The Tim Ferriss Show - #592: Dennis McKenna — An Ethnopharmacologist on Hallucinogens, Sex-Crazed Cicadas, The Mushrooms of Language, BioGnosis, and Illuminating Obscure Corners
Episode Date: May 4, 2022Brought to you by Athletic Greens all-in-one nutritional supplement, Eight Sleep’s Pod Pro Cover sleeping solution for dynamic cooling and heating, and Shopify... global commerce platform, providing tools to start, grow, market, and manage a retail business. Dennis McKenna (@DennisMcKenna4) has spent more than 40 years researching the interdisciplinary study of Amazonian ethnopharmacology and plant hallucinogens. He has conducted extensive ethnobotanical fieldwork in the Peruvian, Colombian, and Brazilian Amazon.His doctoral research at the University of British Columbia focused on the ethnopharmacology of ayahuasca and oo-koo-he, two tryptamine-based hallucinogens used by indigenous peoples in the Northwest Amazon.He is a founding board member of the Heffter Research Institute and was a key organizer and participant in the Hoasca Project, the first biomedical investigation of ayahuasca used by the UDV, a Brazilian religious group. He is the younger brother of Terence McKenna.From 2000 to 2017, he taught courses on ethnopharmacology as well as Plants in Human Affairs at the Center for Spirituality and Healing at the University of Minnesota. In 2019, in collaboration with colleagues, he incorporated a nonprofit, the McKenna Academy of Natural Philosophy. Currently, the Academy has several projects underway, with the most immediate being preparations for an upcoming conference in the UK May 23rd–26th, ESPD55, which will cover a wide range of topics related to psycho-ethnopharmacology and feature an exclusive, pre-release screening of the McKenna Academy’s first short documentary, BioGnosis, Bridges to Ancestral Wisdom.Dennis emigrated to Canada in the spring of 2019 with his wife Sheila and now resides in Abbotsford, British Columbia.Please enjoy!This episode is brought to you by Shopify! Shopify is one of my favorite platforms and one of my favorite companies. Shopify is a platform designed for anyone to sell anywhere, giving entrepreneurs the resources once reserved for big business. In no time flat, you can have a great looking online store that brings your ideas to life, and you can have the tools to manage your day-to-day and drive sales. No coding or design experience required.More than a store, Shopify grows with you, and they never stop innovating, providing more and more tools to make your business better and your life easier. Go to Shopify.com/Tim for a FREE 14-day trial and get full access to Shopify’s entire suite of features.*This episode is also brought to you by Eight Sleep! Eight Sleep’s Pod Pro Cover is the easiest and fastest way to sleep at the perfect temperature. It pairs dynamic cooling and heating with biometric tracking to offer the most advanced (and user-friendly) solution on the market. Simply add the Pod Pro Cover to your current mattress and start sleeping as cool as 55°F or as hot as 110°F. It also splits your bed in half, so your partner can choose a totally different temperature.And now, my dear listeners—that’s you—can get $250 off the Pod Pro Cover. Simply go to EightSleep.com/Tim or use code TIM at checkout. *This episode is also brought to you by Athletic Greens. I get asked all the time, “If you could use only one supplement, what would it be?” My answer is usually AG1 by Athletic Greens, my all-in-one nutritional insurance. I recommended it in The 4-Hour Body in 2010 and did not get paid to do so. I do my best with nutrient-dense meals, of course, but AG further covers my bases with vitamins, minerals, and whole-food-sourced micronutrients that support gut health and the immune system. Right now, Athletic Greens is offering you their Vitamin D Liquid Formula free with your first subscription purchase—a vital nutrient for a strong immune system and strong bones. Visit AthleticGreens.com/Tim to claim this special offer today and receive the free Vitamin D Liquid Formula (and five free travel packs) with your first subscription purchase! That’s up to a one-year supply of Vitamin D as added value when you try their delicious and comprehensive all-in-one daily greens product.*How Dennis and his brother Terence tuned in to “vegetable television” with the addition of an ayahuasca ingredient to their regular consumption of mushrooms and cannabis, and why even the components of tried-and-true ayahuasca are in constant flux depending on who’s making it. [07:39]Why is it that psychoactive drugs don’t always work — even in people who usually feel their effects — and what keeps us from finding out through controlled studies? [13:51]As much as Dennis has experimented with adding and subtracting ingredients to various psychoactive admixtures, he’s come to believe it’s best to avoid combinations if possible. There are often alternative ways to dial the effects of these substances up or down as desired. [21:43]Why would we have cannabinoid, opiate, and other molecular receptors in our brains unless we’re designed to consume these substances from external sources? [29:45]Tales of terror from the world of psilocybin cicadas, cordyceps zombies, and toxoplasmic rodents. [36:34]Dennis shares his thoughts on psychedelics as a potential treatment for dyslexia and other language-based disorders. [42:20]What happened to Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell after having his savikalpa samadhi experience — a mystic glimpse beyond the self into the true nature of things? Does Dennis believe current psychedelic pioneers are misguided in downplaying the mystical experiences certain compounds bring out in people? [50:18]For anyone curious about Albert Hofmann’s discovery of LSD, Dennis recommends the graphic novel Bicycle Day by Brian Blomerth. [53:48]My recommended resources for learning more about the perceptual phenomenon of synesthesia. [54:58]What ESPD 55 entails: its history, its itinerary, and how you can participate even if you can’t physically make it to the conference in the UK from May 23rd to the 26th. [56:51]How does Dennis relate to mortality and the inevitability of death? [1:08:54]What is BioGnosis? [1:11:56]How does Dennis feel about synthetic substitutes for psychedelic compounds that have been traditionally harvested from natural — and often endangered — sources? What adaptations might groups who see these plants as sacred have to make to ensure that some of them don’t go extinct? [1:14:16]Most communities of any size eventually have to deal with in-fighting and power grabs from a certain element, and the psychedelic community is no exception. Can Dennis imagine any solutions to this unfortunate reality? [1:25:31]What would Dennis choose if he could only partake of three psychoactive substances for the rest of his life? [1:35:02]The pros and cons of cannabis consumption and its methods of delivery, and how modern strains can induce experiences akin to psychedelics. [1:36:38]What we can expect from an upcoming second edition of The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss, The BioGnosis Project (and its first associated documentary (to be screened at ESPD 55), virtualizing the Herbarium in Iquitos, and other parting thoughts. [1:42:46]*IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER: The plants and compounds mentioned in this episode are illegal in many countries, and even possession can carry severe criminal penalties. This episode does not constitute medical advice and should not be construed as a recommendation to use psychedelics. There are serious legal, psychological, and physical risks. Psychedelics are not for everyone—they can exacerbate certain emotional problems, and there have been, in very rare cases, fatalities.For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsors.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hadda hadda. A quick disclaimer before we get into the interview, the plants and compounds
mentioned in this episode are illegal in many countries, and even possession can carry severe
criminal penalties. This episode does not constitute medical advice nor legal advice
and should not be construed as a recommendation to use psychedelics. There are serious legal,
psychological, and physical risks. Fatalities have been recorded. So psychedelics are not for
everyone. They can exacerbate certain emotional problems, certain diagnoses,
and there have been, as mentioned in very rare cases,
fatalities.
So thanks for being safe, everybody.
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The Tim Ferriss Show.
Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferriss Show.
My guest today is a fan favorite, Dennis McKenna. You can find him on
Twitter at Dennis McKenna. For Dennis has spent more than 40 years researching the interdisciplinary
study of Amazonian ethnopharmacology and plant hallucinogens. He has conducted extensive
ethnobotanical fieldwork in the Peruvian, Colombian, and Brazilian Amazon. His doctoral
research at the University of British Columbia focused on the ethnopharmacology of ayahuasca and ukuhe, two tryptamine-based hallucinogens used by indigenous
peoples in the Northwest Amazon. He is a founding board member of the Hefter Research Institute,
which has helped fund and directly funded a lot of very good science, and was a key organizer
and participant in the Huasca Project, the first biomedical investigation of ayahuasca used by the UDV, a Brazilian religious group. He is the younger brother
of Terence McKenna. From 2000 to 2017, he taught courses on ethnopharmacology as well as plants and
human affairs at the Center for Spirituality and Healing at the University of Minnesota.
In 2019, in collaboration with colleagues, he incorporated a non-profit, the McKenna Academy of Natural Philosophy. Currently, the academy has several projects
underway, with the most immediate being preparations for an upcoming conference in the UK
May 23rd to 26th, that's 2022, ESPD 55, we're going to talk a lot about this,
which will cover a wide range of topics related to psychoethnopharmacology.
Dennis emigrated to Canada in the spring of 2019 with his wife Sheila and now resides in
Abbotsford, British Columbia. The website for the event that I just mentioned is ESPD55.com.
Dennis, welcome back to the show. It's so nice to see you again.
Thanks, Tim. It's really great to be here. Thank you for welcoming me back. Absolutely. And I want to mention to folks right up front that the first
episode covered a lot of ground. I'm going to try not to duplicate too much. The title of the last
episode, for people who want to check it out, is Dennis McKenna, The Depths of Ayahuasca, 500-Plus
Sessions, Fundamentals, Advanced Topics,
Science, Churches, Learnings, Warnings, and Beyond. So you get the idea. If you want to do a deep dive
on not just ayahuasca, but certainly a lot of your biographical details and more,
listen to the first episode. I'm going to try to deliver on the promise that I made at the end of the first episode, which was a teaser
to a second conversation, which now we are in the very beginning of, during which I said we might
get into, quote, the really strange and weird stuff, end quote. So I'm going to make an attempt
to incorporate some strange and weird stuff. I don't think it'll be very hard. And I thought we could start with a number of excerpts, highlights that I
grabbed from The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss, which chronicles many of your life
experiences, adventures, and misadventures alongside your brother and the many other
people in your life. And I'm just going to pull out a section here, and you can feel free to
revise or update or now refute anything that I bring up, but here's the line. They were an excellent compliment to the
cannabis, we don't have to get into all the context before this, which we smoke constantly,
along with the occasional hit derived from the shavings taken from our fresh supply
of Banisteriopsis copy, the vine added to ayahuasca as a source of the MAO-inhibiting
compounds, that's monamine oxidase-inhibiting compounds. Here's the part I wanted to hear you expand on a bit.
