Science and Spiritual Practices - Dr Rupert Sheldrake

Get early access to our latest psychology lectures: bit.ly/new-talks5
The effects of spiritual practices are now being investigated scientifically as never before, and many studies have shown that religious and spiritual practices generally make people happier and healthier.
In this talk, Rupert Sheldrake will summarize the latest scientific research on what happens when we take part in these practices, and suggest ways you can explore some of these fields for yourself.
In particular, the talk will focus on how science helps validate seven practices which underpin all the major world religions, and discuss some of them in more detail:
- Meditation
- Gratitude
- Connecting with nature
- Relating to plants
- Rituals
- Singing and chanting
- Pilgrimage and holy places.
For those who are religious, you’ll learn about the evolutionary origins of your own traditions and gain a new appreciation of their power. For the non-religious, the talk will show how the core practices of spirituality are accessible to all, without the need to subscribe to a religious belief system.
Dr. Rupert Sheldrake is a biologist and author of more than 85 scientific papers and 13 books. He is a leading researcher into anomalous phenomena and was among the top 100 Global Thought Leaders for 2013, as ranked by the Duttweiler Institute, Zurich, Switzerland’s leading think tank.
He studied biology and biochemistry at Cambridge University where he earned his Ph.D., followed by a fellowship at Harvard where he spent a year studying philosophy and history. His books include: ‘Science and Spiritual Practices’ (2017), ‘The Science Delusion’ (2012), and ‘The Sense of Being Stared At, And Other Aspects of The Extended Mind.’ sheldrake.org
Links:
Get our latest psychology lectures emailed to your inbox: bit.ly/new-talks5
Check out our next event: theweekenduniversity.com/events/
Rupert’s website: sheldrake.org/
Rupert’s books: amzn.to/2Gbvijy

Пікірлер: 363

  • @raymondgillespie2169
    @raymondgillespie2169 Жыл бұрын

    The BRILLIANT Dr Rupert Sheldrake. Light in a dark world !! 🙂😊🙏

  • @theonlymeaning
    @theonlymeaning3 жыл бұрын

    I like to listen to him as I fall asleep when my mind won't relax, but only listen to talks I have heard several times, otherwise I get caught up in his subject matter...I adore his voice and manner of speaking the actually gorgeous language of English, when he says a sentence it is quite lovely..

  • @reikiorgone

    @reikiorgone

    3 жыл бұрын

    try alan watts ;) love listening before bed

  • @not2tees

    @not2tees

    3 жыл бұрын

    I too have been carried down the Rupert River on its magical currents!

  • @lifeinruralthailand

    @lifeinruralthailand

    3 жыл бұрын

    Rupert's latest interview on his book WAYS TO GO BEYOND for anyone interested kzread.info/dash/bejne/oH52utlqlJnTlrg.html

  • @anderz64

    @anderz64

    3 жыл бұрын

    You are so right. His entire performance is very pleasing before sleep. Thank you 🇳🇴

  • @Jazzgriot

    @Jazzgriot

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@reikiorgone Alan Watts great voice for seminars, and talks, also Idris Shah.

  • @AdventureswithAixe596
    @AdventureswithAixe5963 жыл бұрын

    I wished the whole scientific establishment and the alternative researchers would share this clear, strictly scientific but totally open minded attitude. I am sure then we would be in a better world and probably would fly to the stars.

  • @GG-xe1sj

    @GG-xe1sj

    3 жыл бұрын

    There are already plenty like this... the world remains complex that has nothing to do with the other.

  • @AdventureswithAixe596

    @AdventureswithAixe596

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@GG-xe1sj Yes - of courses you are right - I made a more emotional comment rather that rational. But still the established science seems to me ran into a very closed minded and partly dogmatic position for whatever reason. And the usual and good fact that every theory has to pass a critic resistance to be accepted (and worked on further with adequate funds) is become too strong and more a wall of ignorance than a test filter. But you are right there are many coming with brand new ideas and new concepts like Donald Hoffmann.

  • @GG-xe1sj

    @GG-xe1sj

    3 жыл бұрын

    Mustafa Eren I agree with your analysis. About dogma. Unfortunately it’s a product of human nature and inevitably science goes in cycles where new ideas are encouraged while other cycles where people stick to convention and a stigmas like you said.

  • @sorjonen8358

    @sorjonen8358

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@AdventureswithAixe596 I suggest you to visit the site of the Center Takiwasi and their research

  • @AdventureswithAixe596

    @AdventureswithAixe596

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dear @@sorjonen8358 thank you very much for your suggestion - I will do so!

  • @jjharvathh
    @jjharvathh4 жыл бұрын

    This guy is so likable, I wish he was my friend and we could go on pilgrimages together. That would be great.

  • @theonlymeaning

    @theonlymeaning

    3 жыл бұрын

    So very likeable....

  • @jamontoast5303

    @jamontoast5303

    3 жыл бұрын

    indeed id love to sit down and chat with him about various topics with a good cup of tea and biscuits

  • @robinsings

    @robinsings

    3 жыл бұрын

    He has a very nice family as well. His wives work is very beautiful.. and his kids.. i am happy to know people like this exist.. i hope that life would be kind and allow me a hello at an event. Consider that a wish

  • @geofreycrow9663

    @geofreycrow9663

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@robinsings Is his wife an artist of some kind? What's her name?

  • @belairfitness

    @belairfitness

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@geofreycrow9663 Jill Purce

  • @pamgl9
    @pamgl93 жыл бұрын

    What a beautiful soul. His energy is subtle, but like a whisper in the ear, keeps one leaning forward for more.

