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Merlin Sheldrake
laudatio & lezing
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Merlin Sheldrake Groeneveld award 2022
Dear biodiversity lovers, dear nature conservationists
[or: activists], dear scientists, artists and architects,
dear Merlin, dear all,
We are here to celebrate the book ‘Entangled life’ and
it is great to see so many of you here. We, as human
beings are entangled, although sometimes we tend
to forget that, individual egos as we are. I believe that
we are entangled – with each other and with other
beings on this planet. In this personal reflection, I will
share my thoughts, feelings and amazement on that
topic. Many of them I got from working with soil-borne
fungi as a scientist working belowground on plant
roots which are so entangled with fungi. Reading
Merlin Sheldrakes book helped me to find the words.
I am deeply grateful for the effort you made to write
the book, to make the book, to actually be the book.
Working with fungi helped me to better understand
who I am: more aligned with myself, my being, my
mission for a nature-positive world. For you in the
audience to understand that viewpoint, I will have
to introduce myself a bit more. This is perhaps a bit
impolite on a festive occasion for Merlin – my apologies.
Wim van Gelder already mentioned that I work
as a professor in Plant Ecology & Nature Conservation
at Wageningen University, and that I am considered
its ‘figurehead’ (boegbeeld) for biodiversity. I have to
admit I feel very uncomfortable with that term. I will
explain why, and how it relates to fungi.
In the early years of my scientific career, biodiversity
experiments in grasslands were ‘hot’, it was a lively
field of research. But what is a biodiversity experiment
really? In such experiments, scientists grow
different plant communities – mostly grassland
species – in plots that differ in plant species richness.
So, in such experiments, there are many plots established
as monocultures, but also 2-species mixtures,
4-species mixtures, even up to 60 species. Biomass
is harvested by clipping, then dried, weighed and
analysed as a proxy for ecosystem productivity. These
experiments have consistently shown: biodiversity
matters. Biodiversity improves productivity. Biodiversity
enhances ecosystem functioning. I was attracted
to this scientific energy – and decided to work in that
research field.
I had to find my own niche and decided to look where
others did not. The standard was measuring aboveground,
so I decided to go belowground, where half
of the plant biomass is. I investigated rooting patterns
of different plant species, and found that they did not
really confirm the ecological theory the textbooks
suggested in those days. Then, the soil was considered
a box full of nutrients – nitrogen and phosphorus
in particular - and plant roots were considered to just
‘sip’ them up. With my team, I set up experiments
that demonstrated that root behaviour cannot be understood
without explicitly considering the immense
biodiversity in soil; without embracing the myriads of
other organisms dwelling around the roots. In particular:
soil-borne fungi – the symbiotic ones that form
the wood-wide web; the saprophytes that decompose
our litter, and also the bad ones – the pathogens.
They are so fascinating – I could have been digging
treasures all my scientific career.
Yet. May 2019. I was sitting behind my desk in my office
on the Wageningen campus. Overseeing the pond
in the garden, the grassland with its many colourful
flowering plants, a green woodpecker on the ground.
I was reading the IPBES report: the IPBES is the Intergovernmental
Panel for Biodiversity and Ecosystem
Services – which is the biodiversity equivalent of the
IPCC for Climate. The message was: globally, biodiversity
is lost at accelerating rates.. We humans are the
cause – the way we eat, built, live ... the way we dominate
nature. It is our own fault that society is at risk.
I was shocked of the scale of the destruction of nature,
the alarming rate of species extinction. I have
two children! Teenagers. What state of the planet do I
leave them? What state of planet do we leave them?
My next thought was: What to do? What could possibly
be my best action? My most strategic move? What
would be my most clever contribution to solving this
other crisis, next to climate change? My son said:
You work at the best university of the world, so do
something! Change it. He was right, he provided clear
direction.
I mobilised my network. I initiated a group of scientists
from all scientific disciplines on the Wageningen
campus – ecologists, agronomists, food technologists,
geneticists, economists, sociologists to work on
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Merlin Sheldrake Groeneveld award 2022
a nature-positive future. To break down silos – and
work beyond their own hobby horses. Provide the
scientific evidence, fill the research gaps, integrate
and deliver knowledge in society where it is needed.