We found that smoking the bark while on mushrooms synergized the closed-eye hallucinations in a most
pleasant and intriguing way. We dubbed this serendipitous discovery vegetable television.
So could you speak a bit more, please, about the effect of adding the smoking of the bark to mushrooms and what that experience was or is like?
It was pretty much an accidental discovery, you know, and doing stuff that maybe not be, maybe not entirely safe, but you had to experiment.
It was just, it was just, we stumbled on it.
We were taking a lot of mushrooms and that's a whole other story that we may or may not get into.
But we were in a situation in the Amazon when we were doing
mushrooms pretty much constantly. And when you're doing them constantly, you get a certain tolerance
built up, and then you have to do larger doses to get any effect. And we were, as it says there,
we were smoking cannabis pretty much constantly through this too. So we decided to just, well, what would happen if we
smoked some Banisteriopsis shavings on the mushrooms? And it had this amazing effect,
you know, which anybody could replicate. And I don't think it's particularly dangerous,
but we found that we could take a hit and then we would get this efflorescence of visions that would just
gently rise and last two or three minutes and then just kind of fade away. And then you could
take another hit and you could repeat that. It was kind of like going up and down in a balloon.
You know, you could lose some ballast and go a little higher or you could come down. It was very pleasant, actually. It was
very nice. And if you look at the whole history of ethnopharmacology, for example, the ayahuasca,
we think of ayahuasca as being essentially a mixture of two plants. But that's very much a simplification of what ayahuasca is. You know, there's a whole
pharmacopoeia of plants that sort of this galaxy of plants that is associated with ayahuasca,
not always taken with it, sometimes taken as admixture, sometimes taken as components of this
dieta, which is very important in the sort of ayahuasca
tradition, the training of the curanderos and so on. And a lot of these plants are
not very well investigated from a scientific point of view. It's an empirical science. And I guess
the point is, in some ways, these practitioners, shamans, curanderos, they're really scientists in a certain sense.
They're experimental about it.
And they don't hesitate to say, well, what if I take this and mix it with that?
What's going to happen?
How is that going to change the effect?
Sometimes they really regret. Those that survive this process, you know, make discoveries,
but there is the potential to take the wrong things. People may think that ayahuasca has been
pretty much figured out in terms of botany, chemistry, pharmacology, and so on, but that's
not the case. There's a lot more to be learned about ayahuasca. There's numerous PhDs left to be done. And particularly these admixture plants are interesting because some of them are psychedelic by themselves or regarded to be, but they may be used with ayahuasca. So this accumulated knowledge that exists in this sort of folk traditions, if you will,
is not explored, certainly not codified, and it's ever-changing.
That's why there is no such thing as a standardized mixture of ayahuasca,
because each preparation is as different as the practitioners that prepare it.
It has their sort of idiosyncratic stamp on it.
I want to underscore a few things that over hundreds or thousands of years can produce
some very refined approaches to solving different problems. And I think that this is well represented
in areas that are perhaps a little more objectively accessible by most markers than,
say, psychedelics. If you look at poisons used in the Amazon, and I've certainly learned a
lot about this from our mutual friend Mark Plotkin, who is an impressive fellow in his own right and
has spent a lot of time in Suriname and other places. But if you look at curare, for a very
long time, for instance, Western scientists who later would take that and use it as the basis for a lot of modern anesthesia
saw that various species of pepper, wild pepper, were being added as admixtures to this poison.
And they, after failing to do any type of assay that produced meaningful results,
concluded that it was just primitive superstition. And that was the conclusion for a long time until it was identified that I
believe it's bioperine in these constituent sort of molecules found in pepper can actually increase
the bioavailability of these poisons such that they're faster acting. And if you're shooting a
monkey in the canopy, the last thing you want is for that tail to wrap around a branch when it dies
so that it doesn't fall to the floor.
And so lo and behold, it turned out that yes, there is a very practical purpose for the inclusion of this admixture. And I'm sure there are some false leads and there are things that
kind of remain that won't be proven out in that same way. But I do think there's an argument to be made that, as you said,
a lot of PhDs are yet to be earned looking at these admixtures. And just to provide a bit of
context on the dieta, and please feel free to jump in and add or refute anything that I say,
the dieta in many different tribes and many different contexts is the ingestion, in some cases, the application
of plants that an individual is attempting to better understand or adopt and integrate as an
ally. And the ayahuasca is viewed as a master plant or a teacher plant, effectively, in some
capacity, a vehicle for getting to understand and know these plants.
So over a period of time, and sometimes it's done in a fasting context, other times it's a very
bland diet, these plants may be not ingested at the same time as ayahuasca, but alternated,
say one day on, one day off, or otherwise. And then in certain cases, as you were mentioning,
there are these psychedelics like Toei that are brewed with ayahuasca, which can be pretty dicey
in some cases. I want to ask you about another paragraph, and that'll lead into my question.
Here's the paragraph. In the next two or three sessions at Don Fidel's,
I experienced the same sub-threshold effects. It couldn't have been poor quality brew. Others in
the group, including Don, were clearly affected. It was something wrong with me. For some reason,
I wasn't getting it, in quotation marks. Reflecting on those first experiences,
I think that ayahuasca is in ways a learned experience. If you don't know what to expect,
nothing may happen. Also,
my uptight hypervigilance may have prevented me from relaxing enough to allow the experience to
manifest. Okay, so this paragraph highlights one brand of sort of a null experience that I find
most mystifying about psychedelics, because I have also had experiences and many others have where they will
one out of 10, one out of 15, one out of every 20 sessions have absolutely no effect, even from
megadoses of ayahuasca. And presumably your serotonin type 2A receptors aren't just out to
lunch for that period of time. And it begets all sorts of questions. So could you speak to ayahuasca as a learned experience
and also comment on, if you have any thoughts, these zero effect experiences? Because in each
case, I can come up with a plausible explanation for why, if it were possible for my psyche to negate an experience, it would have negated those experiences in those settings.
But it's hard for me to make heads or tails out of.
It's very hard to do any kind of controlled study on this.
You can't do that. I think what this speaks to is that ayahuasca or any psychoactive drug, not just psychedelics,
but it happens in psychedelics, is the experience is a combination of pharmacology,
pharmacogenetics, the way that your unique body, we're all biochemically unique in the way your body handles the absorption
and the elimination of the substance and the circumstances, set and setting. This dynamic
of the environment that we harp on constantly is the importance of set and setting. I forget who
it was, but some, I think maybe it was Andy Weil who
once made the observation, psychedelics are a kind of placebo in a certain way. And if you
take them under the wrong circumstances or inappropriate circumstances, you're not going
to get any effect because it doesn't sync with the expectations that you may have or other things, and it just
won't happen. You have to surrender to it. You literally have to surrender to it to let it happen.
But I think that this whole area of how the pharmacology and the expectations interact.
It's a dynamic process that involves the medicine,
your expectations, the dose,
and your biochemical individuality and all that.
I mean, it's interesting, for example,
there are some people, most of us, for example,
smoke DMT and we're blown away, right?
I mean, DMT is hard to ignore if you smoke it.
It's profound, very quick, but very intense experience.
There are people who experience nothing, which is rather strange. So what's that about? And without looking into, well, okay, so what's unique about
their serotonin pharmacology? Maybe these people are like genetic knockouts, natural genetic
knockouts. Maybe they don't have high levels of 5-HT2A receptors, or maybe their MAO is super active or super high. But, you know, the problem, Tim,
with studying this stuff is it all comes down to these are case studies. So you can't do a
controlled experiment, really. You can't do a group and really study this effectively. It's all about,
well, there's this one individual that no matter how much he takes,
he or she takes DMT, he's insensitive to it. I heard a case of someone who, for example,
was insensitive to DMT, but very sensitive to 5-methoxy DMT. Why would this be? It's just a
mystery. What also just produces more questions than answers certainly
for me is when you look longitudinally at the experience of a single person so yeah like their
pharmacogenetics should be reasonably stable you would think and let's just say in my case where
i'm extremely sensitive to ayahuasca, generally speaking,
and then in a handful of cases have two or three cups and absolutely zero discernible effect.
And I have my own subjective explanation for why that plausibly could have happened, but
biochemically, I don't know how that is possible, because my expectation was that I would feel the effect.
And similarly, there are cases where even if we remove the expectancy effect, there
are certainly cases of people being dosed, let's just say, with LSD and any number of
incarnations, and they end up tripping their faces off, even though they hadn't planned
on spending the rest of their evening in the 17th dimension, right? So I should also add just a quick note related to the smoking
of the Benisteriopsis copy bark with mushrooms. I've never experienced that. I find that actually
incredibly... I'm not recommending it. For all of the drug disclaimers and everything else,
please revisit episode one. But I will say everything we're discussing,
or a lot of what we're discussing can go terribly sideways, even if you are highly experienced. So
we're not recommending you do any of these things, talk to your medical professional,
et cetera, et cetera. However, all of that having been said, I find what you did more interesting than say what someone did,
who I may or may not know, which is ingesting harmin or harmaline or tetrahydroharmin orally
in combination with ground psilocybe mushrooms, where you hit the tennis ball or you hit the
golf ball more accurately and you can't unhit it. And in that case, just for people wondering,
the multiplier effect on the subjective experience of mushrooms is about a 3 to 4x.
