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- Terence McKenna
-
- INTERVIEW BY GRACIE & ZARKOV
-
- [INTRO]
-
- M2: Why did you write Food of the Gods ?
-
- TM: I felt if I could change the frame of the argument and get drugs
- insinuated into a scenario of human origins, then I would cast doubt
- on the whole paradigm of Western Civilization, in the same way that
- realizing that we came from monkeys did a great deal to re-set the
- dials in the 19th Century Victorian mind. If you could convince people
- that drugs were responsible for the emergence of large brain size and
- language, then you could completely re-cast the argument from:
- "Drugs are alien, invasive and distorting to human nature" to: "Drugs
- are natural, ancient and responsible for human nature". So it was
- consciously propaganda, although I believe all that and I believe it's
- going to be hard to knock down.
-
- M2: Who is your target audience?
-
- TM: The target audience will be the converted first of all, but my hope
- is that the engines of public relations and publicity will move it much
- more into the mainstream. The 18-25 year old group that is
- drug-friendly but has no rationale except that it's a good time. This
- book is what I want every co-ed next Fall to be carrying to Anthro 101
- to beard the professor with.
-
- You've heard me talk about meme wars, and how, if we could have a
- level playing field, these ideas would do very well. The theory I'm
- putting forth_to disprove it you would have to get your feet wet and
- get stoned. Anybody who doesn't want to do that should rule
- themselves off the case. So that presents academic types with a real
- problem.
-
- M2: If you're going to challenge the conclusions you must come to
- grips with the empirical facts of being high.
-
- TM: That's right. It's not a metaphysical argument, or an emotional
- plea; it's an argument on their own terms. Can they do better? What
- was happening?
-
- I think we should look at the impact of diet and realize that what you
- eat changes the parameters of the environment that is selecting you.
- I found no discussion of the impact of diet on human evolution, and
- yet at the very moment that the great [primate] evolutionary leaps
- were being made, there was a transformation of the diet towards
- omnivorousness-meat-eating, predation-away from the fructarian
- original state.
-
- I'm not saying that civilization fucked up what was otherwise a
- naturally-occurring politically correct situation. There was a period
- when, because of the presence of psilocybin in the diet, the natural
- tendency to male dominance hierarchies was interrupted. It was in
- that moment that community values, altruism, language, long-term
- planning, awareness of cause and effect, all the things that distinguish
- us were established. Then, as the mushroom became less available due
- to climatological factors, after 15,000 years of this human-mushroom
- quasi-symbiosis, the old dominance hierarchy hard-wiring re- asserted
- itself in the ancient Middle East with the invention of agriculture, the
- need to become sedentary in order to carry out agriculture, the need
- to defend surplus, the establishment of kingship. These are a
- re-assertion of an older pattern that had been interrupted by a factor
- in the diet which basically made people mellow.
-
- M2: Did that interruption occur throughout the entire human
- genome, or are there areas which would have been outside the
- mushroom Garden?
-
- TM: People have been migrating out of Africa during each
- interglacial. I think the mushroom was having an effect in Africa over
- the last three million years, but what really kicked the process into
- high gear was that during the last interglacial, true pastoralism
- evolved. All previous migrations out of Africa were the migrations of
- hunter/gatherers. The migration that began at the melting of the last
- glaciation about 18,000 years ago, were the first herders out of Africa.
- It's the cattle/human /mushroom triad that reinforces the partnership,
- non-dominant, orgiastic style.
-
- I talk in the book about how apparently at a certain point in the
- evolution of human cognition, cause removed from effect became
- something that people noticed. At the very moment that men were
- realizing that the consequences of sex were children 9 months later,
- women were realizing that the consequences of tossing trash onto
- middens was food availability in those very spots 12 months later.
- This ability to correlate a cause with a delayed effect indicates a
- certain level of neurological processing that sets the stage for the
- suppression of orgy. Because the suppression of orgy is linked to a
- concern for male paternity. Before you know that sex leads to
- children, all children are the tribe's children. Women know who their
- children are, but for men, children are group resources. Once you put
- the male paternity thing together, the notion of ownership soon
- follows. The idea is that psilocybin is an egolytic compound, that
- orgies every new and full moon, everybody screwing in a heap, makes
- it impossible to form these notions of my women, my children, my
- weapons, my food, and so forth.
