<p>Rupert Sheldrake outraged the scientific establishment in the early 1980s with his hypothesis of morphic resonance: his book <em>A New Science of Life</em> was denounced by the journal <em>Nature</em> as &#39;the best candidate for burning there has been for many years&#39;. With his academic career torpedoed Sheldrake has become the champion of &#39;the people&#39;s science&#39;. Books such as <em>Dogs That Know When Their Owners Are Coming Home</em> and <em>The Sense of Being Stared At</em> have won him popular acclaim and academic opprobrium in equal measure. In this special issue of the <em>Journal of Consciousness Studies</em> Sheldrake summarizes his case for the &#39;non-visual detection of staring&#39;. His claims are scrutinised by fourteen critics to whose commentaries he then responds. In his editorial introduction Revd. Anthony Freeman explores the concept of &#39;heresy&#39; in science and in religion.</p>
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