So if you were to take 1.5 grams of mushrooms and combine it with the MAO inhibitors in this way,
the sort of subjective feeling is the intensity of 4.5, let's just say, grams. You want to be aware of
that. But the smoking is super interesting because you can titrate that additive effect up or down,
which is the same reason why I found some of my experiences with intravenous ketamine very
interesting versus intramuscular, for instance, because in real time, you can dial
up or down the intensity, assuming you haven't pushed yourself through the looking glass with
a huge bolus in the very beginning. In that case, forget about it. All bets are off. But
if you're starting at a dose and a drip on a per kind of milligrams per kilogram basis over 60 minutes that you can manage a conversation
with, then you can kind of dial it up and down, which is extremely, extremely interesting because
you're able to better observe the effects at least. Like you say, all the caveats, you know,
about being careful with anything like this, anything you're doing. I think that one should be careful.
One thing about the mushroom smoke banisteriopsis thing is that it does seem very gentle,
very easy to control. Again, your results may vary. Your mileage may vary. Everybody's different if you're super sensitive. I've always been a
little puzzled why people would want to combine beta-carbolines with mushrooms, because they
don't require it. They're orally active. That's what sets them aside. That's what sets psilocybin
aside apart from DMT. It does not require activation by a monoamine oxidase inhibitor.
And I'm a person that tends to think, avoid combinations if possible, because every drug
you add into the mix complicates the pharmacokinetic picture and everything else,
potentially makes it a little more hazardous.
So to the people that say, well, I can take a gram and a half of mushrooms and potentiate it
with Paganum harmala and get a much higher effect, my question is, well, why not take
four grams of mushrooms and let it go with that? you know, because that is a much more straightforward
approach. Yeah, you'll get to the same place. But this idea about titrating dose is interesting.
You know, that's another approach to DMT that you can take that's interesting, which I haven't
worked with it that much. But vaping DMT in a volcano vaporizer, I've had some of the most profound experiences with DMT
that way, because you don't have to mess around with the pipe. You just get the bag full of smoke
and then you can deal with it. If you put under your tongue sublingually a little bit of banisteriopsis tincture like 10 minutes before you do this then you can smoke
the vapor in dmt and again you get this ability to just gently rise up into the place and you
can kind of maintain that for a while and then you can sort of drift back down and then you can
take another hit and you can go back up there.
But you feel this sense of it's very much less threatening.
You don't feel the sense of being out of control.
You just take three huge hits of DMT.
It's kind of like, you know, OK, we're jumping off a cliff here.
Open the umbrella.
Hope for the best.
But this is a much more controllable way to approach it.
And if it gets scary, well, you just let yourself down gently and come in for a gentle landing.
And if not, you can go to 28,000 feet or 50,000 feet or all the way into orbit if you want.
If you, you know, so I guess if there's a point to this route and dosage and the way that
you approach that, that's part of the dynamic of this set setting, drug, individual setting,
and dose, and that includes route of administration.
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that's athleticgreens.com slash Tim. I have, not surprisingly, a whole slew of questions
that I'd like to ask, and I'm trying to sequence them so we can get in some rational way, because
I think some could engender just a whole new branch of the conversation. Let me start with
one that I've heard you discuss on some capacity before, but I can't remember the answer,
and I just love your help. We're probably going to get into like phylogenetic trees and all sorts
of stuff. But I heard someone talking not too long ago, and they said something along the lines of,
well, if you look at the fact that we have cannabinoid receptors in our brain,
why else would we have those if it weren't for the fact
that we were designed to consume cannabis? You know, something along those lines. I think the
logic was something like that. How would you explain the prevalence or existence of receptors
for these various types of molecules? I mean, we could use, is it cannabinoids? Is that how you say
that correctly? I'm not even sure if I'm pronouncing it correctly.
What would your response to that be?
Or if you're sitting at a dinner table and someone brought that up, where would you take it?
I think it's not that complicated, actually. The fact is, so we have cannabinoid receptors in our brains, and we actually have cannabinoids in our brains.
We have these prostaglandin-like compounds called
anandamines and other types of things. These are effectively, they're our brain's own cannabinoids.
Similarly, you see this with opiates, you know. Opiate receptors in our brain bind to these opiate
peptides like endorphin and dinorphin and those sorts of things. And they
just happen to bind to the alkaloids from opium and have that effect. Similarly with serotonin
receptors or dopamine receptors, all of these have their own endogenous, the term is endogenous
ligands. And obviously for serotonin receptors, their serotonin is the endogenous. The term is endogenous ligands. And obviously for serotonin receptors,
their serotonin is the endogenous ligand. But interesting new findings, Tim, show formerly
there was a lot of, there was excitement, there still is excitement about endogenous DMT.
You know, and it's all related to the pineal gland and that sort of thing.
Not so much.
The current understanding is that the pineal is not so important,
but DMT occurs in the brain, in certain parts of the brain,
in rather high amounts in the frontal cortex.
And this hasn't really been discussed or studied as much as it should. My friend John
Chavez has gotten into this rather deeply. So DMT is an endogenous ligand. And DMT
is a very simple molecule. It's only two steps from tryptophan, which is in everything,
which is one reason why you find DMT in plants, animals, fungi.
I sometimes in my lectures say nature is drenched in DMT.
It's not uncommon at all.
Oh, how did this come about?
Well, it came about because these neurotransmitter-like compounds found in the brain are also found in plants and fungi, and they have similar evolutionary origins, basically.
At some point, the fungi, the animals, and the plants split off from each other.
There's this concept of the leuca, you know, the last universal common ancestor, which was, nobody knows what it was, but we know that it had to have existed.
And probably it already had the genetic machinery to make these neurotransmitter-like compounds.
And just like neurotransmitters in the brain, what they do is they facilitate signaling,
they're signal transduction molecules. But plants and fungi
and everything else use very similar molecules, sometimes the same molecules, for signal
transduction processes in the ecosystem. Plants modulate their relationship with other organisms
in the environment through signal
transduction.
And these messenger molecules, the plants make these sort of, they're called secondary
compounds.
And that implies that they're not important.
They're absolutely important.
Plants substitute biosynthesis for behavior.
Plants modulate, optimize their relationship with everything
in the environment because they can't respond. They can't run away, right? They're stuck in one
place. So they do it through chemistry. And sometimes, this is like my usual rap, but
sometimes the message is very simple. Stay away. Get away from me. I'm poisonous. You
don't want to muck with me. Other times, the message is, come closer. Let's symbiose. Let's
form relationships. All of this is mediated by these signal transduction processes, which is a
special kind of signaling process in organisms that involves a receptor and a molecule
that comes from somewhere outside or some other part of the brain and actually binds into that
receptor. So it's a physical molecular interaction. That's what I mean by signal transduction,
as opposed to, say, electrical nervous transmission,
which also takes place.
That's the myth.
It's not really a mystery.
It's we evolved from the same origins.
Not surprising that our brains have neurotransmitter-like compounds that resemble those we find in nature.
And the interesting thing is something like psilocybin is a good example.
Psilocybin has, phylogenetically, we're pretty sure that psilocybin has been around for
at least 75 million years. The higher mushrooms, the basidiomycetes, are very old, long before
there were animal nervous systems for them to interact with.
But then animals did evolve, and it turns out they have interesting effects with psilocybin.
What was psilocybin doing in nature before then?
Well, probably insects.
It had to do with insects, that it was either an attractant or a repellent,
more likely an attractant.
And there are some interests.
We could go down that rabbit hole.
It's like going to the bar for the local insects.
Right, yes, effectively, yes.
I mean, you've heard of the psilocybin cicada story, right?
No, I have not.
Oh, well?
How did I miss the psilocybin cicadas story?
Sounds like a punk band.
It does, really.
Well, I don't know.
Do you want to go into it?
I do.
Yeah, of course I do.
Are you kidding?
So, very interesting study came out a few years ago.
You know, so cicadas are those things that spend like 17 years underground, and then they come out every 17 years, or different species come out at different times, and so on.
Well, it turns out, I should be able to quote more detail, but if you Google this, it'll all come up.
So cicada, there's a fungus, which is not a psilocybe.
It's called massospora is the fungus, but it makes psilocybin.
And it makes cathinone, which is a stimulant compound that's found in cot.
It's the stimulant found in cot.
Well, massospora infects these cicadas while they're in the ground, and they take it over, and when they emerge out of the ground, essentially their abdomen has been replaced by fungal sporangia.
This is kind of a grisly tail.
They emerge out of the ground, and instead of having a butt, basically, their tail is replaced by these
massive spore masses. And they're hypersexual. They try to mate with anything that moves or even
that doesn't move. And they're waving around their butts and spreading spores everywhere,
infecting more cicadas. And this is how the fungus effectively the fungus has taken
over that cicada and enslaved it into a turn them into sex crazed zombies if you want to put it that
way and facilitate also a good punk rock band sex crazed zombie yes also yeah yeah and this is this is actually known in mycology there's another
group of fungi called the cordyceps you've heard of cordyceps yeah cordyceps same thing you know
i mean they don't use psilocybin but they infect something like an in an ant or a caterpillar or
many many kinds of insects many kinds of species of cordyceps.
And they effectively will take over the insect's brain and direct its behavior.
For example, in ants, there are certain kinds of ants.
The fungus will infect the ant, doesn't kill it, but it causes it to climb up a blade of
grass to the optimal position for
spore dispersal, then it kills it. Then it will explode out of its head with sporangia,
and the spores will spread, fall to the ground, infect more ants. So effectively,
these cordyceps are taking over the behavior of the outs.