-
- M2: What do you mean by the term ego?
-
- TM: I'm assuming a Jungian vocabulary. The ego is not the self. The
- ego is a nexus of strategies for short-term gain at the expense of group
- values and even long-term personal gain.
-
- M2: If for the North African herders the primate hierarchical
- programs were broken down by mushrooms, would it be correct to
- say that the European Paleolithic hunters on the edge of the ice sheet
- @20,000 B.C. would still have the primate hierarchical programs
- because they had no access to mushrooms?
-
- TM: Right. Basically, this mellowness was an African style, and it
- could only sustain itself as long as there was a plentiful supply of
- mushrooms and a religious institution that insisted on it being used.
-
- Here's the scenario: You have this climax Edenic partnership society
- based on orgies and mushrooms and herding, and the drying
- continues. The mushroom becomes less plentiful. It becomes localized.
- It becomes seasonal. The mushroom festivals become further and
- further apart. Eventually this is recognized; there is an anxiety to
- preserve the mushroom. The obvious strategy then is to put it into
- honey. But honey itself has the capacity to turn into a psycho-active
- substance, mead, a crude alcohol. So what begins as a mushroom cult,
- through a sincere effort to preserve the mushroom cult, turns into a
- mead cult a few thousand years later. Because the mushrooms are
- spread thinner and thinner, and the honey is more and more the focus.
- But look at the consequences of an alcohol cult. Alcohol lowers
- sensitivity to social cueing while it increases a false sense of verbal
- facility. So, it sets the stage for boorish behavior. From that comes the
- suppression of women as part of this bronze-tipped spear/grain
- surplus/city-building kingship/standing armies/turf-defending
- mentality that we find in the so-called proto-civilizations.
-
- M2: OK, we've had first-hand experience with the tryptamine
- linguistic phenomena, so your language acquisition hypothesis is
- certainly as plausible as any other theory, more so, since it can point
- to a mechanism. Otherwise you have to take on faith that some
- miracle happened to create self-reflection and linguistic capabilities.
-
-
- What evidence is there for the orgiastic, cooperator model? Certainly
- the ecological catastrophe when the last glaciers retreated made war
- a survival skill. In Northern Europe when all the game was hunted
- out, the skilled hunters started hunting the people on the other side of
- the hill. In the MIddle Esast it was agriculture and grain surplus, as
- you say. So why hierarchy and violence become successful strategies
- is very clear. What is the evidence for the Edenic partnership model,
- and is such an extreme position necessary for your theory?
-
- TM: Well, the evidence is two-fold: first of all, the kind of attitudes
- you find in African nomadic herders today; for instance, the only time
- anybody ever offered me his wife was when when I stayed with the
- Masai. Good hospitality dictates that the youngest wife spend the
- night with the guest.
-
- M2: But these are wives owned by a particular husband.
-
- TM: That's right. But still there is clearly a different attitude toward
- these women. They are not exclusively accessed by the husband. [no,
- he can hand them around to other men-is this a partnership mode of
- behavior? -G]
-
- The other thing is the great horned Goddess, found throughout
- Paleolithic history_why horned? Cattle are the key, because cattle
- establish the presence of the mushroom. Cattle-based nomadism and
- horse- mounted nomadism are absolutely antithetical, because
- horse-mounted nomadism is based on an economy of plunder.
- Cattle-based nomadism is based on establishing a stable environment
- that is moving over a large area.
-
- M2: Does that necessitate a partnership society as opposed to any
- other kind of social organization? It's the black and white dichotomy
- we're having trouble with.
-
- TM: Well, it probably was not as black and white as I paint it because
- there must have been residual carry-over from this early level of
- primate programming. That's why I think a key feature is the
- mushroom religion and the frequency of these practices. Because I
- think the ego will begin to form in the personality very quickly in the
- absence of psilocybin. You have to keep re-inoculating yourself
- against what is essentially an anti-social idea in those contexts. It's
- amazing to me that the male love of nookie would stand aside for the
- male love of property and dominance. That orgies were ever
- suppressed shows how strongly that must have been felt. They said, "A
- good time is fine, but the really important thing is to control women
- and property."
-
- M2: There are two things that I would disagree with there. You
- assume that men make all the sexual decisions, not taking into account
- how much women choose their mates, even in a hierarchical society.
