The cosmic serpent

DNA and the origins of knowledge

257 pages

English language

Published Dec. 7, 1998 by Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam.

ISBN:
978-0-87477-911-0
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(1 review)

3 editions

Review of 'The Cosmic Serpent' on 'Goodreads'

This is the kind of book that can be an eye-opener. Maybe one can find in it more juice if one has already some inkling about psychedelic experiences and studies, or if you have had some experience with hallucinatory substances, especially ayahuasca, which is central to the thesis of the book.

At times Narby seems to get too carried away with his part of the argument, but that also makes this book a very humane one, as it carries us through a simplified stream of consciousness as an idea evolves throughout the author's investigative effort.

In the end, what one takes from it depends on how open-minded one might be to face the world around us under different conceptual assumptions than those we (westerners, particularly) are mostly used. In any case, it's a good book to show how thinking outside-the-box can be achieved and how defocalizing (using Narby's word) one's …

Subjects

  • Indians of South America -- Drug use -- Peru
  • Shamanism -- Peru
  • Hallucinogenic drugs -- Peru
  • Knowledge, Theory of -- Miscellanea
  • Molecular biology
  • DNA
  • Ethnology -- Peru -- Field work
  • Ashaninca Indians -- Drug use
  • Ashaninca Indians -- Ethnobotany