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The Archaic Revival

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Cited by the L.A. Weekly as "the culture's foremost spokesman for the psychedelic experience," Terrence McKenna is an underground legend as a brilliant raconteur, adventurer & expert on the experiential use of mind-altering plants. In these essays, interviews & narrative adventures, McKenna takes us on a mesmerizing journey deep into the Amazon as well as into the hidden recesses of the human psyche & the outer limits of our culture, giving us startling visions of the past & future.

288 pages, Paperback

First published May 8, 1992

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About the author

Terence McKenna

78 books2,284 followers
Terence Kemp McKenna was a writer, philosopher, psychonaut and ethnobotanist. He was noted for his knowledge of the use of psychedelic, plant-based entheogens, and subjects ranging from shamanism, the theoretical origins of human consciousness, and his concept of novelty theory.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 122 reviews
Profile Image for Ryan.
20 reviews4 followers
August 9, 2007
You're probably not ready for this.
Profile Image for John.
49 reviews14 followers
January 4, 2011
Zero stars for rationality + 4 for audacity = 4 stars
Profile Image for Erik Graff.
5,167 reviews1,451 followers
March 18, 2015
Terence McKenna is one of the most interesting and entertaining speakers one can listen to. I strongly recommend listening to some of his public lectures and interviews about topics as diverse as James Joyce, psychedelics, Mayan calendrics, modern cosmology, ethnobotany, cybertechnology, the mass media et cetera. He is witty, charming and sometimes acutely creative. He is probably very, very stoned.

As a writer, McKenna does not shine as brightly. His best book may be Food of the Gods, but this collection gives the reader an idea of the range of his interests and speculations.
Profile Image for Noah Green.
6 reviews1 follower
March 20, 2010
I had to keep my eyes from rolling into the back of my head with this one. It's an interesting read, enjoyable, and also ridiculous. McKenna poses ways of looking at natural psychedelic experiences (psilocybin mushrooms and DMT, not LSD) as gateways into other realities and parallel universes. Oh, and he believes the psychedelics were put on planet earth by aliens so we could ingest them and listen to the aliens' instructions to guide our culture as a whole.

McKenna wants society to get to the point where small portions of the population are taking psychedelics and communicating with each other and aliens in this alternate/parallel universe to make decisions for the entire population. While reading this I kept picturing the dorm room poster of the alien with the joint in his hand saying, TAKE ME TO YOUR DEALER, but like IN REVERSE, MANNNN. Terence McKenna is incredibly intelligent and he's serious about all this stuff and to me that's pretty admirable. Reading McKenna makes me want to get into a sensory deprivation tank.
Profile Image for Jens.
4 reviews4 followers
May 7, 2015
This book was important in my personal development. It lifted me out of my 'intellectual Kansas' so to speak, haha!

Here we have a collection of essays dealing with a wide range of topics all connected by the unifying theme; psychedelia.

Reading McKenna's prose is a psychedelic experience in itself! The guy expresses himself in a rich and beautiful way. His ideas are dense and rich, weaving Jungian archetypes, eschatology, process philosophy and Platonic forms together in a dizzying, but at the same time excillerating manner.

It seems to me, that many people miss the point about McKenna, believing he literally speaks of alien communication and the apocalypse. It is a result of his usage of language, which is filled with symbols and metaphors. I read the book a number of times in a row, taking my time with every other sentence trying to grasp its meaning. That is how McKenna should be read.

This book opened up my mind and made me consider everything in new ways. I do not necessarily agree with all of McKenna's views, but his work is deeply inspiring and remain an influence on me.
4 reviews
May 26, 2014
Having read "food of the gods" and unfortunately found it fairly boring and dull i wasn't sure that this book would offer anything of interest to me. Thankfully my expectations were surpassed, this is truly a fascinating read.

The majority of the book derives from interviews which for me was fantastic (i feel he is at his best when talking). Despite the fact in the past i haven't enjoyed his writing, the essays allowed him to further expand on many topics introduced in the interviews and i am now contemplating going back and reading "food of the gods" as wells as his other 2 books. "The archaic revival" flows incredibly fluently and repeats some ideas just enough that you obtain a transparent picture of what he is getting at.

