Terence McKenna
"We are so
much the victims of abstraction that with the Earth in flames we can
barely rouse ourselves to wander across the room and look at the
thermostat."
Terence McKenna was the Magellan of psychedelic head space, and
humanity's first ambassador to the hyperdimensional machine elves of
the Eschaton.
McKenna was a true child of the '60s, graduating from UC Berkeley with
one of those majors you could only get in Berkeley in the '60s —
Ecology, Resource Conservation and Shamanism.
When he got out of school, he set off for the Amazon, where he
"studied" the native hallucinogenic drugs used in various South
American shamanic traditions. McKenna studied these drugs repeatedly
and in large doses, along with his brother, Dennis.
While pursuing these scientific studies, McKenna experienced some
interesting effects on his consciousness, not surprisingly. These
experiences would form the basis for a series of theories that are
extremely cool, if occasionally somewhat sketchy from a rigorous
scientific viewpoint.
His work has influenced a generation of writers and philosophers, and
his writings have been as influential as that of better-known
contemporaries like Timothy Leary and Abbie Hoffman.
Like them, McKenna advocated the use of drugs, and particularly organic
hallucinogens. McKenna also provided his disciples with detailed
instructions on the collection, cultivation and application of those
drugs. His classic underground work "The Magic Mushroom Growers Guide"
can now (ironically enough) be bought on Amazon.com.
McKenna had a brilliant mind that moved so fast it was hard to tell
whether he was reaching escape velocity or just running in circles. He
had a gift for making even outrageous ideas sound credible, and when he
applied himself, he could produce works of breathtaking scope and
scholarship.
His experiences with ayahuasca
formed the basis for the beliefs that would shape the rest of his life.
Like many users of hallucinogens, McKenna believed that his experiences
were real and spiritually significant. Unlike many users of
hallucinogens, McKenna spent his life aggressively evangelizing his
viewpoint to anyone who would listen (and even a few who wouldn't).
In his own words: "In the Amazon and other places where visionary
plants are understood and used, you are conveyed into worlds that are
appallingly different from ordinary reality. Their vividness cannot be
stressed enough. They are more real than real, and that's something
that you sense intuitively. They establish an ontological priority.
They are more real than real, and once you get that under your belt and
let it rattle around in your mind, then the compass of your life begins
to spin and you realize that you are not looking in on the Other; the
Other is looking in on you.
"This is a tremendous challenge to the intellectual structures that
have carried us so far during the last thousand years. We can do tricks
with atoms, there's no question about that, but these tricks immolate
us. The higher-order structure of molecules, let alone organelles and
that kind of thing, is intellectual incognita to us. We have no notion
of how these things work or what is going on. Yet it is from those
levels that the constituent modalities of reality are being laid down."
McKenna believed that tryptamine-based organic hallucinogens, such as those found in ayahuasca
and magic mushrooms (psilocybin), were a vehicle for communication with
other forms of life in the universe, either in what he called
"hyperspace" or even literally on other planets.
McKenna was particularly fascinated by a certain consistency of
experience among hallucinogen users at "heroic" dosages. It seemed as
if they were all going to the same place, a realm inhabited by entities
he referred to as "self-transforming machine elves."
The way these entities were perceived was based on the vehicle for
dosing and the cultural context. For instance, McKenna found that DMT
(the active ingredient of ayahuasca)
could be extracted from plants, purified and smoked, which invariably
resulted in the user having a UFO abduction-type experience (in which
the machine elves were seen as aliens in flying saucers).
McKenna, and those influenced by him, began to speculate about the
universality of the hallucinogenic experience, especially as it related
to UFOs, angels, faeries and elves. Later, mainstream researchers would
pick up on some elements of this (particularly the citation of DMT,
which occurs naturally in the brain, as a possible explanation for UFO
sightings).
McKenna was a prolific writer and left volumes of speeches and books
promoting his views. McKenna and his brother were most notoriously the
authors of the underground classic, "The Magic Mushroom Growers Guide,"
which described in great detail how to cultivate psilocybin mushrooms
at home (a venture that was very popular since the U.S. government,
which had outlawed the mushrooms themselves, had neglected to outlaw
the spores, or seeds, used to grow them). The book was published under
the psuedonyms "O.T. Oss and O. N. Eric."
"Food of the Gods" is perhaps his most credible and coherent work. The
book is an extraordinarily complete survey of drug use in human
cultures. It extends from prehistory to the modern day, and is replete
with scathing indictments of the "war on drugs," particularly as it
related to organic plant hallucinogens. McKenna found the notion of
outlawing a plant absurd, and he viciously indicted the societal power
structure that made possession of hallucinogens a capital crime while
peddling refined sugar to children and subsidizing tobacco and alcohol production.