  • @theonlymeaning

    @theonlymeaning

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh Pam, 'A WHISPER IN THE EAR" yes indeed , but do let us admit the full truth :) that he is tall and he is handsome and his speaking voice and use of the English language is quite exquisite. Linda

  • @guitarszen

    @guitarszen

    11 ай бұрын

    You are fooled by style over substance. He offers nothing of substance.

  • @toastie8173

    @toastie8173

    Ай бұрын

    @@guitarszen And hows that?

  • @polpapol
    @polpapol Жыл бұрын

    04:58 1. Gratitude 15:49 2. Meditation 36:50 3. Rituals 3.1. Rites of passage 52:29 3.2. Rituals of remembrance 58:18 4. Pilgrimage and holy places 1:09:46 5. Closing remarks 1:12:38 Q&A 1. Gratitude to Dr. Rupert Sheldrake and Terence McKenna. He talks about their work. 1:14:40 2. More gratitude. 1:15:59 3. About other public conversations with Dr.Rupert Sheldrake. 1:16:07 4. Is it possible to be aware without having an object of awareness? Isn’t worshiping an entity simply worshiping of awareness? 1:18:56 5. Are nearly-dead experiences induced by psychedelics just chemicals in the brain or something more? 1:21:17 6. About morphic resonance and the remembering of practices that no longer exist. 1:22:14 7. I had a nearly-dead experience when I almost drowned as a child. 1:24:59 8. How can one feel bliss when meditating while there is so much tragedy in the world? 1:29:06 9. How about tarot cards? 1:31:13 10. What can you do to help materialist people understand the claims about the mind existing beyond our brains?

  • @dru9184

    @dru9184

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this!

  • @coyotitotl

    @coyotitotl

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @peterrose8944

    @peterrose8944

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for doing this.

  • @buyvibe

    @buyvibe

    6 ай бұрын

    Naw, you da man!

  • @kerim.peardon5551
    @kerim.peardon55512 жыл бұрын

    His mentioning of morphic resonance in holy places reminded me of a trip my late husband and I took to a Shaker village in Kentucky. My husband had bad knees and couldn't walk too far without a break, so after touring a few buildings and the gift shop, we sat down on a bench outside and I was overcome by a sense of peace. It was so calm and relaxing--unlike any other place I have ever been. I have always wanted to go back there and shell out the money to stay in one of the original buildings on the site and explore that feeling further.

  • @guitarszen

    @guitarszen

    11 ай бұрын

    It's all nonsense. Sheldrake is not a doctor or scientist (anymore). He writes books for profit.

  • @NomadicNirvana420

    @NomadicNirvana420

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@guitarszen are you saying that she did not have that experience?

  • @guitarszen

    @guitarszen

    11 ай бұрын

    @@NomadicNirvana420 she is misinterpreting events. People do this all the time, attributing feelings, etc. to things that are irrelevant.

  • @J0hnC0ltrane
    @J0hnC0ltrane6 ай бұрын

    The perspective of the moon being reflected in water is most useful. Dr. Sheldrake's talks are very helpful.

  • @donbakerseattle
    @donbakerseattle3 жыл бұрын

    Esoteric teachings say that science will discover the etheric body in this century, which will lead to all kinds of positive developments related to health and healing. I believe Rupert's work with morphogenic fields is in that direction.

  • @truerealist757

    @truerealist757

    Жыл бұрын

    The Science of the west shall find nothing..it is a Bastard and a wild man totally cursed to searching and finding nothing, discovering everything yet knowing nothing for it has forsaken God the Creator.

  • @danpaulson927
    @danpaulson9273 жыл бұрын

    A true visionary. It’s as if someone is finding and explaining the connection humans and our consciousness have to the cosmos we’re are in and of. It’s refreshing and makes me feel happy to put some theory to ones life experiences.

  • @lifeinruralthailand

    @lifeinruralthailand

    3 жыл бұрын

    Rupert's latest interview on his book WAYS TO GO BEYOND for anyone interested kzread.info/dash/bejne/oH52utlqlJnTlrg.html

  • @sumanjyani6601

    @sumanjyani6601

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lifeinruralthailand thanks

  • @colleenkaralee2280
    @colleenkaralee22802 жыл бұрын

    When I dedicate time to being thankful I find it raises me up to bliss.

  • @leona7522
    @leona75224 жыл бұрын

    Phenominally good. Thank you!!

  • @roumyanapetrova5687
    @roumyanapetrova56872 жыл бұрын

    A most remarkable contemporay thinker with an amazing sense of humour. I can listen to him for hours and never get bored. Thank you!!!!!

  • @lindaklase3821
    @lindaklase38213 жыл бұрын

    EXCELLENT PRESENTATION EXCELLENT ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY

  • @Liusila

    @Liusila

    2 жыл бұрын

    OH MY GOOOOD

  • @Cotten-
    @Cotten-2 жыл бұрын

    This man talks me straight to sleep. It's much better than any pill I've taken. I'll finish a full lecture sometime in the future.

  • @guitarszen

    @guitarszen

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes, because his ideas are boring and fictional, like a nice story that makes it easy to drift off.

  • @toastie8173

    @toastie8173

    Ай бұрын

    @@guitarszenHow are they fictional? Give me an example.

  • @lmansur1000
    @lmansur10003 жыл бұрын

    I so much appreciate his teaching - thorough, down-to-earth, open and comprehensive. I am learning a lot about many things I have sondered about.

