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"The modern media environment, the proliferation of virtual images and sounds that ever increasingly surround us, recalls earlier models of the relation between consciousness and the cosmos that drew on magical or supernatural analogies.13 I am far from proposing here a project of '''reenchantment of technology.''' Rather I want to probe the unique cultural nature of modern media, which confront us with representations that are fundamentally different from conventional realist theories of mimesis based simply in resemblance. However, rather than offering yet another review of the ontology of the photographic image as proposed by Andre Bazin, Roland Barthes, and others, I want to explore the ontology and phenomenology of modern media of reproduction (the debates surrounding photography can be extended to both moving image and sound recording) through the metaphor of the ghostly and the phantasm. The ontological argument claims t'''hat photography not only por trays things but participates in, shares, or appropriates the very ontology of the things it portrays'''. I'''n what way does the medium disappear in photography, abdicating in favor of the object portrayed? How does the photographic medium mediate?''' "-100-scan a ghost
"The modern media environment, the proliferation of virtual images and sounds that ever increasingly surround us, recalls earlier models of the relation between consciousness and the cosmos that drew on magical or supernatural analogies.13 I am far from proposing here a project of '''reenchantment of technology.''' Rather I want to probe the unique cultural nature of modern media, which confront us with representations that are fundamentally different from conventional realist theories of mimesis based simply in resemblance. However, rather than offering yet another review of the ontology of the photographic image as proposed by Andre Bazin, Roland Barthes, and others, I want to explore the ontology and phenomenology of modern media of reproduction (the debates surrounding photography can be extended to both moving image and sound recording) through the metaphor of the ghostly and the phantasm. The ontological argument claims t'''hat photography not only por trays things but participates in, shares, or appropriates the very ontology of the things it portrays'''. I'''n what way does the medium disappear in photography, abdicating in favor of the object portrayed? How does the photographic medium mediate?''' "-100-scan a ghost


Subject: Cows
I am still working with cows because I do not feel that I ever really captured what it is that I was trying to when I started photographing them. I am interested in their religious significance cultural significance as a food product, a symbol of farm land, of rural landscape, local cultures. Why specially did I begin working with cows? I was drawing inspiration from psychedelic literature and movements, and by Terence McKenna’s “stoned ape” theory that human consciousness was pushed forward in its development by the psilocybin mushrooms that grew in cow piles. And, I just find them very aesthetically interesting. I am interested in working with them using a science fiction/psychedelic/ritual magic/surreal aesthetic, as well as incorporating the aesthetic of the psychedelic experience, color shifts, mirroring, etc.
Why? Religious significance
A judgement I am trying to make is that cultures have repressed paegan religions in favor of dominate and oppressive religions that demand blind faith in something unseen. they worship saints, confess through priests, sacrifice their lives and desires for the benefit of an unseen entity that has never shown itself, or done anything
Cultural significance as a food product, symbol of farm land, rural landscape, local cultures.  
Rather than have faith in themselves, they are more likely to worship a saint, a symbol, A COW, something that has really never shown itself to be magical or have a spiritual capacity. And the only “creature” to really have shown to possess magical qualities or a spiritual capacity is the individual, yourself. We as individuals are the most amazingly diverse in our perception. I want to tie in Allan Watts’s idea expressed in "The Taboo against knowing who you are", when he says we basically have a culturally driven fear of arrogance or self love and we would never openly procalim that WE ARE GOD because it is not in good taste. As a species, we are more inclined to put our “faith”, or to worship idols or deities. So the cow is a symbol, a stature, and a bit of a joke of our in regard to how much we fear ourselves to some degree.
Why specially did I begin working with cows?
Now, as a culture, we are moving further away from religions, and leaning more towards a technological pragmatism. In a way, this is a good thing because religion creates boundaries for experiences and limits our ability to accept one another but what this move towards technology also does is hinder us from ever finding our way back to spiritual traditions that are rooted in nature. I think a potentially interesting method to tie our culture of technology back to nature is the use of naturally occurring psychedelic substances.
I was drawing inspiration from psychedelic literature and movements, and it is theorised by Terence McKenna that human consciousness was pushed forward in its development by the psilocybin mushrooms that grew in cow piles.
Another detail from the work of McKenna that I always found striking was his theory that human anxiety is a dietary issue in which we lack psyilosibin from the magic mushroom. And here I come back around to the symbol of the cow, because McKenna’s stoned ape theory is based on the magic mushroom being found by early human pastoral societies in the cow piles from their recently domesticated zubu.
Also, I really think they are stunningly beautiful.  
so back to the cow---we can again use the cow as a symbol, but a symbol which is referencing the mushrom and our need for it.
the cow is basically the source, so if i can create this viral images of this psychedelic-technologically produced cattle image-it can be the symbol for our need to ingest mushrooms in order to allieviate the anxiety which comes with the high moving, and increasingly complex new media world


I am interested in working with them using a science fiction/psychedelic/ritual magic/surreal aesthetic


A judgement I am trying to make is that cultures have repressed paegan religions in favor of dominate and oppressive religions that demand blind faith in something unseen.
they worship saints, confess through priests, sacrifice their lives and desires for the benefit of an unseen entity that has never shown itself, or done anything