Refined sugar was a particular target of his ire. McKenna classified it
as a drug, for its addictive qualities and negative health effects,
then pointed out the effect of this worldwide addiction on human
history. Numerous wars have been fought over sugar, and entire
generations were condemned to slavery in the service of its
cultivation, he noted, as opposed to the innocent mushroom which only
ever wanted to make people happy.
McKenna was continually frustrated by the bans on hallucinogens, which
he saw as devastating hypocrisy in a society that legalized big-money
mind-numbing drugs such as alchohol. "If the words 'life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness' don't include the right to experiment with
your own consciousness, then the Declaration of Independence isn't
worth the hemp it was written on."
McKenna argued that plant hallucinogens were inimical to modern
cultures because they undermine authority structures by democratically
giving all users equal access to the big picture: "Because modern
institutions depend on the transmission of a certain world view and
then willing acquiescense in the truth of that world view by the
populations into which it is being exported. In other words a kind of
cultural brainwashing is necessary for modern cultures to work at all.
The consequences of the acceptance of this situation of brainwashing is
further acceleration toward catastrophe."
In "Food of the Gods," McKenna also advanced a startling theory about
the evolution of human consciousness, proposing that the evolutionary
track leading to the development of modern humans was sparked by the
consumption of psilocybin mushrooms by cavemen.
Noting that a threshhold dose of psilocybin produces ehanced visual
acuity, McKenna theorized that primates who lived in areas where the
mushrooms thrived gained an evolutionary advantage in hunting.
At these and higher doses, the mushrooms also stimulated the verbal
centers of the brain, causing the primates to vocalize aggressively. At
first, these vocalizations were random, glossolalia, but with
consistent use over time the primates began to associate the sounds
with communicative concepts, enhancing the evolutionary advantage
provided by the visual acuity. Eventually, language became a learned
behavior, and the evolution of consciousness is widely believed to have
been an outgrowth of the development of language.
In an essay on the topic published in 2000, McKenna wrote: "We wouldn't
be here if it weren't for psychedelic drugs. In terms of the role of
psilocybin in human evolution on the grasslands of Africa, people not
on drugs were behind the curve. The fact is that, in terms of human
evolution, people not on psychedelics are not fully human. They've
fallen to a lower state, where they're easily programmed, boundary
defined, obsessed by sexual possessiveness which is transferred into
fetishism and object obsession. We don't want too many citizens asking
where the power and the money really goes. Informed by psychedelics,
people might stop saluting. 'Take your political party, your job,
whatever, and shove it.' "
"Food of the Gods" was an intellectual tour de force that made a number
of powerful and intellectually persuasive points. But the work that
McKenna lived for, and that he considered his most important
contributions to society, went a lot further into the fringes of
sanity.
As noted previously, McKenna believed that organic hallucinogens
provided a window into an experience that was both spiritually
significant and literally real. So when the hyperdimensional machine
elves talked, he listened. And listened. And listened.
The result of all this listening was an elaborate theory called
Timewave Zero. McKenna argued that time was a fractal wave of "novelty"
(the introduction of new ideas and change-producing events), which is
in the process of collapsing to a zero point.
McKenna extracted a formula for calculating this wave from the 64 hexes of the I-Ching,
the ancient Chinese divination tool which is structured around
time-related issues. The Time Wave was a graph that, in theory,
corresponded to the introduction of new ideas and dramatic change
throughout history. When the graph dipped, more novelty entered the
world. McKenna lined up his graph against human history, and somehow
determined that the Zero Point, the Eschaton,
was scheduled for Dec. 21, 2012, which also coincidentally happened to
be the end of the 10,000 year calendar used by the Mayans. McKenna
planned on being there for the final act, but a brain tumor struck him down more than a decade too soon.
Time Wave Zero influenced a generation of doomsayers, and features somewhat prominently in The Invisibles, a comic-book countdown to Armageddon replete with ideas as strange as McKenna's.
In the end, Terence McKenna became an aggressive evangelist for the
Time Wave, which many people found interesting but which lacked the
intellectual weight of the theories propounded in "Food of the Gods."
McKenna became increasingly associated with flaky New Agers and UFO
cult-style views, which never bothered him in the least. He lectured on
these topics regularly until his death in 2000.
He was a vocal critic of modern society, and often delivered scathing
rebukes against the numbing effects of television and the repression of
individual spirtual expression. He also saw a lethargy settling over
the minds of the masses, encouraged by the powers that be: "We are so
much the victims of abstraction that with the Earth in flames we can
barely rouse ourselves to wander across the room and look at the
thermostat."
When he was diagnosed with the tumor in 1999, McKenna sought both
conventional and non-conventional treatments, but nothing worked. He
died on April 3, 2000.
Taken from: http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/mad-science/terence-mckenna/
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