Work interdisciplinary. Work transdisciplinary: not
only a diversity of scientists, but together with society:
with farmers, businesses, NGOs, policy makers at
different levels – from local to global.
We organised dialogues – to meet, listen, and share
ideas, desires and... hope. To know of each other,
and build on each other. To make better plans from
listening to critique rather than build stronger walls.
We work evidence-based, but also with the heart, as
human beings taking responsibility.
I have been wondering since then – why me? What
made me the person to do this? As I explained, I have
a scientific background in biodiversity experiments in
grasslands – but I have to admit I do not recognize all
of the 60 plant species... Would it be my social skills,
or my personality, my stubbornness?
Partly. I only found a satisfying answer, a grassroot
answer, since I read Entangled life.
I recognised much of what was written in chapter 1:
What it is to be a fungus? I am a plant ecologist – for
two decades working underground. By being underground
for such a long time, I have been changed by
my subject: how to be a fungus? I think I can imagine
being one. Working with fungi – as Merlin rightly
argues - requires being able to imagine their behaviour,
because they are so invisible... so different....
beyond our imagination, and therefore triggering it:
imagination. I think that that is the essence of leading
for change into a nature-positive future: the belief in
unimaginably better. I learned that fungi can change
our old habits. They bring new perceptions – unimaginable
new ones. Completely different worlds
exist. Dreaming about different worlds - not being
bound by the current rules, laws and busyness or big
business - is what is so much needed nowadays. To
trigger the change – to lead the change, it is vital that
we get ‘tricked’ out of our perspectives – out of our
daily routines. We must dream beyond the horizon,
and fully decide to go for it.
Some of you may think that scientists are bad in
dreaming, as they are excelling only in “cold-blooded
rationality”, in the words of Merlin. But I know – because
I am one myself - scientists are emotional,
intuitive whole human beings too. We all are. Entangled,
being able to take different roles. Fungi learn
us to go beyond the imaginable roles – they do things
so differently, that whatever we will dream, it already
exists in the fungal world. They tell us it is possible, if
we would ‘only’ use our common sense. The hope for
the world is in fungi – that we learn to dream unimaginable
futures, and wholeheartedly go the pathways
towards them.
Another insight from the book is that fungal relationships
are confusing. To understand what is a relationship,
the identities of the ‘things’ that form ‘the
relationship’ must be known. The question: ‘What is
an individual?’ has always appealed to biologists. But
answering it for fungi – what is an individual? Or even
framed a bit more general: what is a species - greatly
stretches the minds of even our best scientists. The
‘things’ that form ‘the relationship’ may not be necessarily
known in the fungal world, but the ‘things’ that
make it happen are the fungal tips. They can fuse with
other fungal entities – different individuals; different
fungal species, and even live intimately with organisms
from other kingdoms. For a long time ecologists
have been blind for these confusing, entangled ways
of forming relationships. Only recently, scientists have
started to appreciate the wood-wide web, the ‘collaborative
mode’ of fungal relationships.
The interesting question is: how does the fungal way
of forming entangled relationships translate to our
human world? On campus we had a Biodiversity challenge
earlier this year with many students, staff and
their children. Here, you could see it happening: how
relationships were formed, between the little boy and
the cool scientist, and also between them and the
fish - across species. It appeared that we share the
campus with at least 821 species (we did not accurately
count the fungal species – just a few mushrooms
and rusts), but it is that entanglement that touches
me every time I come to the Wageningen campus. It
makes me wonder: who are we humans to dominate
nature? Can we find a more symbiotic relationship?
More collaborative? More humble?
