The point is that Sheldrake is trying to understand Consciousness and the mind without sticking to the ridiculous notion that 'the brain generates the mind and consciousness'.
It's not ridiculous at all, in fact it's what the evidence is telling us. Even many of the more radical ideas about conciousness that you have previously referred to (IIT and Orch OR, for example), would agree that it is the brain that produces the fully functioning mind.
He is being vilified for that meaningful effort which many others (I have named above) also are attempting.
He's being vilified because he's a known charlatan who peddles pseudoscience.
He is just trying to go beyond the narrow confines of mainstream science. Very laudable!
Science doesn't have 'narrow confines' unless you mean that it actually has to be science, rather than wishful thinking or vague, baseless nonsense like "morphic resonance" which seems to mean whatever suits him at the time.
The problem, as always with you, is that you don't care what the source is, how credible the idea is, or even how closely it fits to what you, obviously and desperately,
want to be true, if you even think it hints it that direction, you'll jump on it and promote it here.
You're taking the exact opposite of the scientific approach by deciding what's true first and then going to look for anything at all that you think might support it. This is exactly the same approach we get from YECs.