Maybe psilocybin is doing something like that to us, except they don't have to infect our brain.
We happen to like it, so we consume it.
We're serving the psilocybe's evil agenda, which isn't so evil.
It basically wants to reproduce and spread.
Nature has some crazy shows, side shows out there. I mean, crazy shit I pulled up. I just
searched cicada psilocybin. And the first thing that pops up is an article and the headline is,
these fungi drug cicadas with psilocybin or amphetamine to make them mate nonstop. The
insects keep at it even if chunks of their abdomens fall off.
And the fungus is apparently Massospora siccidina, I think it is.
I'm probably mispronouncing that.
But there are also cases, you know, mammalian cases.
I can't recall the exact disease.
I should actually be able to recall this,
but it causes rodents to become suicidal
in the sense that they become aggressive
towards cats and effectively bait them. And then the cats eat the rats or the mice, and
they contract this disease, which then has effects on cats. I mean, it just goes on and on and on.
So nature's got a lot going on it's got a lot going on and and from a
standpoint of like human ethics this seems bizarre and crazy and actually evil but it's not it's just
this is nature nature in action and and things try to optimize their survival strategies and
for fungi spreading and sporulating and all that,
that's all they really want to do. That's what they want to do. If you want to attribute a desire
to them, they're optimized for reproduction and they'll do anything. They don't care if
they have to take over primates and control. Look at how psilocybin's symbiosis,
psilocybin's symbiosis with humans has been beneficial for us,
for them and for the mushrooms, because everybody's growing them.
They're growing them all over the place.
And that's true of many plants and fungi.
If you domesticate something generally,
if humans domesticate a plant or a fungus that's like
going on easy street for the organism because we're here to take care of it until we blow up
the planet completely entirely but until then they have a pretty good free ride about it anyway
so let me ask you a question about a comment that you made in the brotherhood of the screaming abyss
about lsd as a potential treatment for dyslexia now i don't have all the context but i pulled
this out and it's going to lead to a broader question about perhaps unusual or unexpected
applications or indications for psychedelics but this section here reads it did lead me to speculate
about the use of lsd as a potential treatment for dyslexia.
We have a limited understanding of neuroplasticity to say nothing of how psychedelics might affect it.
That man's anecdote, so of course I've omitted an anecdote,
hints at the curious link between psychedelics and language,
as do the more prevalent accounts of synesthesia I've discussed earlier.
And then I'll actually read one more sentence.
Psychedelics have some fundamental relationship to the way our brains create meaning and understanding out of
sounds and images. Convinced that further investigations into this phenomenon would
yield new insights. Could you expand on that? Because I would agree, certainly, with the
assertion of this fundamental relationship. Any thoughts on LSD specifically as perhaps a tool for addressing
dyslexia or psychedelics for any other indications that people might not guess?
The connection to LSD and language, and I think even more so with mushrooms, because
you're probably familiar with an essay, I think by Henry Munn, that was published in a book called, I think it was by
Peter First, called Hallucinogens and Culture. This was around 1970. There's a wonderful chapter
in there called The Mushrooms of Language. It's by Henry Munn. And it makes the point, and again,
like I talk about this in The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss, it makes the point, and again, like I talk about this in The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss,
it makes the point that in this be-mushroom state, the poetry, the language becomes much more fluid.
It just sort of flows out of you. And that's why these people can chant for hours, and they're
actually instantiating the mushroom as speaking through them.
You know, this gnosis, literally, the logos is the word.
The true, the pure logos actually flows through them.
And then there's the phenomenon of synesthesia, which psychedelics, especially mushrooms, can reliably do.
And, you know, the association with meaningful images with sound.
Some people are naturally genetically synesthetic. It's very interesting how their
synesthetic experiences often have to do with words and numbers and things like that. And they'll say things like, well, the number 13 is chrome-shaped
and spiky, shiny and spiky. What? But for them, that's a reality. And I think, you know, I've
argued that mushrooms, well, I have, Terrence have, lots of people have, that mushrooms were
important in the origin of consciousness. And I think that it is this connection to language that, you know, consciousness,
what we understand as true consciousness depends on this construction of this worldview, essentially.
And that's built on language, this artificial reality that we construct for ourselves that's a combination of sensory input
that is filtered and processed in a certain way
and linked to associations, memories,
all of that kind of thing.
So we build this, what the neuroscientists now call
the default mode network,
which is kind of ordinary consciousness,
our ordinary state of consciousness. Long before I heard of the default mode network, which is kind of ordinary consciousness, our ordinary state of consciousness.
Long before I heard of the default mode network, I was calling it the reality hallucination.
Effectively, we live in a hallucination. We live in an artificial world reality that our brains
construct. And it must reflect whatever is out there because we're not wandering around stepping in front of buses and things like that.
So it does map to reality in some ways, but it's actually an impoverished version of reality.
A lot of what the brain does is filter things out, you know, and Huxley had this insight. He talked about the reducing valve, that, you know,
to make the world comprehensible, you have to selectively filter what gets in. You inhabit
this filtered, you could almost use the word curated version of reality. Otherwise, it would
just be a blooming, buzzing confusion confusion you wouldn't be able to navigate
and then you can take a psychedelic you can disable those mechanisms you can disable this
default mode mechanism open the gates of the reducing valve and that can be very beneficial
in terms of helping you get outside of your reference frame. And that's
very useful. I think that that's what psychedelics, I think that's where the therapeutic effect really,
for many of the things it's indicated for, it's this ability to step outside your reference frame
temporarily and look at your situation from a different perspective, but you wouldn't want to be there all the time,
right? Because you wouldn't be functional. That's again why you have to be very selective about your
set and setting. It's a complex topic because I think it does relate to the way that we link
images, essentially internal images, to sounds and meaning. Because I'm here rapping to you,
and I'm making effectively small mouth noises, which are inherently meaningless,
except that we happen to share a language. And so when I make these small mouth noises, chances are your brain is reflecting it in terms of
images. I say chair, you see a chair. I say star, you see a star. I mean, it's more complex than
that, but I think that's the basis of cognition, really. And if you look at culture, if you look at consciousness, it's all based on this relationship between sound, image, and meaning, or what they sometimes call portentousness.
Yeah, and ascribed meaning, right?
It's a learned association that is not automatic, right?
I think about this a lot with, say, infants and language, and I'm sure there's someone who can comment on this much more intelligently than I can, but when an infant, let's say before they develop full-depth perception and so on, if they were to look at what's in front of me, they wouldn't see laptop, webcam, microphone, wood table, et cetera,
pile of papers as discrete objects until they have likely,
at least not to that level of fidelity,
until they have labels for those things. It might just be a flattened sort of two-dimensional sheet
of colors and shapes and shadows.
I think about that quite a bit also,
as you mentioned in the last episode that you've done,
who knows how many sessions with ayahuasca,
you know,
500 plus.
And it does seem that people develop or some people develop an ability to
discern and see in those spaces in the same way that an infinite sort of develops the
ability to discern between these discrete things that we have labels for as adults, if that makes
any sense at all. I'm not sure if that resonates at all, but I do think about that a lot.
And I wanted to come back to something you said, which was adopting a new reference point and how that can be applied to
many different, say, conditions or issues. And in some ways, a lot of the outcomes that we see,
or even the case studies that we might see in the case of this person with dyslexia,
or Andy Weil with his allergies, sort of defy conventional mechanistic explanations for how that could happen, right? As far as I know, LSD is not an antihistamine, right? Sort of defy conventional mechanistic explanations
for how that could happen, right?
As far as I know, LSD is not an antihistamine, right?
So it raises all sorts of questions.
And I wanted to read,
this is going to be the last section
that I wanted to read to you.
And I realized that
The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss
was written quite a while ago.
So if this goes to a dead end,
I'll take the blame for it.
But I pulled this out, which was a segment on Apollo 14. This is another example of
reference point changes. So Apollo 14 is mostly remembered for the two golf balls that Alan
Shepard hit with a makeshift club he'd brought with him. It was also the mission on which,
and this is the part that I bolded, astronaut Edgar Mitchell, I'm guessing that's how that's said, had his famous Savikalpa Samadhi experience, or mystical glimpse beyond the self into the true nature of things.
Mitchell subsequently became interested in consciousness research, paranormal phenomena such as ESP, and went on to become a founder of the Institute of Noetic Sciences, or IONS.
What happened to Edgar? I don't actually know this
story. I think he had a mystical experience, basically.
And this was in space while he was in orbit? In space, yeah, or on the moon, whatever. But I
think, you know, we know these things happen spontaneously. I think basically he got so far
out of his reference frame, you know, and who wouldn't be out of their reference frame if they're on the moon or in space, right?
And so he had a spontaneous mystical experience, you know, we are all one with the cosmos and all that.
And now if he'd been on psychedelics at the same time, he might have really, but I think that's what happens, you know. And so that
speaks to the idea that this ability to step literally outside your box, outside of this
default mode network is probably at the center of the psychedelic experience, at least in terms of its therapeutic effect and its profundity, if you will, the mystical experience or however you want to describe that. even though they're the pioneers in looking at psilocybin and mystical experiences but they really
tone it down because they don't want to alarm people you know and they don't talk about mystical
experiences anymore they talk about personally meaningful experiences well that's nice but
they're they're mystical experiences damn it i I mean, they are experiences of transcendence, and it's important, I think, to acknowledge that.
Oh, I agree. I mean, they did also develop the, I'm probably getting the terminology wrong, but the sort of mystical experience questionnaire, which had the parameters and characteristics, which include ineffability
and so on.
Right. And some people just get this naturally. I mean, for example, Albert Hoffman. Albert Hoffman
had numerous what you might call quasi or actual mystical experiences in nature
long before he took LSD.