Rather than have faith in themselves, they are more likely to worship a saint, a symbol, A COW, something that has really never shown itself to be magical or have a spiritual capacity
the zebu are the type of cow as in 'holy cow', and they were also the cattle found in africa at the type mckenna theorized humans we living in an era of the mushroom cult. 'stoned ape'
______________


but what has shown to have a magical quality or a spiritual capacity is MYSELF, yourself. we as individuals are the most amazingly diverse in our perception.
"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."-TM
Here I am trying to bring it back to the idea of Allan Watts in "The Taboo against knowing who you are", when he says we basically have a culturally driven fear of arrogance or self love and we would never openly procalim that WE ARE GOD because it is not in good taste


and some how, it is better taste to worship idols or deities that have no real ground to stand on which would confirm for us that they deserve our faith
the cattle worship evolved from mushroom worship, but as mushrooms became more scarse, and emphasis became about the cattle as some kind of lost, tradtion.


and now that we are moving further away from religion, we lean more towards a technological pragmatism. and this is in a way, a good thing. because religion creates boundaries for experiences and limits our ability to accept one another
"stoned ape theory of evolotuion"
but what this also does is prevent us from ever finding our way back to spiritual traditons that are rooted in nature
Crick theory of panspermia
and I think that a way to tie our culture of technology back to nature and our organic components is naturally occouring psychedleic substances.


Another gem from McKenna is that he theroized that human anxiety is a dietary issue where we are lacking in mushrooms
http://www.lycaeum.org/~sputnik/McKenna/Evolution/theory.html


so back to the cow---we can again use the cow as a symbol, but a symbol which is referencing the mushrom and our need for it.  
Food of the gods:
"Although psilocybin and psilocin, the hallucinogenic indoles active in the cattle-associated
Stropharia cubensis mushroom, are not presently thought to directly metabolize into DMT
before becoming active in the brain, nevertheless their pathway is the closest of relatives to the  
neural pathway of DMT activity. Indeed, they may be active at the same synapses, with DMT
being, however, more reactive. The source of this difference is probably pharmacoki-netic —
that is, DMT may cross the blood-brain barrier more readily, so that more reaches the site of
activity in a shorter time. Affinity of the two compounds for the bond site is approximately
equal. "


the cow is basically the source, so if i can create this viral images of this psychedelic-technologically produced cattle image-it can be the symbol for our need to ingest mushrooms in order to allieviate the
DMT-connection to alien abduction stories
supports the science ficton asthetic
 
Food of the gods:
"Addictions and obsessions are unique to human beings. Yes, ample anecdotal evidence
supports the existence of a preference for intoxicated states among elephants, chimpanzees, and
some butterflies.' But, as when we contrast the linguistic abilities of chimpanzees and dolphins
with human speech, we see that these animal behaviors are enormously different from those of
humans.
 
Habit. Obsession. Addiction. These words are signposts along a path of ever-decreasing free
will. Denial of the power of free will is implicit in the notion of addiction, and in our culture,
addictions are viewed seriously -especially exotic or unfamiliar addictions. In the nineteenth
century the opium addict was the "opium fiend," a description that harkened back to the idea of
a demonic possession by a controlling force from without. In the twentieth century, the addict
as a person possessed has been replaced with the notion of addiction as disease. And, with the
notion of addiction as disease, the role of free will is finally reduced to the vanishing point.
After all, we are not responsible for the diseases that we may inherit or develop.
 
Today, however, human chemical dependence plays a more conscious role than ever before in
the formation and maintenance of cultural values. "
 
"AN ARCHAIC REVIVAL
 
This book will explore the possibility of a revival of the Archaicor preindustrial and
preliterate-attitude toward community, substance use, and nature-an attitude that served our
nomadic prehistoric ancestors long and well, before the rise of the current cultural style we call
"Western." The Archaic refers to the Upper Paleolithic, a period seven to ten thousand years in
the past, immediately preceding the invention and dissemination of agriculture. The Archaic
was a time of nomadic pastoralism and partnership, a culture based on cattle-raising,
shamanism, and Goddess worship. "
 
"A NEW VIEW OF HUMAN EVOLUTION
 
The first encounters between hominids and psilocybin-containing mushrooms may have
predated the domestication of cattle in Africa by a million years or more. And during this
million-year period, the mushrooms were not only gathered and eaten but probably also
achieved the status of a cult. But domestication of wild cattle, a great step in human cultural
evolution, by bringing humans into greater proximity to cattle, also entailed increased contact
with the mushrooms, because these mushrooms grow only in the dung of cattle. As a result, the
human-mushroom interspecies codependency was enhanced and deepened. It was at this time
that religious ritual, calendar making, and natural magic came into their own.
Shortly after humans encountered the visionary fungi of the African grasslands, and like the
leafcutter ants, we too became the dominant species of our area, and we too learned ways of
"keeping the bulk of our populations safe in subterranean retreats." In our case these retreats
were walled cities. "
 
"When our remote ancestors moved out of the trees and on to the grasslands, they increasingly
encountered hooved beasts who ate vegetation. These beasts became a major source of
potential sustenance. Our ancestors also encountered the manure of these same wild cattle and
the mushrooms that grow in it.
 