  • @lifeinruralthailand

    @lifeinruralthailand

    3 жыл бұрын

    Rupert's latest interview on his book WAYS TO GO BEYOND for anyone interested kzread.info/dash/bejne/oH52utlqlJnTlrg.html

  • @RSEFX
    @RSEFX2 жыл бұрын

    I WONDER WHY Dr. Sheldrake hasn't included---in either of his recent books on the subject--- the ARTS AS ONE OF THE PRIME SPIRITUAL PRACTICES? Creation often results in a very spiritual link to the deeper nature of things, and can come with a quite a strong meditational experience. I would think he could write an entire book on that subject.

  • @Alpha-Andromeda

    @Alpha-Andromeda

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting idea. It definitely used to be connected to spirituality, definitely religion, but also a kind of mysticism. But who does that nowadays I wonder. I see Americans turning mandalas into commercial products to “color in”. Gruesome it feels to me. Sometimes I draw sigils but it’s always for a purpose. Well, the Lascaux cave paintings were equally for a purpose. To invoke divine fellowship in an endeavor. He does speak to the importance of mantra and singing/chanting so you must be speaking about the visual arts and movement arts like dancing. It’s a relevant question you ask.

  • @johnwoodhead5950
    @johnwoodhead59503 жыл бұрын

    Great talk and Q and A........he puts his points across very well

  • @GuerrillaNature
    @GuerrillaNature7 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for this!

  • @donsoley746
    @donsoley7464 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Rupert!

  • @rebeccaaldrich3396
    @rebeccaaldrich33968 ай бұрын

    Excellent presentation!

  • @lindamclean8809
    @lindamclean88097 ай бұрын

    Wonderful presentation thank you........there are more things in heaven and earth than we can ever imagine. 🥰🥰🥰

  • @Jazzgriot
    @Jazzgriot3 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant. An important scholar, and thinker. I'm a big fan.

  • @blackbird5634
    @blackbird563419 күн бұрын

    At YMCA camp (in the 70's) we all yelled: "Rub a dub dub, thanks for the grub!" Grace was rather informal then. We played The Who's album Tommy during morning calisthenics. Van Halen had come out with ''Eruption'' but we only got that on special occasions.🤣

  • @josephgagliano6145
    @josephgagliano6145 Жыл бұрын

    Yes, I yearn to just be in the flow.

  • @robinsings
    @robinsings4 жыл бұрын

    I could listen to him for a long time ..

  • @theonlymeaning

    @theonlymeaning

    3 жыл бұрын

    I do, over and over....why didn't I follow my dream and move to England at age 21 and remain there,....at 74 that remains a bit of a sad thought...

  • @timothytannerandtheamazing5054
    @timothytannerandtheamazing50546 ай бұрын

    A fantastic learning experience delivered by one of the most affable, intelligent, knowledgeable and wise academics.

  • @aretwodeetoo1181
    @aretwodeetoo11813 жыл бұрын

    Great talk. On reconciling tragedies and bliss through spiritual practice, when you are connected to the larger consciousness you are no longer affected by human or even ecological tragedies the way that you are as an individual. God has seen all sorts of extreme tragedies throughout the epochs of space and time. While not insensitive to the tragedies of materialized conscious beings (in fact the opposite), God is not afraid of them and instead accepts them for what they are and integrates them completely. When you are connected to God you share this extended viewpoint, you realize that tragedy and bliss are two sides of the same thing and your intention is the determining factor, regardless of how "terrible" the circumstances you find yourself in. Suffering comes from not accepting tragedy as something that happens and changes us, not from the tragedy itself. Peace.

  • @biancaturner725
    @biancaturner7258 ай бұрын

    I do exactly that eversince my husband started taking over meal prepping ❤

  • @tammymiller9773
    @tammymiller977311 ай бұрын

    There is a traditional and joyous hymn that goes " i saw the light"

  • @robinsings
    @robinsings3 жыл бұрын

    Interesting talk.

  • @ErikRothFfM
    @ErikRothFfM Жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much Mr. Rupert Sheldrake, ❤🌿🔥🍀🌒🌕🌘🍀🔥🌿❤ Namasté and Blessed Be.

  • @vickygibbins7838
    @vickygibbins7838 Жыл бұрын

    Ok, I am 43 years old. At 24 years I was aware that I wanted to discover my spiritual self. At that age I didn't understand what that was. At the age of 15 when describing my religious ideology, I would say I was agnostic; that I wasn't prepared to condemn myself to any faith, and that I believed (a bit of this, and a bit of that..) That was my take on things after I was told as a child I was a protestant (which I never understood) and attending Sunday school and Christian services, harvest festival, Christmas mass.. I was always envious of the congregation lining up in the Isle to make their way to the alter to receive the body and blood? Of Christ. Taking the rice paper disc in their mouths and drinking from the same silver plated goblet as the 15/20 people in front of them with richeousness and glee.. like they've achieved something and were worth more than the average Joe... So religion for me was a confused phenomenon. And so I knew that some bits of this and that appealed to me, so the correct choice for me was agnosticism 🙂 When filling out forms for jobs the generic question would come up, do you see yourself as white black, ethnic minority, I would answer 'I'm world wide baby' a humanist, universal..' hoping that any of these answers would grab a readers attention and influence them in some positive way hopefully... As much as spirituality and inward contemplation are very, and always have been important to me, as they go along with worldly understanding, and appreciation of everything that turns up and is provided magically. How the world and universe provide material things that I need to survive that I awe at! That are simply the most wonderful beautiful, conscious, clever, supreme things I've ever had the pleasure of discovering.. there's no end to the wonder that I have discovered and are yet to!! The senses.. all of them! The feelings! Anyway, all that aside. Don't we think it's time that the average layman get to grips with understanding and providing to our fellow man (so to speak) intelligent and emotional knowledge to the adolescent who have no examples to learn this from? For instance, Mens psychology absolutely amazes and astonishes me. So many masculine/male people are lost, with no family structure or direction.. with this qll important ego, but no intelligence or respect for any other being.. who end up alone and lonely... they're an ignored community that need our society to take notice and guide them through what they can achieve and expect life to throw at them.. Unless they have a strong community to guide and instill their expectations, then most slip through the cracks do they not? I think I've struck on a very important subject here, that the intellectual community need to address and curriculate this void in our society for the sake of man kind! And their children... do you agree?