- And I'm not sure I see the direct connection between psilocybin use
- and orgiastic sexuality .
-
- TM: Psilocybin creates arousal. So in a society exempt of Christian
- paranoia this group arousal would just naturally turn into orgy. If
- you're getting people together at every new and full moon and getting
- them loaded, they're going to fuck.
-
- M2: OK, but why in orgies?
-
- TM: Basically, because it's a boundary-dissolving stimulant. It would
- be interesting to give chimpanzees mushrooms and see whether they
- go into the corner of their cage and turn their faces away or whether
- they all jump each other.
-
- M2: Is there a dosage issue here also?
-
- TM: Well, there's a series of ascending doses. At very low doses you
- get measurable increases in visual acuity. This is the foot in the door
- from which all other consequences flow. Because that will select
- against non-psilocybin using members of the population, because they
- are less successful at hunting, less successful at feeding their offspring
- and bringing them to reproductive age. So on the next level you get
- arousal and sexual activity: a second factor selecting against non-using
- members of the population because they are fucking less, presumably.
-
- M2: But at visionary doses you don't want to do anything but watch.
-
- TM: At visionary doses you become subject to glossolalia and
- language-forming activities. It's possible to imagine all three of these
- things happening to a single individual in a single afternoon. You take
- it at 4:00pm. In the first hour, you kill an antelope that you have
- keenly observed; in the next hour you eat it with your mate and have
- great sex; and following that you're swept away by a psychedelic
- experience. That's a little extreme, but you can see how this could be
- happening on all levels.
-
- M2: There's still a leap of faith in your description of the cultural
- complex. As psychedelic pagans in a long-term, sexually open,
- partnership relationship, we're close to your audience in many
- respects. But the discussion about dominator and partnership cultures
- reads like dogmatic preaching about good vs. bad cultures.
-
- TM: Well, not good cultures and bad, but adaptive and mal-adaptive.
- Pastoral nomadism is clearly a viable, open-ended strategy. [until you
- overgraze the grasslands and the desert advances -G.] The dominator
- thing can't be run for more than 3 or 4,000 years before you are where
- we are: with limited resources, aggression carried beyond any
- reasonable level_It may be dogmatic_
-
- M2: What is the dominator thing? Why not use existing terminology:
- authoritarianism, uptightness, sexual repression, totalitarianism,
- violence, etc. I guess that reading the book it's very hard for me to
- understand how I distinguish between Joe Stalin and John Kennedy.
-
- TM: I think by this theory these guys are comrades-in-arms.
-
- M2: That's where I have a problem. What have we done right in the
- last 10,000 years, as opposed to what is wrong and should be thrown
- away?
-
- TM: Well, the answer is very little, consciously. It's almost as though
- we have designed culture as a suicide machine of some sort.
-
- M2: Would you include Galileo, Locke, Voltaire and Jefferson in
- that?
-
- TM: Yes and no. It depends on the frame. In the European
- Enlightenment, these are the heroes. But the Enlightenment is a
- necessary response to medievalism and the Christian eschaton. So
- there has been progress, but always within the terms of the dominator
- culture. There's always been a fifth column, or a critical community
- or an underground. But notice how hard it is to push this agenda
- forward. You couldn't get people to sign on to the Bill of Rights right
- now.
-
- M2: You couldn't get people to sign on to the Bill of Rights the first
- time. It was pushed through by an intellectual Θlite.
-
- TM: Who were probably homosexuals, and therefore infected with
- this unconscious feminizing element.
-
- M2: So the Bill of Rights is not an artifact of dominator culture but
- a resistance to it?
-
- TM: Freeing slaves, the universal rights of man are feminist attitudes.
- So is anything that erodes the idea that the king at the center of the
- mandala city is the absolute arbiter of what should happen.
-
- The fall away from the Edenic state in Africa didn't end at Sumer or
- Greece or Rome or Paris in the 1760's. It's still going on. So we're still
- losing touch even as we're reaching out to gain touch again. I think
- that the endpoint of male dominance is not even fascism but Naziism,
- where there's a racial element as well. Fascism, the only authentic
- political philosophy adumbrated in the 20th Century, is the greatest
- distance from what we're trying to get to. I think society will definitely
- embrace fascism if it feels threatened by a return to Gaianic style.