I found part of the answer to that question when
reflecting on my resistance regarding the term ‘figure
head’. First, let me cite from the chapter Living la׉	 7cassandra://i_cUvmdD3jMzts9sN7_4rLmhDrMDzUWjlAZRG7g7TCU`̵ c~XU8K(c~XU8K({בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://-pxW94QP8BVJqPngLGUQctnzllmk2aaqnVYpmYeB2Ow _`׉	 7cassandra://2fR7IOv0KHy49zt16Wi-_ft3tb42Ba0r0-KpK1BadP4`U`S׉	 7cassandra://Rom_u9qVtGPPuNeUv3uZEHLADL5vM4yjtyto9sNhkfY]`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://3i2LgKzziMEkY2WGpT2i3QWb-Sp7xjoe6_IollhaIL0 m͠c~XU8K(ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://7M3Pe8Uv6lG0rfK390G9ARFuNyerrhpS6C7FJjFawk0 H` ׉	 7cassandra://68UnTG1HWbplYMFQ7C-QMFYaMJRpedQ_cHTBP7qEby0p`S׉	 7cassandra://QAV92jYWgYFP_7tAiyPTpShtqfIeK8nKTcAjp6jJbAQU`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://hpfaBbPnEiEqApC6pF14YEgPtDTkYVATv6_8sutbJzQ: ͠c~XU8K(נc~XU8K(  9ׁHhttps://www.youtube.com/watׁׁЈ׉EGroeneveldlezing Liesje Mommer
Merlin Sheldrake Groeneveld award 2022
byrinths: “Fungal lives are lived in a flood of sensory
information. And somehow, hyphae, piloted by their
tips – are able to integrate these many data streams
and determine a suitable trajectory for growth, for the
next step”. “Hyphal tips are the part of the mycelium
that grow, change direction, branch and fuse. They
are the part of the mycelium that do the most”. And –
importantly: “They are numerous”.
That is a massive encouragement for the world: if
we organise ourselves as mycelial networks – collaborative,
mycelium networks - change can happen
towards a nature-positive future. Maybe I should introduce
myself not as a figurehead, but as a ‘mycelial
tip’ of the biodiversity movement from now onwards
– thank you Merlin, for giving me that perspective. I
integrate data streams (i.e. the knowledge from the
different disciplines, the opportunities, ....) and then
determine the next best step. Not really knowing the
step – but going the step.
But most importantly: there are many mycelial tips in
a mycelium – and fungi have found ways to organise
them. I believe we can too. Change starts if we organise
ourselves like a collaborative mycelium. Fungi
show us the way!
Earlier this week at the #COP27 in Egypt, the secretary-general
from the United Nations – Antonio
Guterres - said: we are on a highway to climate hell.
Hearing such quotes, I used to get beyond hope,
but now I am fearless and full of courage. Taught by
fungi. They are radical, they are unorthodox, and they
find solutions. For example, they figured out how to
breakdown lignin. They are the only organisms on the
planet that can. They are persistent and perseverant.
They can even survive in radioactive sites such as
Chernobyl, and they seem to thrive in abandoned,
polluted, and overexploited habitats. I hope they are
generous.
I was hiking a few weeks ago in the Netherlands,
with Merlin’s book in my backpack – and its many
messages in my mind. Often I feel sad when hiking
in the Netherlands – I see what is NOT present, even
with my positive attitude. Despite all the good work
by nature conservation organisations, the patches
of nature are so small, fragmented, disturbed. Yet,
this time I hiked along our rivers – the Maas, Waal,
Nederrijn, and I felt a little hope. There were so many
colourful trees, beavers, kingfishers, even a white-tailed
eagle. I suddenly saw the rivers as the mycelium of
the landscape. This is where change happens, things
fuse. Where hope starts for a better future – a nature-positive
future.
During the hike I recalled the beautiful poem by Emily
Dickinson:
“Hope” is the thing with feathers –
That perches in the soul –
And sings the tune without the words –
And never stops – at all –
I wonder, what Emily Dickinson would have written if
she would have read ‘Entangled life’?
“Courage” is the mycelial thing –
That perches in the soil –
And finds [the way] with radical forms –
And never stops – at all –
I invite you to feel hope, to find courage in the beauty
of this musical piece https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGrLL3T0ozE,
in a very recent composition of
Christopher Tin, sung by the acapella choir Voces8. In
the meantime, dream about being a fungus, to radically
change the world, together with many mycelial
tips. If we decide to trust the network, and act accordingly,
we can make this world a better place.
