01 August 2021

Michael Pollan, Author of "This Is Your Mind on Plants" | Amanpour & Company Interview and a review

Nice to have one more book --- first a write-up/review from The Guardian + a streaming video from Amanpour & Company

This Is Your Mind on Plants by Michael Pollan review – the trip of a lifetime

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Opium poppies: Pollan grew his own 25 years ago.  Photograph: Westend61/Getty Images<br>Opium poppies: Pollan grew his own 25 years ago.  Photograph: Westend61/Getty Images</div>

This fascinating insight into our relationship with mind-altering plants weaves personal experimentation with cultural history

Michael Pollan has written for many years, brilliantly, about our relationship with food and farming, in particular for the New York Times. In 2018, in what seemed like a midlife departure, he published a book on “the new science of psychedelics”, which was a personal report on renewed scientific interest in experiments with LSD and Ayahuasca, after decades of taboo. Pollan saw no change of direction in that project, however; he insisted to me at the time that it was simply a natural evolution of his “abiding interest in how we interact with other plant and animal species and how they get ahead in nature by gratifying our desires”. The desire to change consciousness was a fundamental element of that relationship, he suggested. This book, which concerns our species’ symbiotic entanglements with three other potent plant-derived substances – opium, caffeine and mescaline – is a further development of a lifelong inquiry, which began, he writes, when he took up gardening as a teenager and attempted to grow cannabis.

His essays on perhaps the three most dramatically efficacious medicinal compounds proceed in a similar way, weaving personal experimentation with each of the “drugs” into informed histories of the ways in which they have taken such a hold of different human cultures. At the root of each case study is a pair of questions: the first asks why, as a species, we have gone to extraordinary lengths to propagate and disseminate these consciousness-changing molecules, and the second is why they are subject to paranoia and regulation in differing degrees. . ."    READ MORE >

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