-
- M2: You're talking in terms of we and it and society. What happens
- to the individual? There is a difference between Napoleon and John
- Stuart Mill. But your book bashes Western Civilization without
- making clear which concepts are the "ideals of a democratic society
- going forward into the future", and which are characteristic of a
- dominator culture.
-
- TM: I guess the difference that we're uncovering here is that it sounds
- like you think it's 50/50, and I'm saying 95% of it was bunk. [We think
- 99% of human history was horrifying, but that key ideas and concepts
- were developed that are absolutely necessary to bail us out, including
- the scientific empirical foundation for Terence's ideas-G&Z] I think
- that anything that went on under the aegis of monotheism is horseshit.
-
-
- M2: Most definitely. However, you point out that the polytheistic
- Hindus have a more feminist religion, yet in terms of the individual
- behavior of individual people towards women in that society_I sure
- won't sign up for that gig.
-
- TM: Well, their problem is not monotheism. There's more than one
- way to fuck yourself up. Their problem is essentially a phonetic
- alphabet. The phonetic alphabet empowers a distancing and an
- abstracting from natural phenomena that is probably equal in power
- to what happens in monotheism. It's just that in the case of the West,
- we got a full dose of both. There are non-phonetic ways to create
- sophisticated data bases_the Chinese_
-
- M2: Is the high Chinese culture a partnership society?
-
- TM: More so than the West. If you look at the structure of Chinese
- marriage in the Tang dynasty, there's definitely male dominance, but
- on the other hand, shadow institutions were created to mitigate that
- dominance that we would never tolerate in the West. For instance,
- concubinage was tolerated in China, but the price paid for it was the
- right of inheritance of the primary wife and her control of the
- household. So there were trade-offs.
-
- M2: Would it be fair to say that the biochemical matrix in which any
- human culture swims is shiftable by ideas, by ingestibles-food or
- drugs-and that there is a shifting center?
-
- TM: Yeah, and it's not randomly driven. A lot of this stuff is dictated
- by the vicissitudes of botany. The fact that the European continent
- was so poor in boundary-dissolving hallucinogens allowed the
- phonetic alphabet and the city-building kingship style to never really
- be challenged [except in 1600, 1789, 1848, 1918, 1991?-Z].
-
- The Maya, for example, are a different situation. They clearly had to
- accommodate to living in tropical rain forests replete with
- hallucinogenic drugs. They were still able to organize slave labor and
- have kingship and warfare. But the very baroque, ritual nature of
- it_the way that Venus regulated their warfare up until the collapse of
- the Proto-Classic phase_meant that other factors were mitigating these
- tendencies. And I'm sure that it was probably the dependency of the
- Θlite on hallucinogens. The level of adornment in these vase paintings
- indicates to me that the Θlite was probably homosexual in style and
- thereby feminized. And there are many powerful women in the lineage
- of the Mayan royalty.
-
- All of these societies that have arisen in the context of what we call
- civilization are not models for what we want to do. It's an incredibly
- radical rejection to say everything from Sumer, essentially all of
- history, is a mistake. History itself is a mistake. The archaic revival, if
- carried out to any degree at all, would mark the most radical
- reconstruction of civilization that's ever taken place.
-
- M2: Do you propose giving up science and technology and the few
- accomplishments of history? Would you would be happiest going back
- to being a Paleolithic pastoralist?
-
- TM: No, I think it's a forward escape. With 3-5 billion people on the
- earth we are not going to return to pastoral herding on the plains of
- anywhere. What can we take from that model and preserve?
-
- My idea of the perfect future is: The scene opens on a world that
- appears totally primitive. People are naked, people are orgiastic,
- people are nomadic. But when they close their eyes there are menus
- hanging in space. Culture has been internalized. Culture is supposed
- to be internalized. All this talk about virtual reality_people don't seem
- to notice_this is a virtual reality. These are all ideas_ideas that have
- been forced into matter so that we could live in a reconstruction of our
- imagination. And de-constructing these virtual realities in which we
- live is the only way to get back to some sort of baseline of what it is to
- be human. And then you can carry culture with you. Culture was
- never meant to be materially realized. Culture is an intellectual object
- like a philosophy or a belief system.
-
- M2: The ultimate Platonistic statement there.
