This is Your Mind on Plants
Appearance
Introduction
- Societies condone the mind-changing drugs that help uphold society's rule and ban the ones that are seen to undermine it.
- Humans have identified plants that:
- Lift the burden of physical pain
- Render us more alert or capable of uncommon feats
- Make us more sociable
- Elicit feelings of awe or ecstasy
- Nourish our imagination
- Transcend time and space
- Occasion dreams and visions and mystical experiences
- Bring us into the presence of ancestors or gods.
- Evidently, normal everyday consciousness is not enough for us humans; we seek to vary, intensify, and sometimes transcend it, and we have identified a whole collection of molecules in nature that allow us to do that.
- Each substance in this book represents one of the three broad categories of psychoactive compounds:
- The downer/sedative (opium)
- The upper/stimulant (caffeine)
- The outer/hallucinogen (mescaline)
- A pharmakon, from the Greek, can be either a medicine or a poison; it all depends - on use, dose, intention, and set and setting. It also means "scapegoat", a role that these substances have played in the drug war.
- Human consciousness is always at risk of getting stuck, sending the mind around and around in loops of rumination; mushroom chemicals like psilocybin can nudge us out of those grooves, loosening stuck brains and making possible fresh patterns of thought.
- The notion of a beyond, of a hidden dimension of reality, or of an afterlife - may be memes introduced to human culture by visions that psychoactive molecules inspired in human minds.