Several of these grassland mushrooms contain psilocybin: Panaeolus species and Stropharia
cubensis, also called Psilocybe cubensis (see Figure 1). This latter is the familiar "magic
mushroom," now grown by enthusiasts worldwide.'
 
Of these mushroom species, only Stropharia cubensis contains psilocybin in concentrated
amounts and is free of nausea-producing compounds. It alone is pandemic-it occurs throughout
the tropical regions, at least wherever cattle of the zebu (Bos indicus) type graze. This raises a
number of questions. Does Stropharia cubensis occur exclusively in the manure of zebu or can it occur in the manure of other cattle? How recently has it reached its
various habitats? The first specimen of Psilocybe cubensis was collected by the American botanist Earle in Cuba in
1906, but current botanical thinking places the species' point of origin in Southeast Asia. At an archaeological dig
in Thailand at a place called Non Nak Tha, which has been dated to 15,000 B.P., the bones of zebu cattle have been
found coincident with human graves. Stropharia cubensis is common in the Non Nak Tha area today. The Non Nak
Tha site suggests mushroom use was a human trait that emerged wherever human populations and cattle evolved
together.
 
Ample evidence supports the notion that Stropharia cubensis is the Ur plant, our umbilicus to the feminine mind of
the planet, which, when its cult, the Paleolithic cult of the Great Horned Goddess, was intact, conveyed to us such
knowledge that we were able to live in a dynamic equilibrium with nature, with each other, and within ourselves.
Hallucinogenic mushroom use evolved as a kind of natural habit with behavioral and evolutionary consequences.
This relationship between human beings and mushrooms had to have also included cattle, the creators of the only
source of the mushrooms.
 
The relationship is probably altogether no more than a million years old, for the era of the nomadic human hunter
dates from that time. The last 100,000 years is probably a more than generous amount of time to allow for the
evolution of pastoralism from its first faint glimmerings. Since the entire relationship extends no further than a
million years, we are not discussing a biological symbiosis that might take many millions of years to evolve.
Rather, we are talking about a deep-rooted custom, an extremely powerful natural habit. "
 
 
"THE TASSILI PLATEAU
 
Archaeological evidence for these speculative ideas can be found in the Sahara Desert of southern Algeria in an
area called the Tassili-n-Ajjer Plateau. A curious geological formation, the plateau is like a labyrinth, a vast
badlands of stone escarpments that have been cut by the wind into many perpendicular narrow corridors. Aerial
photographs give the eerie impression of an abandoned city (Figure 2).
 
In the Tassili-n-Ajjer, rock paintings date from the late Neolithic to as recently as two thousand years ago. Here are
the earliest known depictions of shamans with large numbers of grazing cattle. The shamans are dancing with fists
full of mushrooms and also have mushrooms sprouting out of their bodies (Figure 3). In one instance they are
shown running joyfully, surrounded by the geometric structures of their hallucinations' (Figure 4). The pictorial
evidence seems incontrovertible.
 
Images similar to those of the Tassili occur in pre-Columbian Peruvian textiles. In these textiles the shamans hold
objects that may be mushrooms but may also be chopping tools. With the Tassili frescoes, however, the case is
clear. At Matalen-Amazar and Ti-nTazarift on the Tassili, the dancing shamans clearly have mushrooms in their
hands and sprouting from their bodies.
The pastoral peoples who produced the Tassili paintings gradually moved out of Africa over a long period of time, from twenty thousand
to seven thousand years ago. Wherever they went, their pastoral lifestyle went with them.' The Red Sea
was landlocked during much of this time. Lowered sea levels meant that the boot of Arabia was backed up
against the African continent. Land bridges at both ends of the Red Sea were utilized by some of these African
pastoralists to enter the Fertile Crescent and Asia Minor, where they intermingled with hunter-gatherer
populations already present. The pastoral mode had been well established across the ancient Near East by
twelve thousand years ago. These pastoral people brought with them a cult of cattle and a cult of the Great
Goddess. The evidence that they had such cults comes from rock paintings in the Tassili-n-Ajjer that are from
what scholars have named the Round Head Period. This period is named for the style of depiction of the
human figure in these paintings-a style not known from any other site. "
 
"
The legacy of Qatal Huyuk was suppressed precisely because of the
culture's deep association with the Mother Goddess. The or giastic
psychedelic religion that worshiped the Mother Goddess made the Qatal
culture anathema to the new dominator style of warfare and hierarchy. This
was a cultural style that arrived suddenly and without warning; the
domestication of the horse and discovery of the wheel allowed the
Indo-European tribal populations to move south of the Zagros Mountains
for the first time. Horse -mounted plunder brought the dominator style to
Anatolia, and trampled beneath its hooves the last great partnership
civilization. Plunder replaced pastoralism, mead cults finally completed the
already well advanced process of supplanting mushroom use; human
god-kings replaced the religion of the Goddess.
However, at its height the cult at ('natal Huyuk represented the most
advanced and coherent expression of religious feeling in the world. We
have very little evidence upon which to reconstruct the nature of the cult
acts performed, but the sheer number of shrines in relation to the total
number of rooms bespeaks a culture obsessed with religious observances.
We know that this was a cult of totemic animals-the vulture, the hunting
cat, and always preeminent, the bull or the cow. Later religions in the
ancient Middle East were bull worshiping in spirit, but we cannot assume
this for Catal Huyuk. The sculpted heads of cattle that protrude into the
cattle shrines at Qatal Huyuk. are sexually ambiguous and may represent
bulls or cows or simply cattle generally. However, the prevalence of
female symbolism in the shrines is overwhelmingfor example, the breasts
of sculpted stucco that are apparently randomly placed-makes it seem
likely that the religious officials were women. The presence of built-in
"recliners" in some shrines suggests that curing or midwifery in a
shamanic style may have been part of the rites.
 