Liesje Mommer 10/11/2022
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Dirk Sijmons (on behalf of the Groeneveld Foundation)
Dear Merlin Sheldrake,
We are very honored to have you in our midst.
Your book ‘Entangled Life’ has the touch and feel of
an instant classic when it comes to natural history
books because it is not just a work of science but also
a work of love. Through your fascination and love for
the subject the reader feels connected to this unknown
world, it is as if your writing connects us with
nature through thousands of invisible treads.
He wanted to follow up on the hypotheses of the
drunken primates eating fermented fallen fruits and
collected whole bags of apples from the ground already
in fermenting state, pressed them and produced
a cider out of it.
Nothing special you could say, not a very strong
punch line to end a book. It gets more interesting
when he tells us that these fruits fell of the apple tree
near Trinity College in Cambridge where famously
Isaac Newton was hit by one that evoked the idea
of universal gravity. Sheldrake thickens the plot by
narrating how at least three Apple trees in and around
Cambridge claim to be the ‘Newton’ tree or at least be
a clone of the original tree.
He adds another layer to tell us that although nobody
believes this falling apple – emerging genial idea –
story really happened, the trees are sacrosanct and
highly protected to give visitors/tourists the illusion
that they visit the place and touch the tree where it all
happened and with any luck see an apple fall. The adventure
of letting the brew ferment with natural yeast
and the sensation of the unexpected taste spectrum.
I quote the very last paragraph:
“….to my amazement it was delicious. The bitterness
and the sourness of the apples had transformed. The
taste was floral and delicate, dry with a gentle fizz.
Drunk in larger quantities, it elicited elation and light
euphoria. I didn’t feel clumsy, although yeast had
most certainly made a nonsense of me. I was intoxicated
by a story, comforted by it, constrained by it,
dissolved in it, made senseless by it, weighed down by
it. I called the cider ‘Gravity’, and lay heavy and reeling
under the influence of yeast’s prodigious metabolism.”
It’s that kind of book. Biology, ecology, philosophy,
nature and culture are being twinned into an homage
to the role of fungi and in a unique reading experience.
It unlocks the rich diversity of the Kingdom of Fungi
and highlights the importance of mycorrhiza, the
collaboration between fungi and plants, seen from
the perspective of the main figures: the fungi. The
book’s structure and your fluid way of writing sucks
the reader into a field of fascinating scientific research
full of new insights and surprising links.
It is not limited to your own research but by highlighting
the work of many fellow scientists. Quite rare to
find a register, bibliography, and a footnote machine
in a popular science book, that is so comprehensive,
together filling almost a quarter of the pages. Sounds
extremely dull and not quite the criterium to award
a prize, but makes the book complete, and I want to
add, the notes read like a book in a book
But for the few people in the room that didn’t read
the book YET let me try to give a short introduction.
It was the fungi that crawled ashore about 500 million
years ago and 450 million years ago, together with
algae, took the first step towards the greening of
the planet through a successful symbiosis. This early
symbiosis still lives on in the form of lichens.
Your research and your writing allows the reader to
look at the living world in a different way. You show
how the Wood-Wide-Web of underground substances
and information exchange can be understood
evolutionarily, and how fungi make systems into
eco-systems. The book manages in setting the record
straight in our mental hierarchy where plants are
ranked higher then – what we learned in school as -
lower forms of live. Plantcentrism you call this.
It even poses the question who is domesticating who.
The recent myth that trees communicate between
each other is replaced by an even more miraculous
hypotheses that the only organism having an evolutionary
benefit in keeping the wood as a whole healthy
Ladies and gentlemen,
Before I start with my laudation for Merlin Sheldrake,
I think I owe you an explanation.
You might have been a bit bewildered by the invitation
the Groeneveld Foundation sent you. Only at
a second glance some of you might have guessed
what it was: an apple being devoured by a fungus. We
chose for this somewhat puzzling illustration because
Merlin Sheldrake’s book Entangled life ends with
apples.