Wether scouring the amazon for potent Ayahuasca, analysing unreadable manuscripts, connecting himself to virtual realities or just compacting Tryptamine space into a "linguistic vessel" Mckenna's eccentric perspective will have you enthralled. I cannot recommend this enough for anybody attempting to make sense of the absurdity we inherit as humans. Really any person who wishes to examine ideas outside of the status quo.

I have absolutely no clue if he is right or wrong, but he demonstrates that there certainly are other options then the culturally accepted theories, That you CAN develop thoughts which are unthinkable by many.

"i think theres a shamanic temperament that is characterised by a craving for knowledge-knowledge in the greek sense of gnosis. In other words, knowledge not of the sort where one subscribes to scientific american and it validates what you believe, but cosmologies constructed out of immediate experience that are always applicable. You see, I don't believe the world is made up of quarks or electromagnetic waves or stars of planets, or any of these things. I believe the world is made up of language and that this primary fact has been overlooked" Pg 161

"our destiny is to become what we think, to have our thoughts become our bodies and our bodies become our thoughts. This is the essence of a more perfect logos, a logos not heard but beheld" Pg 232


{{ i would like to add if you disregard the possibility of psychedelics offering entrance into other realities and view this idea as far to ridiculous to be true (i.e. somebody who has likely not had a convincing psychedelic voyage). Unless you can put your preconceptions behind you, i would urge you to stay away or at least start with some different psychedelic literature (breaking open the head by Daniel Pinchbeck would be my suggestion as a introduction).}}
Profile Image for Tristy.
751 reviews56 followers
June 10, 2013
As far as Terrence McKenna books go, this one is actually the easiest to read. His writing can be dense, but also filled with beautiful metaphors. I find it fascinating that someone who talked so much about "destroying the ego" through hallucinogens, also believed that all the "messages" he received while taking "heroic trips" were true for every single person on the planet. Instead of paying attention to what he was bringing personally to his trips, he chose to remain OUTSIDE of himself to interpret them. Ironically, he believed that if you closed your eyes while tripping, the message would be "pure" and "devoid of outside distractions" but he completely ignores his own inner psyche - including his own psychological baggage and YES, HIS EGO. So in the end, it was difficult to wade through all his theories to get to the beauty. It's there - he has some real gems of thought and vision, but they are completely mired in fundamentalist demands that all people need to take hallucinations on a regular basis. I do wish that he had lived to see 2012, since he was so obsessed with what the world would be like on that "fateful Mayan deadline." I have tried many times to connect with Terence McKenna, but it looks like I'll be sticking to my favorite authors Tom Robbins and Rob Brezsny for the metaphoric gems and chaotic beauty I crave.
Profile Image for Mikey.
29 reviews2 followers
December 3, 2021
I find a lot of his ideas interesting, but I thought that some of his predictions on technology advancements were a little dated and/or too optimistic. Fun read.
Profile Image for NHC Gonzo Division.
31 reviews2 followers
September 23, 2020
Terence McKenna is one of my alltime favourite people. I hold him in very high esteem. An unbelievably intelligent, deep, complex, unique, insightful, sagacious individual. He was talking about stuff back in the 60’s, 70’s, 80’s that we’re only just starting to get-to-grips-with today: A.I, The Singularity, DMT, ayahuasca, quantum physics and so on and so forth. He is a luminary, a genius who was many lightyears ahead of his time.
A true polymath, he was a jack-of-many-trades and a disciple of manifold studies: Lepidopterist/urban shaman/psychonaut/botanist/entheogenist/mycologist/technoenthusiast/psychologist/writer/poet/artist/teacher/orator/traveller/anthropologist/environmentalist/chemist/hippy/raver/sesquipedalian/linguist/soothsayer/pioneer/truthseeker/humanist/raconteur/biologist....
Terence approached the psychedelic experience with an open, astute, logical, observant mind. He explored the realms of DMT and psilocybin etc. in a lab coat with a clipboard like a true scientist, and he extrapolated data. He has tripped on the local hallucinogen of just about every tribe left in the world, encompassing many thousands of miles around the globe on his mission and many lightyears through innerspace and transcendental space. Never was there a more courageous and fearless psychonaut as T. McKenna.
The Archaic Revival is nothing short of a manifesto for the 21st Century and beyond. In it, Terence shines his illuminating mind on a whole cross-section of subjects: artificial intelligence, virtual reality, evolution, environmental issues, shamanism, the “new age”, spirituality, modern science, The Voynich Manuscript, plant intelligence, and a very interesting take on the U.F.O phenomena. This is probably one of the most important books released last century and I believe it will only become more apparent over the coming decades. McKenna is the Tesla of psychedelics. Reading this book is almost as mind-altering an experience as the chemicals espoused within it! His most important work ‘Food of the Gods’ is also essential reading. And Terence has many talks and lectures on YouTube and a very, very mellifluous voice!
Profile Image for Helmut.
1,056 reviews66 followers
November 18, 2014
Shed the monkey!
Zauberpilze sind außerirdische Lebensformen, die per Panspermie auf die Erde kamen und für die Entwicklung von Affen zum Menschen mitverantwortlich sind, sich uns in der Form des UFO metaphorisieren und uns den Weg weisen, wie wir am Ende der Geschichte (nicht der Welt), 2012, den nächsten Schritt zum Überbewusstsein erreichen, mit dem wir uns dann schnell auf den Weg zu den Sternen machen. So, das als Vorabwarnung; wer jetzt noch weiterliest, hat das Recht verwirkt, nachher süffisant zu grinsen.

