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- From: fauxton@mindvox.phantom.com (Zapotec Blue)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Book Review: Ott's Pharmacotheon
- Date: 11 Jan 1995 20:22:59 -0500
- Message-ID: <acksyc5w165w@mindvox.phantom.com>
-
- Pharmacotheon: Entheogenic drugs, their plant sources and history
- by Jonathan Ott, foreward by Albert Hofmann
-
- ISBN 0-9614234-3-9, 640pg Softcover, Natural Products Co. 1993 - $40.00
- Sales: Johnathan Ott, P.O. Box 1251; Occidental, CA 95465
-
- Cover illustrated by former vegetalista Pablo Amaringo's magnificent tempura
- painting of an ayahuasca visionary healing "Pregnant By An Anaconda". Wow.
-
- The first thing Ott does is to explain his use of the neologism 'entheogenic'
- in the title and throughout the book. He says that since we know from
- experience that shamanic inebriants do not provoke "hallucinations" or
- "psychosis," it would be incongruous to refer to traditional shamanic use of
- "psychedelic" plants. He states that his term "is not meant to specify a
- pharmocological class of drugs; rather, it designates drugs which provoke
- ecstasy and have traditionally been used as shamanic or religious inebriants,
- as well as their active principles and artificial congeners."
-
- Albert Hofmann writes in the foreward, "It is the first comprehensive
- scientific compendium on the subject of entheogenic drugs, a particularly
- interesting sector of the drug world. The emphasis is on comprehensive and
- scientific, as this book deals in detail with all aspects of entheogenic
- drugs - their botany, chemistry, neuropharmacology, ethnology and history.
- Herein the scientific specialist will find access to all of the source
- publications in a voluminous bibliography, to which reference is made in the
- text."
-
- Ott's Pharmacotheon could be called the Shaman's Desk Reference. In the
- preface "Proemium" Ott says, "the goal in writing the present book was
- two-fold: first, to write a reference book for the specialist, citing the
- most important sources in the historical, anthropological, botanical,
- chemical and pharmacological literature, meanwhile placing this subject in
- the broader context of general ethnobotany. Thus I have updated and greatly
- enlarged the best existing bibliography to the subject, that of Botany and
- Chemistry of Hallucinogens. The present bibliography is triple the size of
- that of Schultes and Hofmann, and even so, does not pretend to be exhaustive.
- My second goal..has been to detail the complex history of entheogenic drugs,
- and to trace the particular story of how these drugs came to be available to
- non-traditional users in the twentieth century. In contrast to the authors of
- many treatises on this subject, I consider the enthnobotany of entheogenic
- plants and their active agents in contemporaty western culture to be every
- bit as important as their traditional ethnobotany, if not more so."
-
- I don't have much to add to that except it's all true! This book is a huge
- masterpiece of scholarship and a real milestone in the literature. The text
- is copiously referenced and footnoted. There are no illustrations save a few
- molecular diagrams and little Mexican mushroom deities who keep showing up.
- If you want illustrations i highly recommend Schultes and Hofmann's Plant's
- of the Gods. To give you a feel for the content and it's comprehensiveness
- i shall reproduce the table of contents as my final act of book reviewage:
-
- Table Of Contents
-
- Foreward by Albert Hofmann 11
- A Note On The Text 15
- Proemium 19
- Part One: Beta-Phenethylamines 79
- Chapter 1: Mescaline, Peyotl, San Pedro, Artificial Phenethylamines 81
- Part Two: Indole Derivatives 117
- Chapter 2: LSD, Ololiuhqui, Kykeon: The Ergoline Complex 119
- Chapter 3: DMT, Cohoba, Epena: Short-Acting Tryptamines 163
- Chapter 4: Beta-Carbolines and Ayahuasca Potions 199
- Chapter 5: Psilocybine/Psilocine/Baeocystine:
- The Teonanacatl Complex 275
- Part Three: Isoxazole Derivatives 321
- Chapter 6: Ibotenic Acid/Muscimol:
- The Primordial Panx and Amrta 323
- Part Four: Appendicies, Bibliography, Index, Acknowledgements 359
- Appendix A: Sundry Visionary Compounds 361
- I. Asarones and Acorus calamus 361
- II. Atropine, Hyoscyamine, Scopolamine: The Visionary Tropanes 363
- III. Ibogaine, Tabernanthine, Voacangine: From Eboka to Sananho 371
- IV. Nicotine, Tobaccos and Pituri 373
- V. Kava-Pyrones and Psychoactive Piper Species 376
- VI. Salvinorin A and Ska Pastora 380
- VII. Tetrahydrocannabinols and Cannabis Species 384
- VIII. Thjones and Visionary Artemisia Species 389
- Appendix B: Putative Entheogenic Species 395
- Appendix C: Index of Entheogenic Chemistry and Pharmacology 429
- Appendix D: Botanical Index 455
- Appendix E: Suggested General Reading 471
- Bibliography 481
- General Index 603
- Acknowledgements and Notes 633
-
- reviewed by someone at fauxton@phantom.com, http://www.phantom.com/~fauxton
- **end of review
-
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