Foreigner
Bluelighter
Interesting. Although the aspect I found most difficult to reconcile to the theory is the change in personality itself that occurs upon structural damage to the brain. If this theory ends up representing the true nature of our reality, then with this in mind, even our personalities as we know them would not share any similarities if our particular "resonance" (am I doing it right?) were transferred from one conduit to another in some form. Once again, not picking sides, simply playing Devil's Advocate in order to understand the concept.
If I understand the theory correctly, the physical DNA provides the template for experience to be imprinted upon, but it is the resonant fields that imprint the actual experience. What Sheldrake is basically saying is that all experiences that have already happened are contained in a field which makes repeat attempts at those experiences easier, thus ancestral knowledge has a non-material basis. The only analogy I can think of to help me understand it is the theory of mass consciousness. Everything that is said and done is stored as a frequency, which is then transmitted in real time to others as they need it. In other words, your primary learning experience in life was made easier because billions of people have done it before you. It means we are tapping into knowledge and experience not only ancestrally but on a species level, through this field. It also means that anyone anywhere can affect someone else instantaneously across space-time through this field. It's why the telephone experiences are so interesting, and common. It provides an explanation for telepathy.
Genetics is responsible for what our body does, but morphic resonance is responsible for the experiential interface. As an aside, our genes are constantly changing throughout life. Even our metabolic pathways change in accordance with what we eat, and what drugs we take. Genetics is often portrayed as being rather concrete but all that "junk DNA" we have is actually highly mutable. The theory of morphic resonance states that it's the field which impacts the DNA, and not the other way around.
I've read the studies on Sheldrake's site and they are really fascinating. I find this theory really "out there" from a scientific basis but instead of shutting him out I wish mainstream science would evaluate it.