Sheldrake, Rupert - The Universal Organism
Singles Collection
•
27m
The so-called "laws of nature" may actually be more like habits and instincts than immutable and inviolable laws. Rupert Sheldrake, Ph.D., biologist and author, suggests that from this perspective all of creation may be viewed as a living organism. This ancient concept, he says, challenges the notion of the universe as a mechanism with God as the great mechanic.
Up Next in Singles Collection
-
Singer, June - The Gnostic Treasure
Gnosticism involves a fusion of middle-east traditions including Judaism, Christianity and Manicheanism. June Singer, Ph.D., is author of Seeing Through the Visible World: Jung, Gnosis and Chaos and A Gnostic Book of Hours. She discusses the Gnostic belief in the direct apprehension of a spiritua...
-
Sirag, Saul-Paul - Consciousness and ...
Nineteenth century theologians developed the idea of multiple dimensions to explain the idea of God in scientific language. Physicist Saul-Paul Sirag discusses current theories of multiple dimensions, which have been fabricated to account for sub-atomic interactions, and the implications of these...
-
Smith, Huston - Psychology of Religio...
One of the most widely read writers in the field of philosophy and religion, Huston Smith's classic book The Religions of Man has sold over two million copies. In this stimulating program Dr. Smith discusses the relation between psychedelic experience and religious practice, the god within and th...