  • @Levandetag
    @Levandetag Жыл бұрын

    This is such a Great listening, Thank you for being Rupert Sheldrake! Listen carefully at, what Rupert says, around 1:30:45 and forward til the end. Incredibly wise and conscious man, who have felt seen experienced more, than most would ever dare to, let into their "perfectly normal lives", or ever dare to speak of. We who have had such experiences, Just Know. Thats the difference with, sceptics, who never ever will challenge their own opinions, they too "just know" their smaller "known" piece of All there is ;) Its very beautiful to listen to human beings being humane and wiser

  • @doctortrouserpants1387
    @doctortrouserpants13872 жыл бұрын

    the materialist (around 1hr 30min) refers to Rupert's comments about "the brain outside the body". He was in fact talking about the Mind outside the body. Materialists confuse the physical with the non-physical.

  • @kathleenbliss2201
    @kathleenbliss22012 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic 🌺

  • @ejws1575
    @ejws15752 жыл бұрын

    I viewed myself in third person, aged 15 when I hospitalised myself on shrooms (they were semi legal in UK at the time) - as I understand it an OD raises body temp precipitating a psychotic episode. Reading about NDEs as a teenager provided the first best example of how it felt and the fact that my POV in space was distorted/depersonalised at the same time as time (moments throughout the night like snapshots, stills or fractions of video that had been shuffled so they were out of sequence), without being ego death exactly, at least not all the time, made me very receptive to some of these ideas.. mainly as they appear in Jung, Burroughs, Laing etc. Nice lecture.

  • @PickeringResearch
    @PickeringResearch3 жыл бұрын

    Nice guy. Really enjoyed his "A Conscious Universe?".

  • @JanicePhillips

    @JanicePhillips

    2 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/hXqc1bGboM3HaKQ.html

  • @evesbuddhabeads4953

    @evesbuddhabeads4953

    2 жыл бұрын

    I enjoy. .the. .messages

  • @gerardmoloney9979
    @gerardmoloney99793 жыл бұрын

    Rupert Sheldrake is highly gifted and intelligent and a wonderful speaker. I've always enjoyed listening to him and learning new ways to look at life and science, so I'm shocked to hear him talk about Darwinian evolution! Darwinian evolution is impossible and has been proved to be so. It is like Darwin; dead. How Rupert doesn't know that is absolutely astonishing!

  • @eamonnmurphy5385

    @eamonnmurphy5385

    3 жыл бұрын

    I believe that he accepts darwins theory of evolution up to a point. The difference is that he proposes something like: there is counsiousness in every atom in the universe so there is an ability for things to happen and evolve which otherwise seems impossible by natural selection and mutation. Like the first living cell. The idea that the universe has counsiousness goes way back to the early Christian Church. In fact the Bible gives us a clue in Genesis by stating that the "Earth would bring forth" the animals and plants ect.

  • @keithd2284

    @keithd2284

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@maxierosenbloom1687 And you wonder why nobody likes you.

  • @flappypaddles_

    @flappypaddles_

    Жыл бұрын

    The Earth is 4.5bn years old, regardless of what you learned in Sunday school or in a Creationist environment. Natural selection through survival of the fittest is going on even right now and is a direct consequence of conscious choice. What Rupert is talking about is that the base reality of which consciousness emanates from is inside all things and we have a large fraction of it that we use to operate ourselves. And yet, we too make certain choices about who we mate with and therefore the fittest are surviving and the unfit are dying out.

  • @toastie8173

    @toastie8173

    Ай бұрын

    @@maxierosenbloom1687 Self denial, eh?

  • @saralakushwaha1180
    @saralakushwaha1180Ай бұрын

    Thank you 👏🏽👍👏🏽👍👏🏽👍

  • @mudhoney99999
    @mudhoney999993 жыл бұрын

    Incredible

  • @avwarrior
    @avwarrior3 жыл бұрын

    I love this man, brilliant

  • @greenchristendom4116
    @greenchristendom4116 Жыл бұрын

    "Meditatio" was used by Guido in the Middle Ages for one of the stages of Lectio Divina (and I think he draws it from such Scripture passages as for instance "upon his Law was my meditation day and night), I believe John of the Cross uses the phrase Discursive Meditation for a certain kind of prayer too, so its older term even in a Christian context.

  • @jayachandranthampi4807
    @jayachandranthampi48073 жыл бұрын

    Very good and useful talk. Thank you for sharing. Meditation (not relaxation techniques) without precondition is Response eliciting than an Expression. This is a suppression technique as per Ancient wisdom and can disintegrate system. It's not a comparative system, but a Healing wisdom. So says, Ancient Wisdom....it's like psychedelic Response....it's good but with a luggage of after effect as a "result"! Meditation is creative instead and thus has no result but Transformation, they say!!!

  • @charleswood2182
    @charleswood21822 жыл бұрын

    Who needs a science of spiritual practices when simply being honest with oneself is the quickest way to commune with one's spirit?

  • @reggyreptinall9598
    @reggyreptinall95983 жыл бұрын

    I think happiness should be redefined.