It is impossible not to see in the cult of the Great Goddess and the cattle
cult of the Late Neolithic a recognition of the mushroom as the third and
hidden member of a kind of shamanic trinity. The mushroom, seen to be as
much a product of cattle as are milk, meat, and manure, was recognized
very early as the physical connection to the presence of the Goddess. This
is the secret that was lost some six thousand years ago at the eclipse of
Qatal Huyuk. "
 
SOMA
 
"The last best hope for dissolving the steep walls of cultural inflexibility
that appear to be channeling us toward true ruin is a renewed shamanism.
By reestablishing channels of direct communication with the Other, the
mind behind nature, through the use of hallucinogenic plants, we will
obtain a new set of lenses to see our way in the world. When the medieval
world grew moribund in its world view, secularized European society
sought salvation in the revivifying of classical Greek and Roman
approaches to law, philosophy, esthetics, city planning, and agriculture.
Our dilemma, being deeper, will cast us further back into time in a search
for answers. We need to examine the visionary intoxicants of our  
collective past, which include the strange cult of Soma described in the
earliest Indo-European spiritual writings.
 
No history of plants and peoples could claim completeness without a
thorough treatment of the mysterious Soma cult of the ancient
Indo-Europeans. As mentioned in Chapter 6, the Indo-Europeans were a
nomadic people whose original home has been a matter of scholarly debate
and who are associated with patriarchy, wheeled chariots, and the
domestication of the horse. Also associated with the Indo-Europeans is a
religion based on the magnificently intoxicating Soma.
Soma was a juice or sap pressed out of the swollen fibers of a plant that
was also called Soma. The texts seem to imply that the juice was purified
by being poured through a woolen filter and then in some cases was mixed
with milk. Again and again, and in various ways, we find Soma intimately
connected with the symbolism and rituals related to cattle and pastoralism.
As will be discussed, the identity of Soma is not known. I believe this
connection to cattle is central to any attempt to identify Soma.
The earliest scriptural writings of these Indo-European people are the
Vedas. Of these the best known is the Rig Veda, best de scribed as a
collection of nearly 120 hymns to Soma, the plant and the god. Indeed, the
Ninth Mandala of the Rig Veda is entirely composed of a paean of praise
for the magical plant.
 
The beginning of the Ninth Mandala' is typical of the
 
 
 
praises of Soma that pervade and typify Indo-European literature of the
 
period:
 
Thy juices, purified Soma, all-pervading, swift as thought, go of
 
themselves like the offspring of swift mares; the celestial well-winged
 
sweet-flavored juices, great exciters of exhilaration, alight upon the
 
receptacle.
 
Thy exhilarating all-pervading juices are let loose separately like
 
chariot-horses; the sweet-flavored Soma waves go to Indra the wielder of
 
the thunderbolt as a cow with milk to the calf
 
Like a horse urged on to do battle, do thou who art allknowing rush from
 
heaven to the receptacle whose mother is the cloud ....
 
Purified Soma, thy celestial steed-like streams as quick as thought are
 
pouring along with the milk into the receptacle; the rishis, the ordainers of
 
sacrifice, who cleanse thee, rishi-enjoyed Soma, pour thy continuous
 
streams into the midst of the vessel.'
 
Soma was prominent in the pre-Zoroastrian religion of Iran as "Haoma."
"Soma" and "haoma" are different forms of the same word, derived from a
root meaning to squeeze out liquid, which is su in Sanskrit, and hu in
Avestan.
 
No praise seems to have been too excessive to be applied to the magical
intoxicant. Soma was thought to have been brought by an eagle from the
highest heaven, or from the mountains where it had been placed by
Varuna, a member of the early Hindu pantheon. Here is another quote from
Rig Veda:
 
