, Rupert (2005)
- The Sense of Being Stared At, Part 2: Its Implications for Theories of Vision — Sheldrake, Rupert (2005)
- Parapsychological Phenomena as Examples of Generalized Nonlocal Correlations—A Theoretical Framework — Walach, Harald (2014)
Same Research Program
- A Dog That Seems to Know When His Owner is Returning: Preliminary Investigations — Sheldrake, Rupert (1998)
- Testing a Language-Using Parrot for Telepathy — Sheldrake, Rupert (2003)
- A Dog That Seems to Know When His Owner Is Coming Home: Videotaped Experiments and Observations — Sheldrake, Rupert (2000)
- Apparent Telepathy Between Babies and Nursing Mothers: A Survey — Sheldrake, Rupert (2002)
- Is the Sun Conscious? — Sheldrake, Rupert (2021)
Also by these authors
More in Telepathy
Telecommunication Telepathy: A Meta-Analysis
Rethinking Communication and Consciousness: Lessons from The Telepathy Tapes Podcast
Taking the Mindfield Literally: Discovering Minds by Assuming Competence Among Nonspeakers
Who's Calling? Evaluating the Accuracy of Guessing Who Is on the Phone
A Comparison of Four New Automated Telephone Telepathy Tests
📋 Cite this paper
Sheldrake, Rupert (2019). Can Morphic Fields Help Explain Telepathy and the Sense of Being Stared At?. Mindfield.
@article{sheldrake_2019_morphic_fields_telepathy,
title = {Can Morphic Fields Help Explain Telepathy and the Sense of Being Stared At?},
author = {Sheldrake, Rupert},
year = {2019},
journal = {Mindfield},
}