I did not know that.
He was a person who was able to do this, and it was very meaningful for him.
So for people who don't have any context, Albert Hoffman,
the first to synthesize, I guess, LSD-25, was that the…
That was the one that got him off, yes.
That was the one that he was called to take before he went on his bike ride?
That's right. That's a wonderful book i should mention you know i like to plug books i
guess others have written you've probably read it called bicycle day by brian blomarth i've heard
of it i haven't read it it's a graphic novel It's a graphic comic novel about his discovery of LSD.
I wrote the foreword.
Oh, amazing.
But it's a great book.
People should get it.
Bicycle Day.
Yeah, Bicycle Day.
All right, so Bicycle Day, we'll link to that in the show notes.
I also wanted to mention a book that is related to a word and a concept and an experience,
a phenomena or phenomenon, I guess, that it's really a set and a concept and an experience, a phenomena or phenomenon,
I guess that it's really a set of phenomena,
synesthesia.
So there are two resources I want to recommend.
The first is a book that I first bought in,
I want to say late high school called the mind of a nemonist.
So the mind of,
as in mnemonic device,
the mind of a nemonist,
a little book about a vast memory and it's written by A.R. Luria, or maybe it's with a forward by Jerome S. Bruner, written by A.R.
Luria, but it's effectively a case study of a Rain Man-like figure who regularly experiences
synesthesia, so this intermingling of the senses. So as you mentioned, identifying
numbers as shapes or smelling colors, having tastes associated with musical notes or sounds,
things like this, which can be either, and in some cases, both an enormous blessing or
the most difficult curse if it is something that you can't turn off.
That's one. There's also, I want to say, a documentary or may have been a TV series called
Brain Man. Young Brit, at least at the time, was young, who experiences or claims to experience
synesthesia. As I understand it, also fairly controversial. Daniel Tammet is the
figure in this one, but still makes for a fascinating watch. And I think it's Kim Peek,
the actual basis for Rain Man, who was also featured in that book, who, believe it or not,
can read two pages at the same time, one with each eye. So try that at home and see how far you get.
Right.
But those are two points on synesthesia. What I'd love to ask you about now is ESPD-55. So
we should probably also provide some context, maybe you can do this, what ESPD stands for,
and just a bit of the history for those who don't have it and didn't hear the first conversation.
Sure. ESPD stands for and just a bit of the history for those who don't have it and didn't hear the first conversation. And then I would love to hear you describe some of what is going to be discussed,
the why to do it, et cetera. Because as you know, I have a collection of these sort of historical anthologies already. ESPD stands for Ethnopharmacologic Search for Psychoactive Drugs. And in 1967,
the National Institute of Mental Health sponsored a conference in San Francisco by that name. And
it was a closed conference. The only thing the taxpayers ever got out of it was this book that they published,
the proceedings of the conference. Well, somehow or other, that came onto my radar at the age of 18.
And, you know, the next year, the year after the conference was done, it was somehow I got it,
and it opened up the world for me of ethnopharmacology.
Well, the government staged this conference, published this book.
They were supposed to have follow-up events every 10 years or so to keep abreast of what was going on in the field.
Well, that never happened.
The war on drugs came along.
They were embarrassed, basically.
They'd never done anything,
even though you could order it from the U.S. government printing office for many years. So I always wanted to stage a follow-up,
and 50 years went by. Circumstances never allowed that to happen, but in 2017, everything came
together. I had funding. I had a place, I had people to help me organize it.
And, you know, I want to give a shout out to them because it wasn't me that did it. I had a lot of
help. And so we did this conference in 2017. We did ESPD 50, this commemorating 50th anniversary conference. And we published the original 67 volume together with the
2017 volume as a box set. We put the videos on. The videos are still up there. People can watch
them. And so now it's been five years. So we decided to do a five-year follow-up. God knows
if I'll be here in 10 years. So, you know, we decided to do a five-year follow-up. God knows if I'll be here in 10 years. So, you know, we decided to do a
five-year follow-up, but that's what ESPD-55 is. The five-year from the 2017 conference or the
55th year of the first conference. And that's the origin. That's the whole idea of it. The 2017
conference was pretty much focused on ethnopharmacology and
sort of the unexplored dark corners or fringes of ethnopharmacology. In other words, the ideas
that search for psychoactive drugs. It's a quest. We're doing that this year. We have some really interesting topics. We have, for example,
one person that's presenting on psychedelics found in sponges and, you know, marine sponges
and that sort of thing. But we've also got a couple forums. We have three forums that don't
really fit into this pattern. One of them is a forum on coca, and they need to de-stigmatize coca. So we've got
coca is a wonderful medicine as coca, not as cocaine is horrible. Cocaine is a horrible drug,
but coca is beneficial. And coca is just at the center of Andean traditions and medicine and all that,
and potentially could be as a nutraceutical, as an herbal medicine, it could be very beneficial.
And, you know, there are all sorts of aspects because you give the people who grow it,
who formerly were basically just told by the cartels, okay, you work for us now. If you don't produce it,
we'll just kill you. But give those families mostly economic benefits and bring coca back
as a respected medicine. So we've got Wade Davis participating in this. We've got Andy Weil.
They're both of them longtime advocates of coca as a medicine and a food, actually,
which it also is. It's very nutritionally beneficial. I want to take a second just to
get into some of the logistics of ESPD-55. As a sidebar, I'll just say the box set of books for
ESPD-50 you can find online. You can find them on
Amazon. They're beautifully done. I have them on my bookshelf. Absolutely a joy to read.
For ESPD 55, people can find that at ESPD55.com. I'll put that in the show notes. And people can
either attend in person in the UK, May 23rd to 26th, this is 2022, or they can attend online.
Are those the two primary options that are available for folks?
Yes, that's right. And less and less in person because it's rapidly filling up, basically,
the in-person. But we tend to live stream it. And when we did ESPD 50, we had, at times, we had 75,000 people participating. We
hope to meet or exceed that benchmark this time. There will be another book. There'll be another,
there'll be a book that comes out of it, only one this time, but it'll be also high quality,
and it will match the design and everything to the previous one so it'll look good on your
shelf and the person that just that provided the art that amazing lovely watercolors that were
incorporated into the design she is there's a link to her website she's selling prints essentially
print sets of about i think about a 100 of her illustrations that people can order.
Amazing.
If they wish.
And they're beautiful.
So, Dennis, one thing I'd like to do to sell this event, if it's okay with you, and we can cut this out if it ends up being more than you'd like to reveal.
But I just want to give some teasers for folks.
I'm not going
to give away too much, or I won't give a lot of the specifics, but let me just give some other
samples of sessions. Is that okay with you, Dennis? Sure. Okay. So there's a session on kratom. A lot
of people have questions about kratom, Mitragyna speciosa, if I'm pronouncing that correctly,
Mitragynine. Fascinating, fascinating plant. I'm going to put this in a
little gingerbread trail, so I'm not going to fill in all the gaps, but a roadmap for sustainable
development of ayahuasca production in the Amazon lowlands. Great interest to me. Psychedelic fauna,
so to be distinguished from flora. I'll leave that alone. I won't go into that too much.
Here's another, a history of psychoactive plants and fungi in Chinese medicine, something you do not hear in at least much that I have at all in
mainstream conversations. You mentioned marine sponges, yield enhancing lessons from psilocin,
which is what psilocybin is quickly metabolized into in the human body. I guess that's probably
what maybe first pass metabolism through the liver.
We've got Hunting Medicines Among the Matsy Genka, The Harpy's Gift to the Jaguar's Curse.
Great title. Wachuma, Phytochemical Profiling Wachuma. Some people might know that as San Pedro Cactus. Also very interesting to me personally from a conservation and sustainability
perspective because it grows so much faster
than say peyote which is which is endangered severely endangered very very endangered
adenanthro we don't so i'm going to leave that alone but if people have never heard that word
a it's a lot of syllables b fascinating history i mean there is contemporary use but that's kind
of beyond the scope of what we're talking about right this second. Establishing collections of sacred psychoactive medicinal plants at Wasiwaska, that's in Floripa. You have some amazing speakers. I can just say, not as the leading expert in this field, but as someone who is certainly an avid consumer and spectator slash tourist, Do read a lot. You have an outstanding roster
of speakers. Here's one you don't see every day. Chemically induced otherworldly experiences of
Zoroastrians in Iran. I mean, yes, please. Would love to be part of that. Incredible. I mean,
where else are you going to find that? Answer is probably nowhere. And it just goes on and on and on. So I'll leave it at
that. I didn't even cover 50% of it. So there's a lot here. There are many documentaries. You have
people who are very well known. We didn't get into his resume at all, but Wade Davis, certainly,
who's known for his books. Paul Stamets. Yeah, Paul Stamets. I mean, the whole idea, you know, of the ESPD
conferences is that they're out of the box in a certain way. It's not just the same stuff. I mean,
I'm happy that there are all these virtual meetings about the therapeutic uses of psilocybin and in PTSD and addiction. I mean, that's important stuff. But there's a lot of
duplication in some of these things. We want to kind of stake out an area, look into the obscure
corners, but still important and kind of highlight the work that remains to be done. For example, the Huachuma project is very
interesting, and I can claim a little bit of credit for it. The person that's going to present
there primarily is a student of Wade Davis's, actually, at UBC. She's in the PhD program,
and then her partner and colleague, a Peruvian gentleman, Yosep, I forget his last name, sorry, but they've collaborated on this. And when I was asked to be on Laurel, Laurel Sugden is her name, asked to be on her committee, I asked them if they, I asked her if she was interested in the chemistry side of this, the ethnopharmacology side of it, not just the ethnography.