McKenna greift unglaublich viele Themen auf und setzt sie (zugegebenermaßen hin und wieder etwas gezwungen, manchmal aber auch in unerwarteter, durchaus kluger Weise) in Zusammenhang mit psychedelischen Erfahrungen. Aus aktuellem Anlass finde ich dabei seine Meinung zur Arecibo-Botschaft spannend, nach der eine entsprechend hochstehende Kultur nicht mittels Radiowellen, sondern mittels direkter Telepathie mit uns Kontakt aufnehmen würde, wenn wir bereit dafür sind. Alles andere ist eigentlich eh, schon allein aufgrund der Wartezeiten, zum Scheitern verurteilt. Sind DMT-Visionen solche Versuche der Kontaktaufnahme?

Die Suche nach dem Spirituellen, ein weiteres der wichtigsten Themen McKennas, ist heute für viele aktueller denn je, und in uns irgendwie veranlagt. McKenna, bekennend inspiriert vom buddhistischen Monismus, beklagt den empfundenen Dualismus einerseits, der unsere Seele scheinbar vom Körper trennt, und glaubt, dass wir durch psychoaktive Stoffe diesen Dualismus irgendwann auflösen können und den haarigen Affen in uns ablegen werden.
We are not primarily biological, with mind emerging as a kind of iridescence, a kind of epiphenomenon at the higher levels of organization of biology. We are hyperspatial objects of some sort that cast a shadow into matter. The shadow in matter is our physical organism. (p91)

Halluzinogene Stoffe sind laut McKenna das Mittel der Wahl, wenn es um spirituelle Einsichten geht. Ich bin mir sicher, dass der eine oder andere Prophet sicherlich stoned war, als er seine Visionen hatte - doch das anzuerkennen oder sogar nur in Betracht zu ziehen, fällt vielen schwer.
I think there's a very strong Calvinistic bias against a free lunch. The idea that you could achieve a spiritual insight without suffering, soul-searching, flagellation, and that sort of thing, is abhorrent to people because they believe that the vision of these higher dimensions should be vouchsafed to the good, and probably to them only after death. It is alarming to people to think that they could take a substance like psilocybin or DMT and have these kinds of experiences. (p30)

McKenna ist dabei allerdings nicht wahllos. Für ihn sind Pilztrips kein Freizeitvergnügen, sondern echte Suche nach der Wahrheit, nach neuen Einsichten, nach einer neuen Stufe des Bewusstseins. Wer nur Spaß haben will, für den ist das "Fleisch der Götter" nichts.
TM: I think that if you do these things right, they give you plenty to think about. One thing that people do that I'm definitely opposed to is to diddle with it. If you're not taking so much that going into it you're afraid you did too much, then you didn't do enough. Not the way people will take it to go to the movies, go to the beach, this and that. No, I talk about what I call "heroic" doses and "committed" doses. And if you only do heroic doses, then every trip will count. (...)
JL: What is a "heroic" dose of psilocybin?
TM: Five dried grams. Five dried grams will flatten the most resistant ego. (p15)