  • @estellekingshott429
    @estellekingshott42927 күн бұрын

    Brilliant thank you 💝💝💝🦄🦄🦄💚💚💚

  • @cabbagefart7432
    @cabbagefart74322 жыл бұрын

    Something to meditate on is worship vs prayer

  • @colleenkaralee2280
    @colleenkaralee22802 жыл бұрын

    I keep my mind from giving me its stream of past scenes and future projections by doing creative visualization - a form of mind candy. It de-stresses and fills in any vacuum created when a practice vanishes some well lodged importance from the mind. I especially have to do creative visualization when I am fasting - denying the importance of sensational eating and drinking. In psychology there is the practice and concept called "re-framing". This is what Lester Levenson did while unfixing a fixated mind that had command power over him as a being. Lester started his path asking "what is happiness" and letting the mind answer up until finally he could process the unbalanced duality of "separation and oneness".

  • @tomasgray6441
    @tomasgray644125 күн бұрын

    Im 59 Im healthy, very activ, very happy and Im not religius or spiritual, Im happy to just enjoy the nature around me and the fact of just being, for me the rest is just boloks

  • @carolrebers1921
    @carolrebers19213 жыл бұрын

    I thoroughly loved the interview by James Gilliland and Rachel Harris...It was very enlightening with many true quotes of Jesus thrown in....this girl is definately "intune" with one and all....never heard of her before...but worth listening to again and the messages in her own music..five stars from me🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

  • @alfrednewman2234
    @alfrednewman22343 жыл бұрын

    Rupert re animates that which is vital in our search for myriad truths, and rejoins the Muses, where science and religion, poetry, art and mathematics, live in a peaceable society. Science is not in a race with other well rounded interests, and thrives in a variegated garden

  • @scottthomas5819
    @scottthomas5819 Жыл бұрын

    yes

  • @mortalclown3812
    @mortalclown38122 жыл бұрын

    Quaker meetings are very chill. People are often surprised to read their tenets or lack thereof. They're scarce in quantity, but worth a visit if you're a seeker. Peace, all.

  • @jamesmatthewswa
    @jamesmatthewswa3 жыл бұрын

    Hate is the only thing we should dislike. I really see no reason for the word hate. I think if we just love them we have no reason to hate. It’s easy, I just say I love you and I chose not to think with my ego. I chose to act with common sense and my heart. I can say love and feel love way faster than hate. If there is mean people then intend harm in anyway. That’s the ones that need to get weeded out. Or we can love them until they love themselves!! Whatever you believe is you’re right to believe. If I can say ok sir-I think you are right in the way you believe. Arguing is pointless and most of the time whoever is arguing never wins. Love is the way! I love the fact we can agree to disagree. I really do not think that we are going to figure it out. I mean for sure crack the code to life. I think I will just go back to enjoying life as I know it. I’m thankful I get to breathe today.

  • @jota55581
    @jota5558114 күн бұрын

    I like isha kryia as form of meditation !

  • @catherinebanks6420
    @catherinebanks6420 Жыл бұрын

    People laugh about NDEs being practiced in the early church, but if you do the research, you find that esoteric/ occult (gnostic, early Christian) faiths did promote this-- for example, initiates getting stuck in a cave for 3 days (no food, water or light) and finding their way out like Jesus' burial or Jonah in the whale's belly. The cave entrance is tiny (how hard it is for a rich man to go through the "eye of a needle") and faces West as the sun sets (death); the exits are in the East, where the sun rises (resurrection). I don't think all of the initiates survived the NDE, which is why Jesus said only a select few would be willing to enter the Kingdom of God. Those who love their life wouldn't dare risk it. Those who experience ego death find oneness with God. Church buildings were originally built oriented east/ west with the sun. Over time, the idea got lost (occulted)-- and now Christians have mostly become ignorant of what Jesus was trying to teach them.

  • @justinwhite368
    @justinwhite3682 ай бұрын

    Some institutional meditation and prayer may be merely post-military forms of social pacification.

  • @edithdotson5617
    @edithdotson56173 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much. I am here by the love, grace, mercy and great intentionality of a personal God who made and rules the Universe. And so are you even if you deny it with meaningless, denigrating verbiage.

  • @OlavSurlandHansen
    @OlavSurlandHansen3 жыл бұрын

    I was also a bit taken aback at his full endorsement of Darwinism, without so much as mentioning the serious problems with it: The transition from non-life to life, the totally improbable transition from a "lower" species to a "higher" one with natural selection working on mutations as the only mechanism involved. Also, his suggestion that John the Babtist and the Anababtists performed literal drownings are highly dubiuous suggestions - involving countless cases of death by drowning if true. He also jumped elegantly over the variant of NDE that I experienced, twice, by ODs: A totally negative one. He is a very entertaining and uplifting public speaker but is he really to be taken as seriously as many people do? Now, how did John the Babtist do his life-changing submerging into the river Jordan of his many clients? To induce a real NDE he would have to force these totally panic-stricken and struggling people down under the water until THEY SWALLOW WATER, NO UNTIL THEY BREATHE WATER. Only then can we be sure to have induced the lack of oxygen needed for NDEs (I stopped breathing when I ODed). How on earth can you do such a thing to people? Many would simply die - and the spectacle of people struggling for their life until they drown and are dragged out, blue in the face, with lungs filled with water and totally motionless, dying. Do you really believe this happened, on a big scale too? I don't. And I doubt Mr Sheldrake does. The English use an expression - tongue in cheek - is this the thing his message is to taken as? If so, what is the point besides being entertaining and seemingly clever and very well oriented about everything from theology of all types to Darwinism to positive thinking etc etc. However, mr Sheldrake is no expert on drowning, that's for sure.

