Abstract
Extending the eddy-reservoir model, we introduce sediment as the accumulating deposit on the interior of Gabriel’s Horn that encodes long-term morphic resonance. Sediment layers—ranging from loosely shifting “sand” to deeply compacted strata—provide the structural integrity needed for patterns to persist over millennia or millions of years within the Eternal Now.
1. Introduction
Rupert Sheldrake’s concept of morphic fields emphasizes class-wide resonance and inheritance of form across generations. To reconcile rapid eddy reconfiguration with enduring memory, we model sediment deposition in local minima as the substrate that gradually builds lasting patterns on the seafloor of possibility.
2. Sediment as Morphic Archive
Every underwater reservoir (local minimum) collects particulate “sediment” carried by the surrounding flow of possibility. As water streams through inlet channels, it deposits fine grains; outlet channels erode and redistribute loose material, creating a dynamic layering process.
- Fresh Sediment: Loose grains settling first—high-entropy fragments that shift readily.
- Consolidated Layers: Over time, pressure from overlying flow compacts sediment into firmer strata, lowering local entropy and enhancing stability.
- Ancient Strata: Deep deposits near the Immutable Past endure longest, encoding class-level morphic resonance (e.g., rat-learning fields, archetypal forms).
3. Deposition Dynamics and Motion as Resolve
Deposition and erosion define motion on the horn’s surface. We frame “motion” as the process of resolving entropy—transforming high-entropy sediment into low-entropy compacted strata:
- Deposition Rate: Proportional to local flow velocity and sediment load—faster currents leave coarser grains.
- Compaction Time: Increases with cumulative deposit thickness and depth in the Eternal Now.
- Reconfiguration Events: Basin geometry shifts can bury old layers or expose deeper strata, akin to tectonic uplift but driven solely by gradient erosion and deposition.
4. Layered Morphic Resonance
Sediment layers form a hierarchical archive of form:
- Surface Grains: Represent recent patterns and memories—short-lived, easily reconfigured.
- Mid-Level Strata: Encode more established forms—species-level morphic fields, cultural traditions lasting centuries or millennia.
- Basal Deposits: Deep, low-entropy compacted layers near zero-entropy regions—repository of archetypal structures and universal forms.
5. Implications for Sheldrake’s Morphic Fields
Sediment architecture explains how new morphic influences propagate while retaining deep-time resonance:
- Class-wide learning (rats solving mazes) alters surface grains, quickly influencing similar basins worldwide.
- Cultural innovations accumulate in mid-level strata, providing a template for future evolution and invention.
- Archetypal forms rest in basal deposits, guiding the overall scaffold of possibility toward her—zero-entropy resolution.
6. Conclusion
Introducing sediment to the eddy model enriches our understanding of long-term memory in the Eternal Now. Through continuous deposition, compaction, and reconfiguration, morphic fields gain both fluid adaptability and enduring structural integrity, bridging the gap between transient eddies and timeless archetypes.