5 Gramm getrocknete psilocybe cubensis sind wirklich eine deftige Menge, und, obwohl es praktisch unmöglich ist, sich an Psilocybin in Pflanzenmasse überzudosieren, haut das wohl jeden völlig aus den Stiefeln, der nicht, wie McKenna, jahrzehntelang experimentiert hat. Nichts für Spieler also, denn die Erfahrung kann den Erfahrenden verändern:
It [Psilocybin] holds the possibility of transforming the entire species [humans] simply by virtue of the information that comes through it. Psilocybin is a source of gnosis, and the voice of gnosis has been silenced in the Western mind for at least a thousand years. (p97)
Diese Kommunikation gibt es laut McKenna nur bei Tryptaminen, nicht bei anderen psychotropen Substanzen wie LSD, das McKenna immer als Abklatsch und wenig spirituell im Vergleich sieht. Tatsächlich ist das Konzept des "Anderen" bei Einnahme von Psilocybin deutlich spürbar, und im Gegensatz zu LSD, das die visuellen Eindrücke hauptsächlich geometrisch darstellt und aus dem eigenen Ich bezieht, fühlt sich ein Pilztrip organischer, fremdartiger an. Ist der Pilz also ein Orakel, das einem Fragen beantworten kann?
I don't necessarily believe what the mushroom tells me; rather we have a dialogue. It is a very strange person and has many bizarre opinions. (p47)
Nun gilt das aber auch für McKenna selbst. Ohne Zweifel ist er ein überzeugter Psychonaut, der in einer unglaublich mitreißenden Weise über sein Thema spricht. Das Problem mit dieser Art der Literatur ist aber, dass man nur, wenn man selbst zumindest ansatzweise diese Erfahrungen teilt, nachvollziehen kann, worüber er redet - und vor allem, wie er darüber redet. Viele der Ideen McKennas würde man einfach als spinnertes Gelaber eines durchgeknallten Drogensüchtigen abtun, wenn man selbst nicht schon die Dimensionen gesehen hätte, von denen McKenna redet. Sicherlich ist seine Interpretation sehr spekulativ und extrem in jeder Form, doch gleichzeitig betont er immer wieder, dass es das persönliche Erleben ist, das zählt, die direkte Erfahrung. McKenna will eben keine Religion gründen, die auf Weitergabe aus zweiter oder dritter Hand beruht und nur von Priestern geleitet wird.

Zum Thema insgesamt findet er auch klare Worte, mit denen ich die Rezension schließe.
You either love them [hallucinogens] or you hate them, and that's because they dissolve worldviews. If you like the experience of having your entire ontological structure disappear out from under you - if you think that's a thrill - you'll probably love psychedelics. On the other hand, for some people that's the most horrible thing they can imagine. (p160)
Ein unglaublich spannendes Buch voller verrückter Fragestellungen und Ideen, das gegen Ende leider ein bisschen repetitiv wird.
Profile Image for Pieter-Jan.
Author 2 books29 followers
November 13, 2013
Today we're privileged to see hours of Terence McKenna lectures online with a single mouse click. So most of the ideas covered in this book, which is an anthology of articles, essays, travelogues and interviews, won't be unfamiliar to the regular McKenna fan.
But this book is still worth having on the shelf because next to being the greatest bards of the 20th century, McKenna is also a fantastic writer. As one of the few who dared to converse with the mushroom Logos, knowing how to handle the linguistic is McKenna's expertise, next to botany. The latter is what made McKenna famous as well as notorious. Being the most vocal psychonaut and on the forefront of the psychedelic movement, he perhaps involuntarily insulated himself to a confined circle of acolytes, maybe having preached to the choir as psychedelics still meet deaf ears outside of a group of daredevils who take their minds to the furthest reaches.

This is why I consider McKenna to be one of the most underestimated philosophers of the 20th century. He has much more to offer than mere psychedelic movement activism. Being one of the few intellectuals out there who thoroughly experimented with altered states of consciousness, he gained access to the regions of mind ( and reality ) the rationalists of modern academia have completely missed. McKenna didn't merely extend and improve upon a certain intellectual tradition like f.e. Marxists do ( and still do ), but radically overturned all of that by listening to another agency. And even when he takes some points from McLuhan or Whitehead, what precedes all of McKenna's musings is the psychdelic experience. This makes him one of the most original philosophers and metaphysicians of the 20th and even preceding centuries.
That gives this book, and others, a quality of being really intellectually novel in all its aspects (which the author perceived as the archè of reality).