And she indicated that she was, that this was interesting to her. at the Albany College of Pharmacy, who's developed an innovative way, non-invasive way to sample
plants and do like phytochemical fingerprints, essentially. A quick way to look at the variation
in the different varieties and species of this cactus, and then using mass spectrometry and
other fancy tools, actually do a, like a phytochemical fingerprint of these different varieties and so on.
So it's going to be a very interesting presentation that combines ethnography, chemistry and pharmacology.
Yeah. And there's others like that.
Michael is going to talk about his work with the cultural key salt species, Michael Coe. And then, as you mentioned, the people from ICERS. We've got two people from ICERS that are talking about the whole issues related to the unintended consequences of ayahuasca tourism, basically, and the depletion of the species and all of that. And how do we
address that? So I think it's going to be a stimulating conference. It's going to be long.
So let me ask you, this might seem like a strange turn, but I want to ask you about life and death
for a second, because you cracked a joke earlier. I'm not sure if it was totally in jest or serious,
but you said, I don't know if I'll be around here in 10 years,
so we're going to do the fifth year, new edition. If you're open to talking about it,
how do you relate to death and mortality? How do you think about that and relate to it
in any way you'd like to take a stab at that. Well, you know, I relate to it in the sense that everybody has to die
sooner or later. Everybody crosses that threshold sooner or later. And a lot of religious traditions
and philosophical traditions and everything have to do with the focus on what happens after you die or when you
die. But, you know, from a scientific perspective, I think the only answer, the only honest answer is
nobody knows what happens when you die, when you really die. There's lots of studies about the near
death experience and all the changes that happens
during the near-death experience. The fact is, that's not death. So that is maybe a reflection
of the stuff that happens to your brain while you're in the process of dying, but it is not,
in fact, dying. Is there anything that persists after death? The honest answer I feel is I just
don't know. I'm open to the possibility. I hope there is, but maybe not. It's a case of
be careful what you wish for, right? I mean, like Shakespeare said, in that sleep of death,
what dreams may come? Hopefully, they'll be
pleasant if there is something. Or hopefully, if there is something after death, hopefully,
there will be something worthwhile experiencing and not just terrible. Or if there's nothing
after death, if there's just oblivion, well, I won't be around to worry about it. So either way, I'm okay. I don't plan to check out soon.
I hope not. I want to be around for ESPD 60 and 65 and 70, but let's face it, I'm no spring chicken.
I'm getting up there. I'm 71. I'll be 72 later this year. so not real old, but not real young either.
So what I do is I think that I kind of take a leaf from the people, for example, that
get psilocybin for end-of-life therapy.
Very often the insight that they get from that is, well, yes, I'm dying, but I'm alive
now.
That's where I'm at. I mean,
we're all dying, Tim, slowly, fast, whatever. Important thing is we're alive now. Make the most of it. That's what I think. So you certainly seem to be making the most of it. What are you
most excited about right now? While you are alive, which you are, what is giving you the most joy and aliveness these
days?
Could be anything.
I think a lot of us are really concerned with things that are happening, and the future
looks pretty grim in a lot of ways.
But you do what you can.
I think that giving in to despair is not a solution for
anything. And it's tempting. I mean, you could just say things are so bad that there is no hope.
But then if you come to that point, then there really isn't any hope. So you just keep plugging
to the degree that I can. I keep plugging and I've got many people who feel
the same way. Does any of it make any difference? I don't know. But like the Bionosis Project is
a good example. If we can slow down this disappearance of knowledge and the
disappearance of the habitats and the loss of species and all that,
just a little bit. I mean, compared to what other groups and organizations are doing,
probably bionosis is a small thing. But it's our thing. It's what we're doing. And I think
maybe it'll make a little difference.
So let me spell that for people. So bionosis, just so we all have the spelling, it's
B-I-O-G-N-O-S-I-S
which...
A made-up word.
Biology, bio, life,
and gnosis knowledge.
A coined word, really.
But that's the idea.
And the people
can find more about
Bionosis, Bridges to Ancestral Wisdom, at bionosis.mckenna.academy, and we'll link to that in the show notes as well. depletion of our natural habitat, this sort of greenish blue marble that is spinning through
space with a bunch of monkeys on it who are making a whole mess of things, busy making a whole mess
of it. What is your current perspective on, say, synthetic options for psychedelic compounds in the sense that I found an older interview
where you were interviewed by Nailed Magazine and there was a bit of a discussion about
synthetic slash freeze-dried ayahuasca. And you mentioned how, and feel free to revise this,
but how you felt that it may be a psychedelic, but it's not ayahuasca because the ayahuasca experience begins when you taste it and the purging is potentially a feature and not
a bug. And I'd just be curious to know, let's say in the case of ayahuasca, what do you think some
of the most viable solutions might be to avoiding over-harvesting and endangering these various plant species. Is the synthetic route,
you know, creating farmawaska alternatives viable, attractive, unappealing, ill-fated?
No, I think we have to look at all viable solutions. For example, psilocybin, psilocybin
mushrooms don't really have that issue. I mean, they're not
endangered. They can be grown by megaton. So we're not going to run out of psilocybin. And maybe if
we want to go with natural psychedelics, maybe we should emphasize those. There is a lot of
global interest in psilocybin, and ayahuasca is endangered, and peyote certainly is endangered,
and things like iboga are endangered. On the verge of extinction.
On the verge of extinction. And I think part of the solution is, number one, I think the community,
the psychedelic community, to the degree that there is one, really has to step up and be
responsible. And I think that the community should seek consensus. For example, peyote is a good
example. The community, like these decrim movements that are happening across the country and in other
countries and so on, in general, I'm in favor of them. But the indigenous people have asked,
don't decriminalize peyote. Let it be our thing. Well, I disagree with not decriminalizing it,
because fundamentally, I think no plant, no organism should be criminalized. I think the very idea is repulsive to me. But that said, the community can say,
let's not criminalize it, but let's protect it. And let's develop a community consensus that,
okay, we'll just put peyote behind a fence. We'll say it's the indigenous people's thing. We will not encourage
on that. We'll respect that and we'll avoid using peyote. Some of these other things,
wachuma, for example, wachuma is a good source. It's not endangered yet. It's much more abundant.
It's easier to grow. That's a good alternative.
We're at a point with huachuma where we can use it responsibly.
If we don't, then it too may become endangered eventually.
Ayahuasca is a very tricky one.
I think that farmahuasca is fine, but it's not ayahuasca.
It may have uses, and it's a different drug.
It's completely different. And I have nothing against synthetics. You know, I think synthetics have their place and I like to
tell people synthetics are, they're made by all natural organic chemists, right? So they come from
nature ultimately. But what I would like to see happen, if it could, is developing a,
over time, developing relationships with Indigenous communities to produce medicines like ayahuasca,
but not encourage people to go to South America to take ayahuasca, encourage these communities to produce them and
take the medicine to the people rather than people to the medicine, develop ways that are legal
to export them to North America, Europe, and so on. And through Decrim, establish centers where
people can come and have these psychedelic experiences that are legal and
safe and well-structured and all that, and give benefits back to the people who produce it,
who grow it economically, but kind of avoid the disruption of the culture that happens
when all these rich gringos come down there to take
ayahuasca. And I mean, I'm guilty. I've organized lots of ayahuasca retreats. I'm not sure that,
I mean, I've seen tremendous benefits for people that come to those retreats,
but I've kind of evolved in my view of it, whether that is actually a good thing. It is and it isn't.
And that's why decrim is important. But I think decrim has got to be very thoughtful, you know,
and clear in its approach to this and say, well, you know, we're not going to encroach on things
like iboga and ayahuasca or do it in this way,
bring the medicines North rather than the people South. And that would transform communities as
well, both in both places. So that's kind of, this is not something that's going to happen
next week or next year. This will take a decade or more, and it depends on how the laws can be changed.
There's nothing simple. There's nothing simple. And I want to ask you a number of questions about
the psychedelic community, as it were, with community in quotation marks, perhaps. But
before I get to that, I want to take, not exactly a counterpoint, but just to
add my perspective on peyote for a moment, which is,
you know, I believe that it's effectively inevitable that peyote is going to go extinct.
Even with current demand by members of the Native American church and very constrained
production and distribution and also a lot of poaching. There are really only a handful of licensed peyoteiros
who can distribute, and there are abuses of the system
even within these various kind of distribution channels.
I really do feel strongly that this is one of the last shreds of,
let's just call it culture, although it's not true that peyote
was widely distributed prior to
quana parker and and other figures and initiatives but it is so important to so many
north american indigenous people and also i'm guilty in the sense that like i have had experiences
with peyote i've been invited by the people who are traveling through the proper channels,
and nonetheless, spending time with a little bit of time, not a ton, but a little bit of time with
the board of the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative. It's a sad picture when you really
look at it and you consider that these indigenous groups generally are not going to want to consume peyote that is cultivated in greenhouses. They're
almost certainly not going to be open to synthetic mescaline or San Pedro. And just
let them have it, is my feeling. And if a way to hedge against sort of bad or chaotic communal behavior is by leaving that one regulated in the way that it's regulated.
I'm okay with that, just because there are alternatives for people who are seeking some
type of mescaline or mescaline. Yeah. But that said, Tim, I agree with all that.
What is really wrong with cultivated peyote? You know, why can't they see
that as a viable part of the solution, not the whole solution? It doesn't have to be wild.
You know, I mean, the reasons that they're prejudiced against it or that they don't want
to use it is their spiritual reasons. They're not scientific or cultural reasons. They could adapt. They could adapt to cultivated greenhouse,
even tissue culture, these kinds of things. They could adapt to it.
But there has to be a little bit of give on both sides for this solution. I hear you. I guess I'll just, and again, certainly I wish we had some sort of indigenous representation
here to hear their perspective.