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Dirk Sijmons (on behalf of the Groeneveld Foundation)
is the giant underground mycelium network. We tend
to see this network as a neutral natural infrastructure,
you show that it is an active entity abiding to its own
laws not just transporting minerals for plants. This
network can communicate through info-chemicals
and electrical signals and moreover influences its
environment and the organisms that are connected
to the network. DNA-material of plants, viruses. and
bacteria also travels through the mycelium. You show
why the metaphor Wood-Wide-Web is inapt and
confusing because it suggests that the plants are the
sites and the mycelium are the hyperlinks. But in the
end, the behavior of the wood wide web is not unambiguous
and the comparison with the internet - just
like brains or politics - is only partially valid. No matter
how much such networks regulate themselves and
how many hints - or are they signals? - there are flowing
back and forth via fungi and plants, wood wide
webs overlap. The frays of their extreme boundaries,
which also include other organisms, run through each
other. That is beyond the reach of metaphors. This
entanglement and multiple symbiosis come closer to
the real complexity of our living world.
In our times of climate change you highlight that
the mycelium networks of our subsurface form the
second largest carbon sink – after the oceans – Fascinating
too: how fungi in a direct sense can also
influence animal (and human) behaviour. How fungi
via fermentation and yeasts were also formative for
human civilization.
You quote Gilles Deleuze that ‘drunkenness is a
triumphant eruption of the plant in us’ only to add
that it is no less than the triumphant eruption of the
fungus in us. You are not only referring to the role
yeasts play in changing water into wine but also to the
intoxication caused by the psychedelic mushrooms.
That the psychedelics from mushrooms play an
important role in the culture of indigenous people
was not surprising at all for me. My Hippy generation
devoured ‘Carlos Castaneda’s books on tripping Yaqui
Indian shamans.
Lately also in our culture ‘paddo’s’ are beginning to be
recognized as an important therapeutic instrument
for all kinds of mental illnesses. They seem most
effective in the battle against Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder. Again, you play with the question: who is
domesticating who. Are we using the fungi to change
our way of seeing or did the fungi produce these
chemicals to gain an evolutionary advantage?
I started out by characterizing your work as a twinning
between science and love. And that is because you
use all means at your disposal – both personal and
cultural - to come closer to the subject of your study
and thereby transcend the cerebral domain. You
didn’t shy away from experimenting with the hallucinogenic
effect of magic mushrooms to make people
look at their own lives and at the world differently.
Not only are the illustrations from his book drawn
with black ink from the ink fungus, but you have
inoculated your book with the spores of the Oyster
Mushroom. You recorded the sound of galvanic
currents produced by digesting your book, amplified
it and accompanied that rhythm on the piano to
finally devour your own book with taste - like a true
myco-phage.
Seeking contact with the non-human life through
the agency of scientific, technical, and cultural means
is part of a broader post-humanist trend. But that is
mostly limited to non-human life that is relatively
close to us. Like Charles Foster who - as part of his
research for his book ‘Being a Beast’ - tried to live like
a badger, otter, fox and swift respectively. That’s hard
enough like the book shows in detail.
Or your other fellow countryman the artist Thomas
Twaithes who, in his goat suit, tried to contact mountain
goats for a week or so. This ontological pluralism,
that all ways of being are equal, has inspired the late
great Bruno Latour to introduce ‘The Parliament of
Things’ to give all creatures that don’t have a voice a
representation in democratic deliberations. In Holland
the most successful example is the Ambassy of
the North Sea trying to make our coastal sea a fully
fledged political player.
Sheldrake shows how, through his evocative mix of
science, technique and culture, that one can even
construct a relationship with the not so easily (re)
knowable and cuddly sides of nature of which we are
a part.
׉	 7cassandra://TIfzpgLFF83CLNYeqmfL5BXYCk2YdX6B1fW-M5h1AfY`̵ c~XU8K(׉ExLaudation Merlin Sheldrake Groeneveld award 2022
Dirk Sijmons (on behalf of the Groeneveld Foundation)
Here we arrive at one of the main reasons to award
you with the 2022 Groeneveld prize. We are convinced
that we will desperately need these new kinds of
empathy with the living nature as a whole to heal our
wounded planet.