And even if we haven't seen the unfolding of a techno-gnostic eschaton or an armada of time travellers from the future appear on that ominous date of december 21st 2012, McKenna's other ideas are still relevant to this day.
22 reviews2 followers
December 6, 2009
God, i love Terence. This book catalogs alot of his mind-bending ideas. I remember a quote from terence that will stick with me forever "The deconstruction of reality has no bottom.".....as kurtz said ...that quote was like "being shot in the head with a diamond."
Profile Image for Domagoj Bodlaj.
113 reviews2 followers
March 30, 2021
Terence is extremly intelligent, knowledgeable and eloquent. Reading about his ideas is downright delightful, however heretical they might be
Profile Image for B..
Author 92 books3 followers
October 29, 2022
Eloquent madness.
Profile Image for Jake.
920 reviews54 followers
February 18, 2021
Pretty wild stuff. Some thought provoking things and some total bullshit. The world didn’t end in 2012 but at least McKenna could admit that he really didn’t know.
Profile Image for Johnny Cordova.
90 reviews5 followers
March 5, 2017
A compilation of essays and interviews spanning 1983-1990, The Archaic Revival is a thoroughly satisfying overview of McKenna's signature ideas, ranging from the evolutionary importance of shamanism, time wave theory, "novelty," linguistics, deep ecology, the end of history, ufos as holographic projections from the future, and the symbiotic relationship between hallucinogenic plants and man.

Archaic Revival is a phrase coined by McKenna to define what he saw as a 20th century movement and return to the spiritual and ecological sensibilities of Paleolithic and Neolithic plant-based shamanism.

Heady stuff!
Profile Image for Nick.
708 reviews192 followers
July 13, 2016
Im tempted to give this book 5 stars because it was just so entertaining. McKenna goes off the deep end in numerous parts, but he is also surprisingly lucid and rational when discussing seemingly bizarre subjects such as the "stoned ape" theory of evolution. The number of topics in this book is astounding, so anyone interested in scifi, fantasy, ethnobotany, travels in south america, aliens, Lovecraft, pantheism, 2012, and a lot of others.

Even though McKenna was dead wrong about numerous things, the way he writes is very precise and easy to understand. Unlike many "mystics" it is easy to see where he is wrong because he states his viewpoint clearly without a fog of mystical sounding "eastern" language. This makes sense, as he is more of a Huxely psychonaut than a Tim Leary type. He claims to have come to his conclusions from a materialist, physicalist and even *gasp* reductionist premises.

Anyway, hes right more often than he is wrong, and his approach is totally solid. After reading this book I actually have a decent amount of respect for the guy whereas before I kind of giggled at him.
Profile Image for Pauline Schmidt-West.
Author 5 books35 followers
June 30, 2021
I adored every page, and never wanted it to end. Provocative pleasures, and so gloriously written:

"Cities pass like billboards in the night of the mind, one night Lima, the next night home...
How strange a creature is man; with religion, intoxication, dream, and poetry we try to take the measure of the shifting levels of self and world. It is a grand enterprise, hedged about with tautology but no less grand for that... Worlds seemed to have come and gone, yet friends who stayed behind in the United States hardly realized any time at all had passed, emphasizing the bewildering sense of a density of experience that the traveler is always able to make his own. We were not unlike the psychedelic voyager who may be absent from company only a single evening and yet may fill that evening with years-long odysseys in strange and enchanted worlds, may in fact explore strange times and worlds of alternate possibilities in a single long silence..." p 138, 1st ed.

A grand enterprise, indeed.
Profile Image for Tom Weismantel.
28 reviews1 follower
December 25, 2017
Some rather weird but at least very interesting ideas presented by McKenna in The Archaic Revival. It's a book to read with a healthy amount of skepticism, as I'm sure Terence would agree, and even he himself seems to go back on forth of what he believes and feels, but I highly recommend this book nonetheless if you're interested in the historical religious background of ethnobotanicals and well as modern applications and a look to future applications of vegetable intelligence.

