I'm on my virtually annual visit to the Miley brothers and other old friends in the Bay area. In preparation for seeing them again I read a number of books they recommended, bringing this one along for the plane ride to give as a gift for Tom, the more skeptical of the two siblings. Although I watched and listened to interviews with Sheldrake before, this is the first of his books I've actually read.
"Seven experiments" are indeed proffered herein. Well, actually he recommends seven areas wherein almost anyone might make valuable contributions to science, suggesting a whole host of possible projects. Of course, he's got an agenda. Sheldrake is no mechanistic materialist and he aims to challenge some of their assumptions.
In addition to the suggested experiments, Sheldrake digresses into various essays, not all of them related to inexpensively falsifiable propositions. In this regard I particularly liked his overview of some of the laws of physics. Here he treats such things as the supposed speed of light, Planck's Constant, the Gravitational Constant and so on, demonstrating how such laws and limits have actually been determined and in so doing showing how much of scientific research actually operates. Here he is reminiscent of Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions and his book may be seen as an addendum to such critiques.