It is drunk by the sick man as medicine at sunrise; partaking of it
strengthens the limbs, preserves the legs from breaking, wards off all
disease and lengthens life. Then need and trouble vanish away, pinching
want is driven off and flees when the inspiring one lays hold of the mortal;
the poor man, in the intoxication of the Soma, feels himself rich; the
draught impels the singer to lift his voice and inspires him for song; it
gives the poet supernatural power, so that he feels himself immortal. On
account of this inspiring power of the drink, there arose even in the
Indolranian period a personification of the sap as the god Soma, and
ascription to him of almost all the deeds of other gods, the strength of the
gods even being increased by this draught. Like Agni, Soma causes his
radiance to shine cheeringly in the waters; like Vayu, he drives on with his
steeds; like the Acvins, he comes in haste with aid when summoned; like
Pusan, he excites reverence, watches over the herds, and leads by the
shortest roads to success. Like Indra, as the sought-for ally, he overcomes
all enemies, near and far, frees from the evil intentions of the envious,
from danger and want, brings goodly riches from heaven, from earth and
the air. Soma, too, makes the sun rise in the heavens, restores what has
been lost, has a thousand ways and means of help, heals all, blind and
lame, chases away the black skin [aborigines], and gives everything into
the possession of the pious Arya. In his, the world-ruler's, ordinances these
lands stand; he, the bearer of heaven and the prop of earth, holds all people
in his hand. Bright shining as Mitra, awecompelling as Aryaman, he exults
and gleams like Surya; Varuna's commands are his commands; he, too,
measures the earth's spaces, and built the vault of the heavens; like him,
he, too, full of wisdom, guards the community, watches over men even in
hidden places, knows the most secret things .... He will lengthen the life of
the devout endlessly, and after death make him immortal in the place of the
blessed, in the highest heaven.'"
 
SEE SOMA AND CATTLE http://archive.org/stream/TerenceMckenna-FoodOfTheGods.pdf/TerenceMckenna-FoodOfTheGods_djvu.txt
 
'''"The psilocybin mushroom religion, born at the birth of cognition in the
grasslands of Africa, may actually be the generic religion of human beings.
All later adumbrations of religion in the ancient Near East can be traced to
a cult of Goddess and cattle worship, whose Archaic roots reach back to an
extremely ancient rite of ingestion of psilocybin mushrooms to induce
ecstasy, dissolve the boundaries of the ego, and reunite the worshiper with
the personified vegetable matrix of planetary life. "'''
 
EAT MORE MUSHROOMS
Chic Filet-eat more chicken
 
Ethnomycology is the study of the historical uses and sociological impact of fungi and can be considered a subfield of ethnobotany or ethnobiology.

Latest revision as of 11:38, 13 April 2015

Medium: Photography Why: Digital images have a way of virally proliferating media.


"The modern media environment, the proliferation of virtual images and sounds that ever increasingly surround us, recalls earlier models of the relation between consciousness and the cosmos that drew on magical or supernatural analogies.13 I am far from proposing here a project of reenchantment of technology. Rather I want to probe the unique cultural nature of modern media, which confront us with representations that are fundamentally different from conventional realist theories of mimesis based simply in resemblance. However, rather than offering yet another review of the ontology of the photographic image as proposed by Andre Bazin, Roland Barthes, and others, I want to explore the ontology and phenomenology of modern media of reproduction (the debates surrounding photography can be extended to both moving image and sound recording) through the metaphor of the ghostly and the phantasm. The ontological argument claims that photography not only por trays things but participates in, shares, or appropriates the very ontology of the things it portrays. In what way does the medium disappear in photography, abdicating in favor of the object portrayed? How does the photographic medium mediate? "-100-scan a ghost

I am still working with cows because I do not feel that I ever really captured what it is that I was trying to when I started photographing them. I am interested in their religious significance cultural significance as a food product, a symbol of farm land, of rural landscape, local cultures. Why specially did I begin working with cows? I was drawing inspiration from psychedelic literature and movements, and by Terence McKenna’s “stoned ape” theory that human consciousness was pushed forward in its development by the psilocybin mushrooms that grew in cow piles. And, I just find them very aesthetically interesting. I am interested in working with them using a science fiction/psychedelic/ritual magic/surreal aesthetic, as well as incorporating the aesthetic of the psychedelic experience, color shifts, mirroring, etc. A judgement I am trying to make is that cultures have repressed paegan religions in favor of dominate and oppressive religions that demand blind faith in something unseen. they worship saints, confess through priests, sacrifice their lives and desires for the benefit of an unseen entity that has never shown itself, or done anything Rather than have faith in themselves, they are more likely to worship a saint, a symbol, A COW, something that has really never shown itself to be magical or have a spiritual capacity. And the only “creature” to really have shown to possess magical qualities or a spiritual capacity is the individual, yourself. We as individuals are the most amazingly diverse in our perception. I want to tie in Allan Watts’s idea expressed in "The Taboo against knowing who you are", when he says we basically have a culturally driven fear of arrogance or self love and we would never openly procalim that WE ARE GOD because it is not in good taste. As a species, we are more inclined to put our “faith”, or to worship idols or deities. So the cow is a symbol, a stature, and a bit of a joke of our in regard to how much we fear ourselves to some degree. Now, as a culture, we are moving further away from religions, and leaning more towards a technological pragmatism. In a way, this is a good thing because religion creates boundaries for experiences and limits our ability to accept one another but what this move towards technology also does is hinder us from ever finding our way back to spiritual traditions that are rooted in nature. I think a potentially interesting method to tie our culture of technology back to nature is the use of naturally occurring psychedelic substances. Another detail from the work of McKenna that I always found striking was his theory that human anxiety is a dietary issue in which we lack psyilosibin from the magic mushroom. And here I come back around to the symbol of the cow, because McKenna’s stoned ape theory is based on the magic mushroom being found by early human pastoral societies in the cow piles from their recently domesticated zubu. so back to the cow---we can again use the cow as a symbol, but a symbol which is referencing the mushrom and our need for it. the cow is basically the source, so if i can create this viral images of this psychedelic-technologically produced cattle image-it can be the symbol for our need to ingest mushrooms in order to allieviate the anxiety which comes with the high moving, and increasingly complex new media world


the zebu are the type of cow as in 'holy cow', and they were also the cattle found in africa at the type mckenna theorized humans we living in an era of the mushroom cult. 'stoned ape' ______________

"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."-TM

the cattle worship evolved from mushroom worship, but as mushrooms became more scarse, and emphasis became about the cattle as some kind of lost, tradtion.