It is, as far as I understand, largely a spiritual matter, a sort of a cosmovision facet of the
belief system.
And if it's not coming out of the ground,
there are ramifications and that peyote derived from the greenhouse is not
the same,
et cetera.
But I guess my perspective is there are so many battles to be fought.
This one's a pretty easy give.
Just let them have it.
Just let them have it.
Like if you live in Venice and you do like,
you're like into the yoga wasca scene
and you have your green juice and you want to experience mesclun,
don't do peyote.
Just use something else.
Let them have it.
I'm all for it.
But even if you let them have it,
It's still on the way out.
they'll still have the problem of the poachers.
Yeah, they do.
It's a mess.
Yeah, it's really a mess.
And it's a shame because it doesn't have toers. Yeah, they do. It's a mess. Yeah, it's really a mess. And it's a shame
because it doesn't have to happen. Yeah. I've spent time with a few,
I don't know if they'd be considered botanists, but certainly scientists. God, I wish I could
remember one. He was a fascinating character. Lives in Alpine, Texas. He spent decades studying
La Fofra Williamse, I guess it is, and knows just the ins and outs of cultivation
also. But even if you were to have greenhouses, right, how long does it take to cultivate,
even if you have the most advanced hydroponics or whatever you might use to accelerate the growth
process? What are we talking, 10 years to grow a mature button? I mean, and in some cases, 15,
20. I mean, so even with greenhouses, you're facing incredible constraints on volume.
So there is that.
So let's talk about this, if you're open to it.
If you want to add something, please jump in.
It's tough.
I mean, there's just no optimal solution for peyote.
And we're very impatient.
We're a very impatient species. I mean, would the indigenous
people have the insight or the patience to say, let's just stop for 10 years and work on developing
the wild populations? I mean, and who's going to administer that and who's going to make those
decisions? You know, it's just one of those things where it's hard to find consensus. Everybody's
got a different idea and we have a hard time listening to each other.
So I wanted to, I mean, this is maybe a better conversation for like a few glasses of wine or
a few bottles of wine, but let me throw this out there. So the psychedelic community, and I put it
in quotation marks earlier, maybe I'm just cantankerous and didn't get enough sleep
last night, but the psychedelic community or many components of it drive me absolutely fucking
bananas. And I feel like it should be called the psychedelic infighting Olympics, because
if you want proof that psychedelics do not automatically create a kumbaya world peace, world of collaboration.
You need not look very far. You just look at all of the infighting and kind of mutual crippling
in this space. And it is astonishing. It is just astonishing to see. And part of the reason this comes up for me,
A, because I'm kind of immersed in it as many people are, as you are. And it's so bad that
I'm thinking about taking a little hiatus myself because it's so demoralizing for me to see
the just absolute lack. And this is not across the board. There are many great people. There
are many people who are clear, ethical, effective, but then they're surrounded for every one of those. I feel like
they're just 10 idiots running around like chickens with their heads cut off, swinging
machetes at everybody. This relates to a section in the Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss.
So let me read something and maybe we can,
I'll let you grab the baton. So, here it goes.
In many ways, the diggers tried to actualize the best ideals of hippiedom. Like most utopian
communities, however, they found it difficult to make reality fit with the ideal. Inevitably,
they seemed to founder on the recalcitrance of human nature. For every idealist who is ready
to pitch in and work for the common good, there is an opportunist who wants something for nothing, or worse, to grab power and bend it to his or her own ends. And
then dot, dot, dot, dot, dot, trying to run an egalitarian community in a dense city is a
challenge under the best of circumstances. And here's the part I highlighted for myself.
And every community that aspires to be spontaneous, to thrive without leaders or hierarchies must
confront the vacuum it creates for the power crazed. I think that describes where we are today in so many different micro
communities within the psychedelic larger quotation mark community end quotation.
Maybe you can just talk me off the ledge.
I think that we're monkeys, Tim. Ultimately, we're monkeys, and monkeys squabble, and monkeys look for opportunities.
And you could look at any spiritual practice or, which psychedelics are, or other
religious practices are, communion in the Catholic Church, meditation and yoga in Eastern traditions,
you know, these can also be used to control people, to control people's behavior. And in that context, there's always some
power-mad person, almost always a male, who sees an opportunity to seize the levers of power to
their own good. And it's usually the motivations are, I mean, so boring and so disappointing, but basically they're usually the same thing.
It's usually about the chicks and the money.
I mean, I'm sorry, but that's what it's about, right?
And people are motivated by those things.
And this idea that, you know, psychedelics will…
It's very Scarface.
Effectively, yeah. That, you know, psychedelics are going to dissolve the ego
and turn us all into bodhisattvas
and we'll all be kind and harmonious to each other.
It's just not going to happen, you know?
I mean, it could, but we have to evolve into it, it seems like.
And you have to be sincere about it.
There are always people who are looking for an opportunity to exercise power of one sort or another, financial, social, or otherwise.
And psychedelics are not immune to this.
You and I know, I know lots of people who take lots of psychedelics.
They're still assholes.
And it's not a cure for that. It can help you,
again, step out of your reference frame and look at your situation. You may have a revelation and
say, oh, God, I really am an asshole. I need to change my whole behavior. Many people are
not interested in changing. So frankly frankly i don't know what to what
to say what the solutions are it all has to do with where the moral compass comes from you have
to have some kind of an ethical framework that you work out of and it has to involve empathy, I think, is a big factor, and just respect for other humans.
And it can be, it's rare.
I mean, and I think psychedelics can be effective tools for learning this.
If you're a sociopath, it's probably not going to help you.
I mean, Shaman I respected very much.
I asked him, who would he not give ayahuasca to?
And he said, well, basically there are two kinds of people
that I would never give it to.
One is schizophrenics because it's not going to help them,
and the other is sociopaths because it's not going to help them either.
Well, I would go so far as to say you could probably make both of those worse, right?
The schizophrenics certainly.
Exactly.
Like throw them again, dash them up on the rocks of chaos,
and then the sociopath might just come back and say,
I just need to do 10 times more of what I'm currently doing.
Or they come back with some messianic delusion, you know.
Exactly.
I have to save the world.
You know, I alone can fix it.
It's something we have to evolve beyond.
I think that psychedelics are our co-evolutionary partners.
I think that they help us become better people.
But you have to work at it, right?
Like any kind of spiritual, moral, ethical development,
you're not going to make it unless you actually try and believe in it.
And nobody succeeds 100%.
I mean, there are plenty of bad things about me, that's for sure,
that I don't share with everybody, but I know what they are.
It's just tough. It's just tough to be a kind and gentle and insightful and wise person.
That's kind of what we're here for, though, I think.
Yeah, what a world.
Discouraging, right?
Well, it's discouraging.
I mean, part of me wonders because I'm still, all things considered,
even though I've been very involved for the last, whatever, six to eight years, kind of publicly, new to the scene. optimistic if you're like if you look at it and you say well yeah a lot of shitty stuff is happening but like we've seen this before it'll shake out and hopefully we won't have the executive
order to put everything back on schedule one and shut everything down which is not an impossibility
right and nor is it a solution you know that's not a solution no you know so i i think yeah i think No. really co-evolutionary partners. And we've been co-evolving with them, well, pick your time,
maybe for a couple million years, you know, if we believe the stone date theory, which I do,
basically, I think it's credible. I mean, we don't need to get into that. But for a long,
long time, we have co-evolved in effectively in symbiosis with these plants. And they've been sort of nudging us along
on this very difficult path. We're midway between the apes and the angels right now.
We haven't reached the angel hood yet. We're still suspended. But the thing is, these dynamics,
these are really biological processes, and they play themselves out over
millennia of time. So, you know, what's going to happen in the next 10 years, the next 50 years,
that's a very small slice of time. I feel that we're always going to have the relationship with
these plants, you know, as long as, number one, we don't
drive them into extinction. Number two, we don't drive ourselves into extinction. All of these
caveats, you know, but hopefully, they will be around for us to learn from. And boy, do we have
to learn. We have a lot to learn. Still, it's a slow process.
So let me ask you just a few more questions, Dennis, and then we can also cover anything
you'd like to cover that I haven't brought up.
But let me ask you, because I don't think I asked you last time, if you could only have
two, and this may not be the right adjective, so we can change the question, but if you
could only have two psychoactive plants slash substances for the rest of your life, what would you choose? And I'm going
to make a few allowances here. So number one, you can have caffeine. Caffeine's a freebie.
You get that. So you don't have to pick that. And then for the sake of simplicity, we'll consider
common cocktails, let's just say, like ayahuasca, we'll consider that a single plant.
And this can include synthetics.
It could certainly include things from the natural kingdoms.
Which two would you choose?
So I only get to choose two?
That's right.
We could start with three if that's easier, and then we'll pare it down to two.
I like to enjoy asking people this question.
Mushrooms would definitely be one, one of those.
I think cannabis would be one, which I don't use as much now as I used to, but I do use
it.
I think of it as a beneficial plant ally. And just in terms of my current state of health
and all, I think those two, ayahuasca would, I'd like to also have access to ayahuasca, you know.
So would you find the benefits of cannabis to be for you or what are the ways in which you use it? I think it just reduces stress.
It helps me relax.
It helps me sleep and calm down.
And it's good for insight.
I think it's good for writing, for example.
Just a general balm to the spirit, in a sense.
B-A-L-M, that kind of thing.
Nurturing.
My brother used to call cannabis
Sister Mary Redemptress. And it's kind of like that. It's kind of like that, this benevolent,
loving, feminine medicine.
Do you typically smoke? Is that your preferred means of consumption? It has been, yeah. I have tried vaping. I've tried edibles. Neither one of those works for me.