In a way you translated Fungi-language into English
(and that was brilliantly translated into Dutch by
Nico Groen) that we face the challenge of translating
our wishes into fungi language. In other words, we
don’t have to limit ourselves to the admiring gaze of
post-humanism, but deeper understanding of the
fungal word offers the potential to translate back
from human language into fungi talk and see whether
fungi can help to address problems we face as a human
society.
You call that ‘radical mycology’ and offer an informed
look into the future of how fungi can help us change
our mind literary. And, very practical, how fungi by
myco-sanitation can help us get rid of – toxic and
plastic (!) waste. Moreover how mycelium might
become a promising building material. Fungi helped
making the world and can also help saving the world.
Does that sound outlandish?
Please allow me a little sidestep. For the architects in
the audience: an article in Nature of 2021 showed that
the total weight of the built environment, the weight
we added in the last 7.000 years surpassed the total
weight of the biomass of the planet. And most alarming
that this weight is about to triple before 2040 . It
sounds a bit Malthusian, but it is the consequence of
living in the Anthropocene’s Great Acceleration and
the almost exponential growth of cities in Asia, South
America and especially Africa.
The map from the Atlas to the End of the World by
Richard Weller shows that the places where urbanization
will go viral coincide with the biodiversity hotspots
of the world. Not only from the angle of natural
resources but also from the angle of conservation
of biodiversity it is very urgent that we tap from a
completely different vessel. This is where radical mycology
may be an alternative. You see a new branch
of building material research at TU-Delft, ETH Zürich
and the design academy in Eindhoven experimenting
with mycelium not just as isolation material but as
structural building elements. Possibly we will grow
our future cities instead of building them with extracted
material.
‘Entangled life’ has been acclaimed all over the world,
has since been translated into many languages, there
even is a strip version now, your galvanic currents
will produce a musical version soon I’m sure and it
has even inspired our star designer Iris van Herpen’s
spring collection.
We are a bit latish in our appreciation, but we comfort
ourselves that the Nobel prize is also famously
late: one already almost forgot what contribution to
science one made and then the phone rings showing
a Swedish number on your screen. The Groeneveld
foundation earned its endowment funds with Forestry
and not with the production of gunpowder, so our
prize money is proportional lower I’m afraid.
Merlin, may I invite you to address this curious and
knowledge hungry audience.
׉	 7cassandra://d8gitqO8SlLE6vv61kWIQ4xmhSkjI7E3rHNnhh4Pp3gU`̵ c~XU8K(c~XU8K({בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://bVFrfFSS7LbHJmvwbmfZTk2ASIs1KvhRzvoEjX7Nel4 J`׉	 7cassandra://A0sW7C-U8nQUpUH7NUYMzCsRmNHqdrXZdo9JtfwGP4g<`S׉	 7cassandra://k2Oe0EEscFtzmQUwqTwfOmAhvNKoz6f47DjECgUMZrI`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://g9BLlTPQFt7HM2EXK18D_JRIqVr7hZyrNGgil-1T5L0 p{͠c~XU8K(׉EGroeneveld Award 2022 document to Merlin Sheldrake
Wim van Gelder (Chairman of the Groeneveld Foundation)
I’ve always wondered why biologists often write so
well. There are also many writing biologists in the
Netherlands, some even belong to our writer elite.
In Holland we have an award for the best book on
Nature, named after the artist and writer Jan Wolkers,
that takes stock yearly of newly published 50-150
books on the subject, nominates six of them and
finally award one. To our minds your book would
certainly have been a winner if – and that is a big if
– it had been a Dutch production. The Wolkers price
doesn’t apply for translated books. We felt obliged
as the Groeneveld foundation to fill this gap! Merlin,
awarding you the Groeneveld price makes you the
youngest in a line of an illustrious prize winners.
Let me hand you the document and light The Festive
Fungal Fireworks.
׉	 7cassandra://k2Oe0EEscFtzmQUwqTwfOmAhvNKoz6f47DjECgUMZrI`̵ c~XU8K(׈Ec~XU8K(c~XU8K({)Groeneveldprijs 2022c~XPfrJ