In a society struggling to understand its highest aspirations and its place in the world and the universe, McKenna's remarks left me feeling hopeful for the future.
Profile Image for Preston Bryant .
20 reviews24 followers
August 13, 2015
"What good is a theory of how the universe works if it's a series of tensor equations that, even when understood, come nowhere tangential to experience? The only intellectual or noetic or spiritual path worth following is one that builds on personal experience."

After reading Terrence Mckenna, everyone becomes a philosopher. This man, in my view, is still the most important philosopher to have ever lived; he certainly changed my life. I hope his motives for a new generation of seekers is met with an abundance of bravery. We need bravery and we need it now.

One of my other true mentors.
Profile Image for Marjan.
155 reviews39 followers
September 10, 2014
I thought this would be more like his other books; a developed argument on the subject, but in fact it is a compilation of essays and interviews. Not just that, it is also a collection of his wildest ideas. Although these things will not come as a surprise to anyone who is familiar with McKenna's work, it is good to have it on the shelf, since youtube videos don't fit there yet. ;)
Profile Image for Cameron.
445 reviews21 followers
March 5, 2016
This collection of interviews, essays and articles contain the most entertaining expressions of the psychedelic audacity that originally inspired me to track down McKenna's writings. Whether or not his conjectures are meant to be taken literally misses the point of living inside his brain for a short time, which is a pleasure.
Profile Image for SeaGreen.
73 reviews4 followers
November 1, 2007
A great summary of McKenna's ideas, i think. (Was it?) My favorite bit coming at the end, to use the octopus as a model for a new form of consciousness and communication. Good stuff, and highly recommended.
Profile Image for Demetrius Wallace.
25 reviews
December 14, 2025
Terance is hands down one of my favorite speakers. While I enjoyed much of this book, his unique way of speaking made part of me miss connecting with his ideas that way. I got the most from the first half.

Key Takeaways:
> The connection one makes to a separate being via triptamines reveals more about one than one knows about oneself. It is a source of stability and information, which most people lack. They are only superficially in touch with their own destiny.
> The citizen is an extremely limited definition of human potential. The self is a definition of human potential so broad that it threatens the citizen's obligation.
> Our current theory of problem solving is that we must solve all of our societal problems with solutions that make a buck. It may not be possible to solve the problems of the twentieth century and make a buck at the same time.
> Psilocybin should give hope because it connects you with the real network of values and information inherent in the planet, the values of biology and organisms, rather than the values of the consumer.
> Negative psychological activity erodes the home. Shammans see the momentum of negative activity as an illusion and can change their mind and step aside as the negative momentum sweeps past them.
> Evolving language evolves reality. Madison Avenue understands this as a way to make money. We could use this idea to do much better things for our planet and species.
> The social consequence of the psychedelic is clear thinking, which trickles down as clear speech. Empowered speech.
> Aldous Huxley's POV: Psychedelics are neither necessary nor sufficient for salvation, but they are nevertheless mystical.
> The most fruitful way to approach the psychedelic experience is in the environment, almost, though not formally, of sensory deprivation. Lie down in complete darkness and silence and watch the back of your eyelids. After all, you're trying to observe a mental phenomenon. To see the mental phenomenon uncontaminated, you must put yourself in a situation where it can fully manifest itself. The mushroom will speak to you if you speak to it.
> The human soul is so alienated from us in the present culture that we treat it as an extraterrestrial.
> We are embedded in an organism. Science and mathematics may be culture-bound.
> The most richly organized material in the universe is the human cerebral cortex, and the densest and richest experience in the universe is the experience we have every day.
> On organic vs. inorganic substances: There is some certainty that one is dealing with a creature of integrity if one deals with a plant, but the creatures born in the demonic artifice of labs have to be dealt with very carefully.
> Understanding the universe is your responsibility because the only understanding of the universe that will be useful to you is your own understanding.
> You live and die with yourself. I took this to inspire me to do things I can live with and die happy with.
> The symbiotic relationship between the primate and the hallucinogenic plant is a transfer of information from one species to another (and also heightened vision + sexual drive). Benefits to the mushroom arise out of the domestication of previously wild cattle and the expansion of the niche occupied by the mushroom.
> We need to be more sophisticated in our definitions of drugs. What society is alarmed by is unexamined, obsessive, self-destructive behavior. This is not true of all drugs for all people. Psychedelics in particular inspire examination of values, which can be seen as corrosive to some (mainly industries hoping to keep people buying, watching, etc.)
> When a culture loses its bearings, the traditional response is to go back in history to find the previous "anchoring model". Look at the breakup of the medieval world during the Renaissance. They had lost their compass, so they went back to Greek and Roman models and created classicism, Roman law, Greek aesthetics, and so on.
Profile Image for #DÏ4B7Ø Chinnamasta-Bhairav.
781 reviews2 followers
December 9, 2024
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<3 * -:}|{}|{ *+* NEGATIVE *+* :}|{}|{:=:}|{}|{: *+* WHY? IM GLAD THATS OVER
= JUST DOESNT COMPARE 2 ACTUALLY HEARING HIM TALK IN THE LECTURES HE GIVES - THIS BOOK IS JUST AN ACUMULATION OF DIFFERENT INTERVIEWS & LECTURES & ASPECTS THAT IS COVERED IN GREATER & MORE INTRESING DEPTH IN HIS OTHER BOOKS OR = THE LECTURES & INTERVIWS THAT ARE FREELY AVAILABLE ONLINE = & ARE OFF A BETTER QUALITY THEN THE TERRIBLE AUDIO BOOK = I ENDURED <3