-
- TM: Well, it's an attractor around which we orbit.
-
- M2: Let's just concede that we disagree about anthropology and
- history. But we both agree we're in a mess. How do we go forward
- from here? We have 5 to 7 billion human beings; we have a stable
- high-tech culture; the optimistic projection is that there will be 12 to
- 15 billion human beings in 2050. How do we get from here to there?
- How many people get to go?
-
- TM: I was challenged by someone who said, "Well, you're always
- talking to these mushrooms. Why don't you ask them how to save the
- world?" The next time I was stoned I asked, "How can we save the
- world?" And the mushroom said, "Each woman should bear only one
- natural child." It didn't hesitate for a moment.
-
- If every woman were to have but one natural child, the population of
- the earth would drop by 50% in the next 45 years. Without warfare,
- without migration, without artificially created epidemic diseases, or
- relocation and horror on a massive scale. Now, someone will say, "But
- how are you going to convince women in Bangladesh to limit their
- reproductive activity?" Good point, but a woman who has a child in
- Malibu_that child will have 800 to 1000 times more negative impact
- on resources than a child born to a woman in Bangladesh. We're crazy
- to preach limited reproduction to women in the Third World when, if
- you convert one woman in Malibu to the idea of not having a child,
- it's like converting 1000 women in the back streets of Dakka. Now,
- this woman in Malibu is very probably college-educated, completely
- media-sophisticated, and open to all the arguments and styles of
- persuasion to which we are familiar. In other words, she's the easy
- person to convince. She doesn't argue that she is Hindu or Catholic
- and can't go along with it.
-
- M2: Forty years from now you've got North American and European
- population decreasing. I still don't see how you have Asia's
- population decreasing.
-
- TM: Well, in South East Asia, if they expect to maintain the
- newly-emerging higher standard of living, they must educate their
- people, and with that process of education is going to come a natural
- reluctance to have children.
-
- M2: Then your argument, and my argument as a developmental
- capitalist, is essentially the same.
-
- TM: Why is this not being preached everywhere? It's because nobody
- has figured out how you make a buck in a situation of retreating
- demographics.
-
- M2: The drive to reproduce-socio-biologically entrained in the
- wetware-is generally reinforced by most social belief systems,
- economic theories, religions, etc. Isn't it time to re-think our
- relationship with our unconscious drive to reproduce?
-
- TM: One of the things that fascinates me about this idea of one
- woman/one child is that here's a plan to save the world, the
- implementation of which would rest in the hands of women. Women
- have been squawking that they are powerless, they are imprisoned
- within a set of male dominator conceptions that make it impossible for
- them to do anything. [Some of us haven't, like the Mondo
- matriarchy-G] You could go to a woman on the Upper East Side of
- Manhattan and say, "How would you like to have more leisure time?
- How would you like to increase your income? And how would you
- like to move to the forefront of political heroism by these acts?"
- Finally we have a solution which simultaneously appeals to people's
- most venal drives, and the political consequences of it are correct.
-
- M2: I would have agreed with that 20 years ago. Propagandizing for
- one or fewer children would certainly help women, who have had to
- swim upstream against social pressure; social pressures which are
- more powerful in poor and traditional societies. Right now,
- increasing affluence reduces fertility. As long as they have
- contraceptive techniques and they don't have authorities like the
- Catholic Church or their parents or their husbands blocking
- them_they will be receptive to your propaganda, and not just in the
- First World. If it weren't for the traditions forbidding frank and
- scientifically accurate talk about sex, you could broadcast this
- message-not only to educated and affluent women, but illiterate and
- poor ones, too-everyone reachable by what, in the book, you call the
- TV drug.
-
- TM: Well, you have capitalism and the Church and tradition generally
- all mitigating against this. These things have to be consciously
- denounced. Hitler was an amateur at the creation of human
- misery_compared to the role that the Catholic Church is playing.
-
- M2: What do you mean by capitalism?
-
- TM: Well, capitalism requires consumers. In a retreating demographic
- situation it's hard to see_every capitalist wants to expand his market
- share. How can he do this if there are fewer and fewer consumers?
-
- M2: The Economist and the Wall Street Journal suggest that smaller
- families with higher standards of living are the only way to save the
- world, and that is good for business.
