Buckyverse

Rupert Sheldrake

British biologist and author (b. 1942) known for the hypothesis of 'morphic resonance' — a holistic, anti-mechanist view of nature that shares the counterculture's appetite for organic wholes, adjacent to Fuller's whole-systems outlook.

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Rupert Sheldrake

British biologist and author (born 1942), best known for his controversial hypothesis of morphic resonance — the idea that nature carries an inherent memory, with forms and habits reinforced across time.

Trained at Cambridge, where he was a Fellow of Clare College working in developmental biology, Sheldrake also served as Principal Plant Physiologist at the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics and later directed the Perrott-Warrick project on unexplained human and animal abilities. His books — from A New Science of Life to The Science Delusion — argue against a purely mechanistic biology in favor of a more organic, holistic account of nature.

Role in Fuller's orbit

Sheldrake's connection to Fuller is thematic and countercultural: he belongs to the strand of holistic, anti-reductionist science that runs alongside Fuller's whole-systems, nature-has-a-generating-logic worldview, and that the same alternative-science audiences embraced. His inclusion reflects the collection's reach into heterodox holism; no corpus work currently links to him directly.

See Also

Sources

  • Rupert Sheldrake (source reference) — Zotero People collection (author website)

entity-personrelationship-contemporaryfuller-adjacentbiologyholismheterodox-science