= I CAN THELP BUT FEEL LIKE THIS IS A WASTE OF TIME WHEN THERE ARE HIGH QUALITY LECTURES - READ BY HIM - AS I AM LISTENING 2 AN AUDIOBOOK THAT IS GOOD BUT IT DOESNT HAVE THE SAME RESSONANCE & DYNAMICS & SUNSE OF ARTICULATION AS MCENNA EXUDES EFFORTLESSLY WHEN HES IN THE FLOWS OF HIS LECTURES & WORKSHOPS - ALSO THE VIDEOS HAVE INRESING IMAGES THAT CONNECT WITH WHAT HES SAYING OFTEN - IN THE CONTEXT OF THIS IT JUST MAKES THIS BOOK - WHICH HAS A TON OF INFORMATION JUST SEAM LIKE A WASTE OF TIME BECAUSE NONE OF IT STICKS - FOR ME PERSONNALLY - I FIND THE META MECANICS OF THE ABILITY HE HAS 2 TELL STORY & WEAVE TOGETHER CONCEPTS - REGARDLESS OF THERE VALIDITY TRULY INTRESTING & AN EXAMPLE OF THE INCREASED LEVEL OF INTERNCONNECTIONS THAT ONES BRAIN BEGIINGS 2 MAKE - WHEN PSYCEDELICS ARE INTRODUCED IN 2 THE SYSTEM - THE PHENOMINA OF INSIGHT IS INTRESITNG IN & OFF ITSELF - MY BRAIN PRODUCES INSIGHTS BASED ON WHAT I SPEND THE MAJORITY OF MY TIME FOCUSING ON - )( I UNDERSTAND - THE MOST GROWTH HE EXPERIENCED WAS THROUGH PSYCEDELICS SO HIS FRAMES ARE ALWAYS - HIGHLIGHTING THE BENIFITS & ALMOST AS IF ITS SOME MAGIC SOLLLUTION )( IVE FOUND IN MY LIFE THE INSIGHTS ARE BUT A GLIMPSE IN 2 WHAT COULD BE - IF NOT ACTED ON OR ATTEMPTED 2 BE INTERGRATED TESTED ECT THEY FALL FLAT - PLANT MEDICINE CAN INCREASE & SOMETIMES GRATLEY DISTORT - ESPECIALLY IN DREAM WORK & IMAGARY IT CAN BE AN ONGOING PROCESS 2 PICK APART & UNDERSTAND THE MESSAGES - I FIND ANY TIME I TAKE & MAKE A MEANING ITS OFTEN UN HELPFUL OR MISLEADING IN TERMS OF WHAAT THOSE ASPECTS THROUGH TIME AS THEY UNFOLD THEY CAN POINT 2 AN EXPASIVE ARRAY OF THINGS - IN A VERY MULTI FACETED WAY - ALSO - IM NOT SURE WHAT IM TRYING 2 SAY SO IM GOING 2 STOP <3
<3 *+* }|{}|{:- * <3

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Form is emptiness; emptiness is form.
Form is not different than emptiness; emptiness is not different than form
~ Heart Sutra ~
Like the ocean and its waves,
inseparable yet distinct