"stoned ape theory of evolotuion" Crick theory of panspermia

http://www.lycaeum.org/~sputnik/McKenna/Evolution/theory.html

Food of the gods: "Although psilocybin and psilocin, the hallucinogenic indoles active in the cattle-associated Stropharia cubensis mushroom, are not presently thought to directly metabolize into DMT before becoming active in the brain, nevertheless their pathway is the closest of relatives to the neural pathway of DMT activity. Indeed, they may be active at the same synapses, with DMT being, however, more reactive. The source of this difference is probably pharmacoki-netic — that is, DMT may cross the blood-brain barrier more readily, so that more reaches the site of activity in a shorter time. Affinity of the two compounds for the bond site is approximately equal. "

DMT-connection to alien abduction stories supports the science ficton asthetic

Food of the gods: "Addictions and obsessions are unique to human beings. Yes, ample anecdotal evidence supports the existence of a preference for intoxicated states among elephants, chimpanzees, and some butterflies.' But, as when we contrast the linguistic abilities of chimpanzees and dolphins with human speech, we see that these animal behaviors are enormously different from those of humans.

Habit. Obsession. Addiction. These words are signposts along a path of ever-decreasing free will. Denial of the power of free will is implicit in the notion of addiction, and in our culture, addictions are viewed seriously -especially exotic or unfamiliar addictions. In the nineteenth century the opium addict was the "opium fiend," a description that harkened back to the idea of a demonic possession by a controlling force from without. In the twentieth century, the addict as a person possessed has been replaced with the notion of addiction as disease. And, with the notion of addiction as disease, the role of free will is finally reduced to the vanishing point. After all, we are not responsible for the diseases that we may inherit or develop.

Today, however, human chemical dependence plays a more conscious role than ever before in the formation and maintenance of cultural values. "

"AN ARCHAIC REVIVAL

This book will explore the possibility of a revival of the Archaicor preindustrial and preliterate-attitude toward community, substance use, and nature-an attitude that served our nomadic prehistoric ancestors long and well, before the rise of the current cultural style we call "Western." The Archaic refers to the Upper Paleolithic, a period seven to ten thousand years in the past, immediately preceding the invention and dissemination of agriculture. The Archaic was a time of nomadic pastoralism and partnership, a culture based on cattle-raising, shamanism, and Goddess worship. "

"A NEW VIEW OF HUMAN EVOLUTION

The first encounters between hominids and psilocybin-containing mushrooms may have predated the domestication of cattle in Africa by a million years or more. And during this million-year period, the mushrooms were not only gathered and eaten but probably also achieved the status of a cult. But domestication of wild cattle, a great step in human cultural evolution, by bringing humans into greater proximity to cattle, also entailed increased contact with the mushrooms, because these mushrooms grow only in the dung of cattle. As a result, the human-mushroom interspecies codependency was enhanced and deepened. It was at this time that religious ritual, calendar making, and natural magic came into their own. Shortly after humans encountered the visionary fungi of the African grasslands, and like the leafcutter ants, we too became the dominant species of our area, and we too learned ways of "keeping the bulk of our populations safe in subterranean retreats." In our case these retreats were walled cities. "

"When our remote ancestors moved out of the trees and on to the grasslands, they increasingly encountered hooved beasts who ate vegetation. These beasts became a major source of potential sustenance. Our ancestors also encountered the manure of these same wild cattle and the mushrooms that grow in it.

Several of these grassland mushrooms contain psilocybin: Panaeolus species and Stropharia cubensis, also called Psilocybe cubensis (see Figure 1). This latter is the familiar "magic mushroom," now grown by enthusiasts worldwide.'

Of these mushroom species, only Stropharia cubensis contains psilocybin in concentrated amounts and is free of nausea-producing compounds. It alone is pandemic-it occurs throughout the tropical regions, at least wherever cattle of the zebu (Bos indicus) type graze. This raises a number of questions. Does Stropharia cubensis occur exclusively in the manure of zebu or can it occur in the manure of other cattle? How recently has it reached its various habitats? The first specimen of Psilocybe cubensis was collected by the American botanist Earle in Cuba in 1906, but current botanical thinking places the species' point of origin in Southeast Asia. At an archaeological dig in Thailand at a place called Non Nak Tha, which has been dated to 15,000 B.P., the bones of zebu cattle have been found coincident with human graves. Stropharia cubensis is common in the Non Nak Tha area today. The Non Nak Tha site suggests mushroom use was a human trait that emerged wherever human populations and cattle evolved together.