But my cardiologist, I now have heart conditions that I have to worry about. So my cardiologist
said, don't smoke whatever you do, no matter what you're smoking. So I tried that for a while.
And finally, I tried vaping.
And that was actually harder on my heart than it was smoking.
So what I do is I smoke tiny amounts in one of those cigarette-looking things.
And it seems to work.
I mean, it's sort of like I told my cardiologist.
I said, well, yeah, I can avoid all these things, but you know, I'd have to live, right? I mean, if I die smoking
cannabis, okay, so be it, you know? I'm at peace with that.
Do you have any preferred, I'm no cannabis expert, but are you preferred strain,
anything along those lines?
No, not really.
I'm from an era long before any of that made sense.
If it's cannabis, if it works, I'm fine with it.
You know, I will say that I've only in the last few years really had proper exposure to cannabis, which take a while to unpack what the hell I mean by that. But I have a few novice takeaways are number one, I'm actually really glad I
discovered it very late, relatively late in life because it could have been a real problem for me.
I can tell. And number two, the two aspects, no, three aspects that have most impressed me are number one, the effects on sleep.
Although it seems like you need to be careful so that you're not eliminating your REM cycles entirely.
So it seems like you can certainly overdo it.
But just in terms of turning down the volume and speed of mental chatter so that I can sleep. It's quite remarkable.
The second is how intensely it seems to improve. Again, who knows? If someone were observing it,
they might have a different perspective. But how intensely it affects and sensitizes my perception of music
and production of music say with percussion unlike anything else of course the dose makes the poison
but at reasonable doses without the distortion that might accompany even moderate say psilocybin use and the third is how fucking strong cannabis is now yeah i mean compared to like the
few puffs i had in high school i had two puffs with a friend recently and i laid down on my bed
thought i was gonna have to skip dinner and had full-blown visuals for a good hour i mean it was
i could not believe how psychedelic the experience was compared to many
things that get lumped in under the umbrella of psychedelics like MDMA, which I don't consider
a psychedelic. But my experience with really strong cannabis, certainly, I would say, I'd be
curious to hear your perspective, would line up nicely with some of the descriptions of psychedelic experience. How do you think about that?
I think that I don't think of cannabis as a psychedelic either, really. For one thing,
pharmacologically, it certainly isn't. But I think with all these super strong strains that
are available, you can get there more than before. I mean, I've had it before. Before they had strong cannabis,
there was hashish, which was always a favorite. And you can get some pretty psychedelic places,
especially if you eat hash. Now people are having cannabis ceremonies, and they're effectively
psychedelic ceremonies. They're like ayahuasca sessions. And I haven't been to any, actually, but people do it.
And that's kind of interesting because here is a legal, pretty much legal medicine that people can use that way.
And I'm in favor of it.
I think it's beneficial and there's no legal risk.
And these strains are out there thanks to modern genetics, mostly.
So just a couple of things.
So on the legal side, definitely check your local jurisdiction
with listeners around the world.
So check your local restrictions or laws around these things.
And I will also just add, because we're talking about
a lot of compounds, a lot of different uses, that I haven't touched anything in at least three
months. So it's not like I'm walking around with a fanny pack full of drugs all day, hitting
something every two to three hours. I haven't touched anything except for a few glasses of wine in the last three months.
So you should also, I would say, not to be too pedantic and, yes, dad, thanks for the advice,
but I think it is important and helpful to abstain for periods of time for at least the purpose of proving to yourself that you can do it.
I mean, that's my perspective.
But Dennis, is there anything else you'd like to mention, like to comment on or add before we begin
to wind down this conversation? A couple of things. I mean, we have pretty well covered
the basis, Tim. This has been great. You're very kind to spend so much time on this. But one thing I'd like to mention, you've quoted a number of times from the Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss. People may be interested to know that there'll be a second edition coming out toward the end of the year.
Oh, no kidding. I've written a new chapter, so it'll be the old one, but I've written a new
forward and a new chapter for it and sort of, in that sense, tried to bring it up to date because
the book itself, what it actually described, ended in more or less with my brother's death in 2000,
and then the book itself was published in 2012. Well, a lot has happened in the last 22 years. So it's coming
out. Synergetic is going to reprint it and it'll have this amended chapter to it. So that's one
thing. The other thing that we didn't really get into, and maybe when we talked about bionosis, I don't know if people understand exactly what
we're doing, but in a nutshell, what we're trying to do with this bionosis project,
which is a long-term project and is actually going to cost considerable money if we do it right,
basically two aspects to it in terms of this knowledge recovery, knowledge preservation
and connection into science.
One is doing this series of documentaries on Amazonian traditional medicine.
The first documentary, we have a short, there'll be short documentaries. The first one will be showing that ESPD-55 and making a big pitch,
basically, for support to complete the series. We conceive this as five to seven 30 to 40-minute
documentaries that kind of is a snapshot of traditional medicine as it exists today in the 21st century in the Amazon. And that's one
aspect to it. But then linked to that is this much bigger long-term project has to do with
the herbarium in Iquitos at the university in Iquitos. And digitizing the herbarium,
it's got 100,000 specimens. Only half those have actually been mounted.
But what we want to do is make high-resolution scans of those specimens, put them online in an
accessible database that anyone can access. And we actually have an idea for creating a VR, using VR and AI technology to build what we're calling the
visionary rainforest, which would be basically these collections distributed through this
virtual space just as a way of representing it. So people, if they can't go to the Amazon,
they can immerse themselves in the visionary rainforest.
It would actually have information.
Each of the collections from the herbarium would be assigned to a place because they were collected someplace, right?
So you go into this virtual environment and there'll be nodes that represent each collection.
You can click on a node and that will open up a whole
link to many forms of information, maybe information about traditional uses, about
chemistry, about genomics, about all kinds of things. So make this a dynamic, experienceable
environment, but make it have scientific validity as well. So this is a grand vision.
And hopefully, again, it will be a resource for anyone, for scientists especially,
but really anyone that wants to experience the...
I mean, the herbarium in the ketosis is kind of a rundown, gradually eroding situation.
But it's a gem.
It's an important resource.
All these plants are there.
What, 160,000 plus specimens, something?
Yeah, about 100,000 specimens altogether.
So we want to make that a real thing and turn it into a world-class resource. And the whole idea of this is, I think it was Ralph Waldo Emerson
is the one who said,
a weed is a plant whose virtues haven't yet been discovered.
In that sense, every plant is valuable.
And to the extent that we can link information about these collections to them, that gives them a value.
They don't need value from us to be valuable, but it gives them a value that we recognize.
So we're going to talk about this project, and it's going to involve working very closely with
the university there, and they're all on board for it. It's probably
going to cost several million dollars to do this, but I think we can get the money. I think that
people will see the value of it and step up and do it. And this is just, in the overall scheme of
things, it's just one little thing we can do to try to slow down what's happening in the Amazon, because the Amazon and our little project is a small part of it,
but maybe enough of a part of it to be a catalyst in this. That pretty much summarizes it, that
this bio-gnosis thing in terms of the nuts and bolts are these two components. One is using
videography to document and preserve this knowledge and make it compelling for people.
We want to do a Netflix series or National Geographic, whoever will take a look at it.
And we want it to be something that people want to watch.
And then this other project is obviously not separate from it, but is a longer term and more ambitious thing of creating this visionary
rainforest that will live on the web and be accessible to people and benefit people in
the Amazon and people worldwide that are interested in these Amazonian plants.
That's the basic idea.
And people can find more on Bionosis.
I will include this link along with links to everything else in the show notes for folks.
Bionosis, B-I-O-G-N-O-S-I-S dot McKenna, M-C-K-E-N-N-A dot Academy.
And I'm sure if you just search Bionosis McKenna on Google that it'll pop right up.
And I encourage people also to check out ESPD55.com,
another link that I'll include.
If the last two volumes are any indication,
and if the schedule is any indication,
this should be a fantastic event and cover a lot of ground that I haven't
even touched before
and as a devout nerd in the space i'm both ashamed and excited that that is true that's
happening in the uk may 23rd to 26th and you can also attend the live streaming online what i should
mention tim is one thing we will be uh we're talking to Synergetic next week.
So you'll be able to pre-order the symposium volume for ESPD 55.
And you can still order the old one as well.
They still have that.
So you can pre-order that there.
And the videos from ESPD 50 are still online, and they're open access, and I'll send
you that link, and you can post that as well. So people can go back and watch those videos.
I think we've pretty well covered just about everything. You've been incredibly generous
with your time. Life feels short sometimes, but it's also pretty long. And if I'm not going to
spend time having conversations like this, what if I'm not going to spend time
having conversations like this, what am I in a rush to do? Go fold my socks. This is much more
fun. People can find you on Twitter at Dennis McKenna, the number four. We will link to that
in the show notes as well. The website for your academy is McKenna.academy. And the links to everything will be in the show notes,
tim.blog.com. If you just search my name and Dennis McKenna, no doubt you'll find both of
our episodes. And that will be very, very easy to source at tim.blog.com. Dennis, it is so nice to
see you again. It's such a pleasure, Tim, Tim. Always fun. This has been great fun.
We just had an amazing rant here.
This is lovely.
Amazing rant.
We have a number of punk rock band names.
We have a partial book title for one of your next books,
The Obscure Corners, which I like a lot.
I took a note on that, which was drawn from something you said earlier.
And all in all, just another extremely thought-provoking,
very, very enjoyable conversation.
So thank you, Dennis.
Thank you.
And to everybody listening, as always,
thank you for tuning in.
And until next time, be just a little kinder than is necessary.
Take care of yourselves.
Be safe and take care.
Hey guys, this is Tim again.
Just one more thing before you take off.
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