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" I and The Father are one,
I am The Truth,
The Life and The Path.”
Like a river flowing from its source, connected and continuous

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Thy kingdom come.
Let the reign of divine
Truth, Life, and Love
be established in me,
and rule out of me all sin;
and may Thy Word enrich the affections of all mankind

A mighty oak tree standing firm against the storm,
As sunlight scatters the shadows of night.
A river nourishing the land it flows through

~}- - - - - - - - - - - - - -:}|{:- - - - - - - - - - - - - -{~

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Profile Image for Thimón Sahuleka.
10 reviews
May 11, 2022
Perfectly captures McKenna's main ideas and it serves as a perfect introduction to his core philosophy. I got into the book after becoming a frequent listener of his lectures however, and i feel that the lectures on the internet already capture his core philosophy perfectly, which kind of changes the need for this book in the internet age. Its a nice addition upon the material available online but doesnt offer too much new material outside of that, especially seeing that 90% of the book is transcribed lectures in the first place, a fact that greatly dissapointed me upon reading the first couple of chapters. I could see however how this book served its purpose when it came out, however i feel the purpose of this book has shifted somewhat with the coming of the information age.

McKenna always mentioned how much he loved writing and i kind of expected this book to be his personal opus, captivating both the core spirit of his ideas and his literary genius at the same time. Sadly this was not the case. However this fact does not degrade the content of the book.

In conclusion, i think that overall the book is core material for understanding McKenna but it does not offer much outside of what is already widely available online. So if one wants to familiarise themselves with the work of McKenna, it really comes down to wether they prefer to listen or to read, the contents of the different formats wont make too much difference in regards to the specific topics in this book.

I kind of expected this book to elaborate much more beyond what was already talked about in the lectures, but sadly they were just other lectures.

I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to get a solid grasp of McKenna's core philosophy. For those already familiar with the basics of his work, dont expect too much outside of what he already frequently states in his lectures/public appearances etc. Good book overall and one of the finest editing,formatting and stylization of a non fiction book i've seen.
Profile Image for U Recife.
122 reviews13 followers
November 18, 2017

This book is a compilation of interviews of Terence McKenna as he is being asked by different people about the plethora of ideas McKenna was known to joust for. As a transcription of said interviews, these lose quite bit by being rendered in text, since Mckenna was mostly a very good conversationalist — the spoken word was his most unique quality; the text presented here becomes much drier than any recording on the same topic.

In any case, this is a good showcase of McKenna’s inventiveness and ease with making new and surprising connections. Since this book is organized by interviews standing for chapters, even if the book lacks some overall coherence making it a bit harder to take it as a whole work, this also allows you to read it as what it is, a compilation, something to be read in many sits, not necessarily tying the whole reading together.

If you are deeply interested in McKenna’s ideas and you’re looking to dig deeper to their origins and developments, inevitably you have to go through this book. However, if you’re just curious and not very prone to waste your time away reading, you’ll be much more satisfied by listening/watching to the many McKenna’s lectures available online, where you’ll not only learn about his ideas, but you’ll the get the full package of having the bard himself saying them, where he’ll delight you with his unmatchable skill in guiding your imagination through the power of his mastery of words.
Profile Image for Parker Rush.
102 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2021
Ate this book up like a second breakfast and then washed it down with hallucinogenic dosed coffee. What a read! Terence McKenna is a wellspring of truly original thought that pushes the delimited boundaries of what we know to be “real” to their outer limits. Mental masturbation, yes. But of the absolute best and most beneficial kind. His ideas concerning futurism, technological predominance of virtual reality, the “alien” or “other” personality within the tryptamine plants, are enough cognitive data to stew over for centuries. Throughout it all is a refreshing willingness to confront the unknown with undaunted courage, receptivity, and a love of learning/adventure. If you are at all interested in shamanic work or Amazonian approaches to plant medicines then The Archaic Revival is more or less essential reading. That being said: the book is not a one size fits all spiritual panacea. Skeptics will be skeptics and take the blue pill back to their comfortable materialist existence of no questions asked, no feathers ruffled. If, however, your doors of perception have already been squeegee’d by one of McKenna’s “heroic doses” then I highly suggest you read this for some reintegration help. Be prepared to surf the strange multidimensional waves of the morphogenetic field my friends!
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