Ample evidence supports the notion that Stropharia cubensis is the Ur plant, our umbilicus to the feminine mind of the planet, which, when its cult, the Paleolithic cult of the Great Horned Goddess, was intact, conveyed to us such knowledge that we were able to live in a dynamic equilibrium with nature, with each other, and within ourselves. Hallucinogenic mushroom use evolved as a kind of natural habit with behavioral and evolutionary consequences. This relationship between human beings and mushrooms had to have also included cattle, the creators of the only source of the mushrooms.

The relationship is probably altogether no more than a million years old, for the era of the nomadic human hunter dates from that time. The last 100,000 years is probably a more than generous amount of time to allow for the evolution of pastoralism from its first faint glimmerings. Since the entire relationship extends no further than a million years, we are not discussing a biological symbiosis that might take many millions of years to evolve. Rather, we are talking about a deep-rooted custom, an extremely powerful natural habit. "


"THE TASSILI PLATEAU

Archaeological evidence for these speculative ideas can be found in the Sahara Desert of southern Algeria in an area called the Tassili-n-Ajjer Plateau. A curious geological formation, the plateau is like a labyrinth, a vast badlands of stone escarpments that have been cut by the wind into many perpendicular narrow corridors. Aerial photographs give the eerie impression of an abandoned city (Figure 2).

In the Tassili-n-Ajjer, rock paintings date from the late Neolithic to as recently as two thousand years ago. Here are the earliest known depictions of shamans with large numbers of grazing cattle. The shamans are dancing with fists full of mushrooms and also have mushrooms sprouting out of their bodies (Figure 3). In one instance they are shown running joyfully, surrounded by the geometric structures of their hallucinations' (Figure 4). The pictorial evidence seems incontrovertible.

Images similar to those of the Tassili occur in pre-Columbian Peruvian textiles. In these textiles the shamans hold objects that may be mushrooms but may also be chopping tools. With the Tassili frescoes, however, the case is clear. At Matalen-Amazar and Ti-nTazarift on the Tassili, the dancing shamans clearly have mushrooms in their hands and sprouting from their bodies. The pastoral peoples who produced the Tassili paintings gradually moved out of Africa over a long period of time, from twenty thousand to seven thousand years ago. Wherever they went, their pastoral lifestyle went with them.' The Red Sea was landlocked during much of this time. Lowered sea levels meant that the boot of Arabia was backed up against the African continent. Land bridges at both ends of the Red Sea were utilized by some of these African pastoralists to enter the Fertile Crescent and Asia Minor, where they intermingled with hunter-gatherer populations already present. The pastoral mode had been well established across the ancient Near East by twelve thousand years ago. These pastoral people brought with them a cult of cattle and a cult of the Great Goddess. The evidence that they had such cults comes from rock paintings in the Tassili-n-Ajjer that are from what scholars have named the Round Head Period. This period is named for the style of depiction of the human figure in these paintings-a style not known from any other site. "

" The legacy of Qatal Huyuk was suppressed precisely because of the culture's deep association with the Mother Goddess. The or giastic psychedelic religion that worshiped the Mother Goddess made the Qatal culture anathema to the new dominator style of warfare and hierarchy. This was a cultural style that arrived suddenly and without warning; the domestication of the horse and discovery of the wheel allowed the Indo-European tribal populations to move south of the Zagros Mountains for the first time. Horse -mounted plunder brought the dominator style to Anatolia, and trampled beneath its hooves the last great partnership civilization. Plunder replaced pastoralism, mead cults finally completed the already well advanced process of supplanting mushroom use; human god-kings replaced the religion of the Goddess. However, at its height the cult at ('natal Huyuk represented the most advanced and coherent expression of religious feeling in the world. We have very little evidence upon which to reconstruct the nature of the cult acts performed, but the sheer number of shrines in relation to the total number of rooms bespeaks a culture obsessed with religious observances. We know that this was a cult of totemic animals-the vulture, the hunting cat, and always preeminent, the bull or the cow. Later religions in the ancient Middle East were bull worshiping in spirit, but we cannot assume this for Catal Huyuk. The sculpted heads of cattle that protrude into the cattle shrines at Qatal Huyuk. are sexually ambiguous and may represent bulls or cows or simply cattle generally. However, the prevalence of female symbolism in the shrines is overwhelmingfor example, the breasts of sculpted stucco that are apparently randomly placed-makes it seem likely that the religious officials were women. The presence of built-in "recliners" in some shrines suggests that curing or midwifery in a shamanic style may have been part of the rites.

It is impossible not to see in the cult of the Great Goddess and the cattle cult of the Late Neolithic a recognition of the mushroom as the third and hidden member of a kind of shamanic trinity. The mushroom, seen to be as much a product of cattle as are milk, meat, and manure, was recognized very early as the physical connection to the presence of the Goddess. This is the secret that was lost some six thousand years ago at the eclipse of Qatal Huyuk. "

SOMA

"The last best hope for dissolving the steep walls of cultural inflexibility that appear to be channeling us toward true ruin is a renewed shamanism. By reestablishing channels of direct communication with the Other, the mind behind nature, through the use of hallucinogenic plants, we will obtain a new set of lenses to see our way in the world. When the medieval world grew moribund in its world view, secularized European society sought salvation in the revivifying of classical Greek and Roman approaches to law, philosophy, esthetics, city planning, and agriculture. Our dilemma, being deeper, will cast us further back into time in a search for answers. We need to examine the visionary intoxicants of our collective past, which include the strange cult of Soma described in the earliest Indo-European spiritual writings.