-
- TM: But they don't conclude how small the family should be. What
- is currently thought by people who don't think much about it is that
- it's good to have two children. No one who is ecologically sensitive
- wants to have three or four, so if you explain to them that two is no
- longer politically correct. . .
-
- So, women taking control, having only one child, then a
- de-materialism of culture. And somehow capitalism, if it's truly the
- system under which we are all going to live, has to carry out a
- complete critique of its premises, and we have to learn how to sell
- something other than objects.
-
- M2: That's happening.
-
- TM: I think it's happening. I am not a catastrophist at all. I think that
- the trends are in place to create the kind of world that we can all put
- up with. But it will be, consciously or unconsciously, a neo-Archaic
- world. It's going to be nomadic; it's going to de-emphasize material
- culture; it's going to be erotically permissive; it's going to
- de-emphasize having large numbers of children. I don't think I'm
- discovering the answers.
-
- M2: That's our vision of a more perfect future, too, at least on this
- planet.
-
- TM: This is why virtual reality, hokey and bizarre as it is, is
- interesting, because what it clearly is, is an effort to sell something
- which is nothing. With virtual reality, if you want to live in the Frank
- Lloyd Wright Waterfall House, it's $895 off the shelf.
-
- M2: And Disneyland is ecologically less destructive than having
- people trekking all over the wilderness all over the planet.
-
- TM: I think that capitalism should be intelligent enough to
- de-materialize itself. I mean, capitalism is not necessarily a
- materialistic theory, it's just that on the crude level of culture the only
- thing you can sell are things.
-
- M2: During this current recession, companies selling high-tech things
- are doing very badly. Companies selling high-tech concepts are doing
- very well. There's definitely a move towards selling abstract
- embodiments of ideas_call them intellectual property processes_ 21st
- Century capitalism.
-
- TM: Virtual reality, if perfected, would allow the energy of capitalism
- to flow entirely into this virtual realm. Then if people wanted to live
- in outrageously gaudy and over-done environments, at least let them
- be virtual.
-
- M2: Going back to Dakka, where they're still selling women into
- slavery_you have to reach at least a late 19th Century North
- American level of development before the propaganda you're talking
- about is going to work. You have to get that far out of traditional
- culture.
-
- TM: To do this you have to back away from the male dominant
- paradigm of military defense. Why is no one saying, "Let's negotiate
- an international agreement that no army shall be more than 200,000
- men."? Then no one can claim threat, and armies all over the world
- can be reduced, but to a level such that they can still carry out a fair
- defense if necessary.
-
- M2: What about radical Islam, my favorite 21st Century military
- problem?
-
- TM: Radical Islam could be unplugged by putting in place a set of
- international agreements of such strength that we can say, "Have any
- kind of government you want. But when you start building weapons
- of mass destruction, the cops will come knocking on your door to take
- them away."
-
- M2: You'd be surprised how many of your ideas are getting currency
- in The Economist.
-
- TM: Europe is way out front on all this. The United States is
- essentially in a reactionary stance. We are passionately
- anti-internationalist, and we have a dream of world dominance that
- is inapporpriately 19th Century.
-
- M2: What practical steps would you suggest to convince the people
- and the government of democracies such as the United States to
- legalize drugs?
-
- TM: Well, I laid out a 10-point program in the book. If people are
- informed of the facts, that's all that has to be done. Facts such as the
- true dangers of heroin relative to alcohol. The true facts concerning
- government connivance in promoting sugar, alcohol, tobacco and
- caffeine over other drugs.
-
- M2: The relative harmlessness of the psychedelics in a social context_
-
- TM: Yeah. Basically, we're living inside a reality created by master
- propagandists. The media is too much a tool of the Establishment.
- More so than ever in my lifetime. I hope my book and some of the
- other things going on in society will break this down. Statistics such
- as that the United States is the number one builder of prisons and
- incarcerator of people in the world-people should have that in their
- faces every day. When the myth of the danger of drugs becomes too
- expensive to support, it will be abandoned and tossed away. Part of
- the problem is that people are easily manipulated and led because they
- have no information to base any resistance on. The word 'drug' has
- been so totally corrupted by the forces in control that you can't even
- have a rational discussion with people. So if the playing field were
- leveled-and I think circumstances are leveling the playing field-
- solutions will come.
-
-
-
-