Kern Lectures and Seminars: Difference between revisions
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== '''Second Kern Lecture - Rupert Sheldrake''' == | [[File:Rupert Sheldrake.jpg|right|240px|thumb|Dr. Rupert Sheldrake]] | ||
== '''Second Kern Lecture - Dr. Rupert Sheldrake''' == | |||
Dr. Rupert Sheldrake is Director of Studies in biochemistry and cell biology at Cambridge University, and author of numerous papers and books on morphic fields and mind/brain issues. His lecture was "The Extended Mind: Recent Experimental Evidence," delivered on Thursday, March 13, 2003, at Bederman Auditorium, 618 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago. According to the program announcement, | Dr. Rupert Sheldrake is Director of Studies in biochemistry and cell biology at Cambridge University, and author of numerous papers and books on morphic fields and mind/brain issues. His lecture was "The Extended Mind: Recent Experimental Evidence," delivered on Thursday, March 13, 2003, at Bederman Auditorium, 618 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago. According to the program announcement, |
Revision as of 14:56, 19 May 2016
The Kern Lectures were a series of public lectures sponsored by the Theosophical Society in America and funded by The Kern Foundation. Eminent scholars were invited to speak on subjects relevant to the Society and appealing to the general public.
First Kern Lecture - Dr. Huston Smith
Dr. Smith is recognized as one of the greatest scholars of religion and bestselling author of The World's Religious: Our Great Wisdom Traditions. In his Kern Lecture, he spoke on "A Life of Exploring Religious Frontiers" at Bederman Auditorium, Spertus College of Judaica, 618 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago on Thursday April 18. According to the lecture announcement,
Huston Smith will look back on his life in a "bookish autobiography" that uses his works to examine the often surprising and unpredictable causes and consequences of a life of religious exploration.
The lecture was followed up with the First Kern Seminar on Saturday, April 20, on the topic, "Rediscovering Forgotten Truths." According to the program announcement,[1]
Prior to the rise of modern science, people believed in the existence of a world that encompassed and surpassed the everyday world that our physical senses disclosed. This "other world" housed values, meanings and purposes that later science could not understand. This workshop will inventory those values and expose the logical mistake that led modernity to conclude that they are not grounded in the ultimate nature of things thereby contradicting the unaniumous testament of the world's wisdom traditions. The cost of this basic mistake will be noted; and the propect that, after 300 years, we are finally beginning to correct it will be documented.[2]
Second Kern Lecture - Dr. Rupert Sheldrake
Dr. Rupert Sheldrake is Director of Studies in biochemistry and cell biology at Cambridge University, and author of numerous papers and books on morphic fields and mind/brain issues. His lecture was "The Extended Mind: Recent Experimental Evidence," delivered on Thursday, March 13, 2003, at Bederman Auditorium, 618 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago. According to the program announcement,
Most of us have been brought up to believe that the mind is located inside the head, but there are good reasons for thinking that this view is much too limited. Recent experimental results show that people can infoluence others at a distance just by looking at them, even if they look from behind and if all sensory clues are eliminated. People's intentions can also be detected by animals from miles away. Recent experiments on telephone telepathy have given highly significant positive results. Reupert Sheldrake will show how his hypothesis of morphic fields could provide a new way of understaniding the extended mind and of going beyond the usual mind/brain problem.[3]
The lecture was followed up with the Second Kern Seminar on Saturday, April 20, on the topic, "Rediscovering Forgotten Truths." According to the program announcement,
In the philosophies of the classical world and of the Middle Ages, souls were the life principles of all living beings, including plants and animals - and even of magnets. Ever since field concepts were first introducee into science in the 1840s, fields have come to take on more and more of the traditional expanatory role of souls. The idea of morphogenetic fields, first proposed in the 1920s, sheds light on the processes of physical healing and regeneration. Behavioral, mental and social fields provide a holistic insight into many biological, psycholoical, and social phenomena. All such fields can be thought of as morphic fields, with an inferent memory given by the process of morphic resonance. Dr. Sheldrake will discuss some o the evidence for this hypothesis and its implications and show how participants can carry out simple experiements for themselves.[4]
Third Kern Lecture - Dr. Ian Stevenson
Dr. Ian Stevenson, MD, was a Research Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. He had an illustrious academic career spanning 50 years, traveling the world to investigate and document over 2000 cases of past life memories. T
On September 23, 2004, he gave an illustrated talk on "Children Who Claim to Remember Previous Lives." Like the previous Kern Lectures, this was held at Bederman Auditorium in Chicago. his was the first lecture that Dr. Stevenson had ever given to a non-academic audience, and 180 people were in attendance.
On the following Saturday, September 25, he presented the Third Kern Seminar on "Evidence for Life After Death: Apparitions, Dearth Bed Visions, and More." Sixty people attended.