No history of plants and peoples could claim completeness without a thorough treatment of the mysterious Soma cult of the ancient Indo-Europeans. As mentioned in Chapter 6, the Indo-Europeans were a nomadic people whose original home has been a matter of scholarly debate and who are associated with patriarchy, wheeled chariots, and the domestication of the horse. Also associated with the Indo-Europeans is a religion based on the magnificently intoxicating Soma. Soma was a juice or sap pressed out of the swollen fibers of a plant that was also called Soma. The texts seem to imply that the juice was purified by being poured through a woolen filter and then in some cases was mixed with milk. Again and again, and in various ways, we find Soma intimately connected with the symbolism and rituals related to cattle and pastoralism. As will be discussed, the identity of Soma is not known. I believe this connection to cattle is central to any attempt to identify Soma. The earliest scriptural writings of these Indo-European people are the Vedas. Of these the best known is the Rig Veda, best de scribed as a collection of nearly 120 hymns to Soma, the plant and the god. Indeed, the Ninth Mandala of the Rig Veda is entirely composed of a paean of praise for the magical plant.

The beginning of the Ninth Mandala' is typical of the


praises of Soma that pervade and typify Indo-European literature of the

period:

Thy juices, purified Soma, all-pervading, swift as thought, go of

themselves like the offspring of swift mares; the celestial well-winged

sweet-flavored juices, great exciters of exhilaration, alight upon the

receptacle.

Thy exhilarating all-pervading juices are let loose separately like

chariot-horses; the sweet-flavored Soma waves go to Indra the wielder of

the thunderbolt as a cow with milk to the calf

Like a horse urged on to do battle, do thou who art allknowing rush from

heaven to the receptacle whose mother is the cloud ....

Purified Soma, thy celestial steed-like streams as quick as thought are

pouring along with the milk into the receptacle; the rishis, the ordainers of

sacrifice, who cleanse thee, rishi-enjoyed Soma, pour thy continuous

streams into the midst of the vessel.'

Soma was prominent in the pre-Zoroastrian religion of Iran as "Haoma." "Soma" and "haoma" are different forms of the same word, derived from a root meaning to squeeze out liquid, which is su in Sanskrit, and hu in Avestan.

No praise seems to have been too excessive to be applied to the magical intoxicant. Soma was thought to have been brought by an eagle from the highest heaven, or from the mountains where it had been placed by Varuna, a member of the early Hindu pantheon. Here is another quote from Rig Veda:

It is drunk by the sick man as medicine at sunrise; partaking of it strengthens the limbs, preserves the legs from breaking, wards off all disease and lengthens life. Then need and trouble vanish away, pinching want is driven off and flees when the inspiring one lays hold of the mortal; the poor man, in the intoxication of the Soma, feels himself rich; the draught impels the singer to lift his voice and inspires him for song; it gives the poet supernatural power, so that he feels himself immortal. On account of this inspiring power of the drink, there arose even in the Indolranian period a personification of the sap as the god Soma, and ascription to him of almost all the deeds of other gods, the strength of the gods even being increased by this draught. Like Agni, Soma causes his radiance to shine cheeringly in the waters; like Vayu, he drives on with his steeds; like the Acvins, he comes in haste with aid when summoned; like Pusan, he excites reverence, watches over the herds, and leads by the shortest roads to success. Like Indra, as the sought-for ally, he overcomes all enemies, near and far, frees from the evil intentions of the envious, from danger and want, brings goodly riches from heaven, from earth and the air. Soma, too, makes the sun rise in the heavens, restores what has been lost, has a thousand ways and means of help, heals all, blind and lame, chases away the black skin [aborigines], and gives everything into the possession of the pious Arya. In his, the world-ruler's, ordinances these lands stand; he, the bearer of heaven and the prop of earth, holds all people in his hand. Bright shining as Mitra, awecompelling as Aryaman, he exults and gleams like Surya; Varuna's commands are his commands; he, too, measures the earth's spaces, and built the vault of the heavens; like him, he, too, full of wisdom, guards the community, watches over men even in hidden places, knows the most secret things .... He will lengthen the life of the devout endlessly, and after death make him immortal in the place of the blessed, in the highest heaven.'"

SEE SOMA AND CATTLE http://archive.org/stream/TerenceMckenna-FoodOfTheGods.pdf/TerenceMckenna-FoodOfTheGods_djvu.txt

"The psilocybin mushroom religion, born at the birth of cognition in the grasslands of Africa, may actually be the generic religion of human beings. All later adumbrations of religion in the ancient Near East can be traced to a cult of Goddess and cattle worship, whose Archaic roots reach back to an extremely ancient rite of ingestion of psilocybin mushrooms to induce ecstasy, dissolve the boundaries of the ego, and reunite the worshiper with the personified vegetable matrix of planetary life. "

EAT MORE MUSHROOMS Chic Filet-eat more chicken

Ethnomycology is the study of the historical uses and sociological impact of fungi and can be considered a subfield of ethnobotany or ethnobiology.