  • @karawethan

    @karawethan

    3 жыл бұрын

    "Darwinism" is often (but incorrectly) used as a synonym for contemporary evolutionary theory, which contains the basic concepts Darwin originally proposed but is far broader and more nuanced, not to mention evidence-based (using genetic rather than morphological analysis). It is now known, for instance, that natural selection is not the only mechanism that contributes to speciation. The transition from non-life to life (biogenesis) however is not directly covered by evolutionary theory. It is a separate subject. Just as chemists and physicists can study the universe without obsessing over its origin (whether the Big Bang or something else), evolutionary biologists can study life without obsessing over biogenesis.

  • @bethbartlett5692

    @bethbartlett5692

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think this may be a bit older. There's a scientific validator a Creator - Quantum Physics, anything that manifest into 3D reality 1st requires thought = "the bang came 2nd!" *"Universal Law of Attraction"* Spiritual/NonPhysical makes up the greater % energy. ❤

  • @Esirre

    @Esirre

    3 жыл бұрын

    there are a lot of people like this, they are talented at speaking and being entertaining in a way that employs dry wit and appeals to those who identify with intellectualism and are psychologically high in openess traits. They are able to spread certain untenable ideas that only attractive prima facie for those who value novelty.

  • @vcoonrod

    @vcoonrod

    3 жыл бұрын

    God makes the transisitions you refer to. God made natural selection do the automatic, easy parts. God has better things to do. Lol.

  • @Esirre

    @Esirre

    3 жыл бұрын

    @E. MM good point

  • @paulcrosslin6011
    @paulcrosslin60112 жыл бұрын

    In a garden, in a field. Those that practiced meditation were always manifested happier.

  • @CarolaAdolf
    @CarolaAdolf4 жыл бұрын

    I have a novel idea: instead of saying a grace before a meal, spare a moment and thank the person who cooked the meal and who will do the dishes afterwards...

  • @BLEMFIDEM

    @BLEMFIDEM

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's the same thing

  • @donyawicken2521

    @donyawicken2521

    3 жыл бұрын

    And offer to help.

  • @joycehaines34

    @joycehaines34

    3 жыл бұрын

    Carola Adolf, that is exactly what the idea of thanking is teaching us as as we evolve from less humane to a more humane society. Thanking soul of the animal or plant life that perpetuate ours,, can be simple not long or complicated. Not necessarily a religious practice.

  • @CarolaAdolf

    @CarolaAdolf

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@BLEMFIDEM lol....so god is frying your eggs and doing the dishes after? oookay.....

  • @n.d8001

    @n.d8001

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this meal fruits of this earth and labor of men

  • @eltonfsahn
    @eltonfsahn3 жыл бұрын

    What happens during "Waterboarding" torture - can you tell me....?

  • @jota55581
    @jota5558114 күн бұрын

    Fasting from various things also helps !

  • @michelleburkholder2547
    @michelleburkholder2547 Жыл бұрын

    My granddaughter knows when she's being watched by the baby monitor. She looks right at the camera and waves at it.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Жыл бұрын

    substantive nature experience of free will has conscious awareness?

  • @garyhobbins4746
    @garyhobbins47462 жыл бұрын

    A Self-Realized person says thank you to God or the Universe a few times a day..

  • @waynekounta5326
    @waynekounta53262 жыл бұрын

    Explanations of religious practice demise; firstly, corruption and crime in religious organisations, paedophilia, child deaths etc undermine the 'family friendly moral tone'. Secondly, convenience culture, long unsociable hours, Sunday/Saturday trading etc, that removes the opportunity to participate. Thirdly, global movement of people for work that dilutes communities of indigenous commonality. Fourthly, science better explaining evolution than old religious books written thousands of years ago. Lastly, religions splitting into factions, or religions being wholly self-serving to themselves, causing frictions with other religions or athiests. In short, it's been made into a global, technological, scientific, corporate world that's linked by telecommunications, and the religions have difficulty in retaining interest within those circumstances.

  • @melodyhart5339
    @melodyhart53393 жыл бұрын

    My remembered "pastlife" existential experience resonates with all of this "nowness/isness"

  • @speaklifegardenhomesteadpe8783
    @speaklifegardenhomesteadpe87837 ай бұрын

    No eye hath seen, nor ear heard, that which God hath prepared for them that love him.

  • @PeerlessReads
    @PeerlessReads Жыл бұрын

    Very enjoyable. A brave half-step away from the science dogma.

  • @orlando5385

    @orlando5385

    Жыл бұрын

    *"A brave half-step away from the science dogma."* 🤦🏻‍♂ What is you define as "science dogma" ?

  • @hellooutthere8956
    @hellooutthere89562 жыл бұрын

    How is it if someone has a brain injury they still have consciousness but the person tht was them is no longer there? Please understand I have searched and hoped tht we are not just the materialism but this is something tht disturb

  • @maslackica1000
    @maslackica1000Ай бұрын

  • @jackcummings4121
    @jackcummings41212 жыл бұрын

    Just think..We are alive today because going right back into pre history..right back to the primordial soup from which all which life originated, then coming forward through all the changes, species etc, to the age of the dinosaur, their extinction, ice ages etc...our ancestors survived. Thinking of all the wars, diseases, catastrophise etc, our blood lines survived. Some family bloodlines ended..but we are here. We survived. For now ?

  • @muralidharankv169
    @muralidharankv169 Жыл бұрын

    22minutes Meditation and parasympathetic nervous system

  • @annielwhite
    @annielwhite3 жыл бұрын

    why is gathering in one area and socializing with others "spiritual" even if they don't realize it? Is there a difference between spiritual gathering and just a music gathering ? i would say these are different though. but maybe someone can explain this to me. its interesting?

  • @mershane6114

    @mershane6114

    Жыл бұрын

    They are different.But the same in as spiritual. You are in the spirit.

  • @flappypaddles_

    @flappypaddles_

    Жыл бұрын

    Anyone who attended a Grateful Dead concert would probably tell you otherwise.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Жыл бұрын

    focus on what divine free will unity provides instead of political government

  • @hassandiallo5326
    @hassandiallo53263 жыл бұрын

    An essential scientist.

  • @Chericeadamsuk
    @Chericeadamsuk3 ай бұрын

    Amazing lecture, very inspiring educational information, really opened my mind up to the ritual terminology of spiritual practices, before I automatically placed it into the dark side of practices. But now I've heard all the practices around the world and the fact that marriage in itself is a ritual, I'm move inclined to research and imply them into my everyday workings in spirituality. Gratitude also show me how limited my perception was, and got my brain thinking more about why I'm grateful for these things, for example nature ; spiritually but also the science of it. Trees the carbon dioxide, and oxygen features, and how being around them, the air being more clean and beneficial to are bodies which intern helps are chakra enlinement and energies move easier throughout are circular systems. The heart being the center axion of enlinement and not the mind.

  • @vittoriaconn958
    @vittoriaconn9582 жыл бұрын

    OMG the lady who kept interrupting him! I can hear her mumbling throughout and I found it profoundly distracting. Finally, at 50:19, she pipes up again, and he has to tell her they'll come to questions later. Did she not notice that NO ONE else thought this was supposed to be a conversation? UGH.

  • @Xime_6888
    @Xime_68882 жыл бұрын

    subtitulos en español? :((((

  • @paradox.rosalyn
    @paradox.rosalyn11 ай бұрын

    25:00 isn't this consciousness can be the collective unconsciousness defined by Carl Jung?

  • @paulcrosslin6011
    @paulcrosslin60112 жыл бұрын

    Those in a highrise experienced lower levels of anxiety and fear if most of them practiced meditation.

  • @thedomestead3546
    @thedomestead35463 жыл бұрын

    2 Timothy 3:5, NIV: "having a form of godliness but denying its power. ... 2 Timothy 3:5, NASB: "holding to a form of godliness, although they have denied its power; Avoid such men as these." 2 Timothy 3:5, NLT: "They will act religious, but they will reject the power that could make them godly.

  • @theonlymeaning

    @theonlymeaning

    3 жыл бұрын

    You must hear his sermon on the Trinity, given in an Anglican church with children fussing et al. LOVELY atmosphere , and you KNOW it is a stone building, the way things echo and he never flinched nor seemed put out...his was the best discussion/message/sermon/ lesson on the trinity I have ever heard in my entire 74 years, and that includes any from C.S.Lewis!

  • @rnunezc.4575
    @rnunezc.45753 жыл бұрын

    Mantra is mantra, meditation is not the same..to say that monastic life practices meditation is not right..as they were kept under a certain chain of thoughts and emotions which not are in the proper practice of meditation. Meditation without the hype is nothing more than practicing no thought or emotional attachment or dwelling or indulging...in few words you become empty of mind activity as possible so the other dimension called spiritual , soul, etc can come out and be felt but is just a relief from too much compulsive mind and identification with only the mind ...which in turn will connect you with the NOW and get away from past or future neurotic states which we all have as this counter-intuitive and easy to say but very hard to do for many people..that's all, no big enlightment ideas or hype....I not a atheist I am agnostic ...it's a good talk though..

  • @Cottage1113
    @Cottage11135 ай бұрын

    😊

  • @junevandermark952
    @junevandermark9522 жыл бұрын

    If a scientist is asked the question, “Do you believe that the universe was created,” and the scientist answers, “Yes,” that is not science. That is religion.

  • @bryanfreeman437
    @bryanfreeman4373 жыл бұрын

    How can we build machinery that can speed up the process of mental projection aka manifesting by interfacing with the mind to overwhelm sensory impressions? Magnetic brain stimulation? I'm basically tired of all the scams that fill this niche, who claim some wonderful method (that only they know ofc) will work for people to fix their lives when we are still in a stage of this realm where we know so little about what actually works.

  • @gordongecko8912
    @gordongecko89123 ай бұрын

    23:00

  • @kirill2525
    @kirill25257 ай бұрын

    Riligin usually just plases people into a box and limits your potential for growth and learning as they tell you to only seek the official texts and not to ask questions and to have blind faith. thats not good. spirituality teaches you to question everything and to always be learning and growing and striving for hte best

  • @lifeinruralthailand
    @lifeinruralthailand3 жыл бұрын

    Rupert's latest interview on his book WAYS TO GO BEYOND for anyone interested kzread.info/dash/bejne/oH52utlqlJnTlrg.html

  • @paulabarbosa4099
    @paulabarbosa4099 Жыл бұрын

    One thing that happened through all my life was the conscience that i was connected to what we call god through jesus.how can i put it i have faith but do not pray much but whenever i asked anything it just happened so my life is full of coincidences which i m very grateful and i know are connected with what i trully believe.the constant love and support of jesus and the divine mind.it humbles me and makes me very grateful and i never feel alone.we all belong great creatures and small and i ve alwaus felt that way.i never panicked when i was blind or in dager of my life.i m 70 now and i was gravelly ill many times.the doctors panicked and didn t'.sometimes i feel myself trying to calm them down.what can happen.i suffer but i may die.so what!!!! For me it s not the end.life is circular and balanced and we have the bliss of beauty and an elegant universe or several.we have so much to honour and deserve as human beings.

  • @lifeinruralthailand
    @lifeinruralthailand3 жыл бұрын

    Rupert Explains further What is God... @

  • @wesleypatterson2883
    @wesleypatterson2883Ай бұрын

    Dr. Of what ?

  • @suntahoannes7671
    @suntahoannes76713 жыл бұрын

    I'm quantum biology

  • @gariusjarfar1341
    @gariusjarfar13413 жыл бұрын

    The situation we are in is told in tales from the 3 religions, babble on from Babylon, language is not the confusion, philosophy and religion confuse humanity.

  • @definitely79
    @definitely793 жыл бұрын

    Atheists would get offended by seeing a accurate period drama depicting people saying grace? I think not...

  • @truerealist757
    @truerealist757 Жыл бұрын

    I totally despise the sentients of the materialist West. Especially how one has to keep apologizing for his assent to God or the spiritual. Even the Greco-Roman world, to which academics look back and exalt gave a man the liberty to choose his own gods with whom he feels a special affinity.....But oh no we are to wise to even assume there is a God and our speech must be strain and devious. May God help the people of the West. Science in my view has done more to destroy us socially and morally than anything else......this inherent atheism it has lurking within it hollow reasoning. Any how it is what it is...........

  • @dorisdoris5563
    @dorisdoris55634 жыл бұрын

    Any practice that is conducive to a feeling of well-being has value, especially considering the present overuse of tranquilizers and anti-depressants. But how do meditation and pilgrimages, expanded consciousness and emotional well-being relate to morality? The identity of morality with religious rituals and taboos was fully accepted in the past, and it surely is an error. The emphasis on tradition may be counterproductive. I have found many traditionalists, religionists and also those who do meditative practices to be unaware and or complacent about the critical situation, from many different aspects, of the world today. Navel-gazing, if it involves only the navel, is a dead end, is it not? Instead of dwelling exclusively on tradition and on the past, shouldn't we be developing rituals that tie and unite us to the future as well? If we are to have one, that is.

  • @MrLeighman

    @MrLeighman

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not sure what your point is? But I will try and explain simply: the purpose of spiritual practices and some " dogmatic" religious traditions could in essence be about grounding us in the present. If there is no past, future and time then there is only the here and now. Your awareness is more full when it is present and many teachers will tell you this. Being present and aware is where you are being, being aware is being connected to your consciousness and also consciousness out side of your self, for pure consciousness is a field that binds and penetrates all living and material things. Forget the future and past, let go, it is making you unhappy. Let go of the materialistic notion that you are just individuated isolated atoms and chemical compounds. These notions are outdated and do not fully explain reality. In fact explaining reality is not necessarily our purpose in life it is being present and expanding our conscious awareness.

  • @dorisdoris5563

    @dorisdoris5563

    4 жыл бұрын

    My point is simply that, while meditative practices may be grounding and have value, that value isn't necessarily ethical or moral. That point is evident in history and we should be aware of it, but history and its values for some traditionalists is some kind of moral or ethical template. That is patently not the case. One of my favourite Shakespeare plays is Titus Andronicus: Titus is a good man who wants no power for himself, but is grounded in tradition and its rules and laws which he follows to the letter. It doesn't turn out well.

  • @MrLeighman

    @MrLeighman

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@dorisdoris5563 It sounds like you fear dogmatic religious traditions - Fair point you make but I would say to anyone on a spiritual path is that consciousness is the very opposite of dogmatic tradition. Pure spiritual awareness of consciousness has free flowing creative and loving qualities. Some traditions are just tools handed down through generations to help to attain certain spiritual qualities. Tools are neutral in their nature but they can be used for good or bad, in history some traditions have become corrupted as tools and we should always take on traditions that we trust though our own experience and not simply on faith of the word of mouth from others. Test things for truth for yourself. Unfortunately the Scientific revolution threw out the baby with the bath water when they quite rightly rejected religious dogmatic Traditions and made objective repeatable reasoning their idol. The baby they threw out was conscious subjectivity, which as Rupert explained, can not be explained through the scientific method alone.

  • @dorisdoris5563

    @dorisdoris5563

    4 жыл бұрын

    Grave error and abuse can and has emanated from both religious and scientific attitudes concerning "reality" when they are dogmatic: I can't see favouring one kind of error over the other. Life subjectively experienced is unexplainable or inexhaustible and unique, and I always prefer Sheldrakes' take and attitude to his opponents. But let's not forget that the politicization of religion is ongoing, not a thing of the past. Personally, I don't have the temperament to take instruction from self-styled religious moral experts, but I understand the psychological need and try to be tolerant. But we're not in a "good place" regarding our continued existence, and that of so many completely innocent and wonderful species. The past and its attitudes brought us here. We shouldn't forget that.

  • @dorisdoris5563

    @dorisdoris5563

    4 жыл бұрын

    @wtnomad Where do you read that I am into rituals? What I said was that religious rituals are universally identified with morality, as in, going to church on Sunday will keep you from hell is the teaching of the Catholic Church, not me, or more precisely, not going to church on Sunday is a mortal sin that, unconfessed, condemns you to eternal damnation. Perhaps they have changed that ridiculous view, but it was the case for at least hundreds of years. But - my view - if going to church makes you feel good and keeps you from taking drugs, it is perhaps the lesser evil, especially in these difficult times. My point is that religion and its rituals is often confused with ethics and morality, but has nothing to do with either. It is simply a "feel-good" exercise. Clear?

  • @josephszot5545
    @josephszot5545 Жыл бұрын

    man made religions are just that man made, truth is implanted in your soul. You know right and wrong internally, but you have free will you choose upon your passing you will be judged worthy or not?

Келесі