9th August 2009, 12:34 PM | #1 |
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On ethnography, hallucinogens, improvised knife, etc.
Here's a very interesting short video on the big picture of ethnography and endangered cultures: NatGeo's Explorer-in-Residence on endangered cultures
The trivia and photos along the way are quite engaging. And towards the end of the talk, you'll be pleasantly surprised at how an Inuit made an improvised blade like no other! |
9th August 2009, 06:17 PM | #2 |
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Thanks Miguel, very nice presentation. Wade Davis is, of course, the man who wrote The Serpent and the Rainbow, which unfortunately was made into a rather sensational and stupid movie. I had the pleasure of seeing him talk at the Museum of Nature History back in the 1990s.
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10th August 2009, 02:48 AM | #3 |
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Thank you Miguel, that was delightful .
Have you ever read any of Castenada's books ? Rick |
10th August 2009, 05:47 AM | #4 |
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That was great, Miguel, and that's a knife none of us will ever collect
Personally, I prefer Wade Davis to Castaneda. I sold all my Castaneda books years ago, but I still have an old copy of Serpent and the Rainbow kicking around. Best, F |
10th August 2009, 07:00 AM | #5 | |||
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10th August 2009, 07:33 PM | #6 |
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Miguel,
I'd also recommend Davis' One River. Although it's mostly about ethnobotany (as is Serpent and the Rainbow), there are some weapons related things in there as well. Curare, for instance (in One River), or zombie making (in Serpent and the Rainbow). As for Carlos Castaneda, if you haven't read any of his books, I'd suggest checking out the Wikipedia articles first, just so you know what you're getting into. Best, F |
10th August 2009, 09:00 PM | #7 |
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Agree with Fearn on this .
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10th August 2009, 11:19 PM | #8 |
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...I think I have seen a knife like that on ebay
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10th August 2009, 11:35 PM | #9 |
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Nice! I'm a fan of both Davis and Castaneda.
(I even enjoyed the film version of Serpent. ) |
11th August 2009, 12:18 AM | #10 |
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Me too .
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11th August 2009, 12:19 AM | #11 | |
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11th August 2009, 12:26 AM | #12 | |
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11th August 2009, 02:49 AM | #13 | |
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11th August 2009, 04:38 AM | #14 |
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"Fiction"?!?
Blasphemy. |
11th August 2009, 06:48 AM | #15 |
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Andrew,
Far be it from me to criticize anyone's beliefs. I will leave that to Wikipedia. Link to Carlos Castaneda article. Other than that, he did write some interesting books. Best, F |
11th August 2009, 02:42 PM | #16 |
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lol.
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12th August 2009, 02:41 AM | #17 | |
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12th August 2009, 03:02 AM | #18 | |
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On Davis, the moment he said ... "To have that [ethnic psychoactive] powder blown up your nose is rather like being shot out of a rifle barrel lined with baroque paintings and landing on a sea of electricity."... I instantly became a disciple of Davis What I meant by that is that the guy sure can communicate and captivate his audience's imagination. And for that, I like the man already (better late than never). But what is really mind blowing for me is not the recreational or meditative uses of these plants among the natives. Rather, it's the fact that as said elsewhere and everywhere "while 25% of Western pharmaceuticals are derived from rainforest ingredients, less than 1% of these tropical trees and plants have been tested by scientists". I'm sure the cure for cancer, AIDS, cardiovascular diseases, etc. are just there, lying in those forests! |
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12th August 2009, 03:13 AM | #19 | |
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12th August 2009, 04:22 AM | #20 |
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Sigh. There are already herbal cancer drugs (i.e. taxol from yew) and heart disease (digitalis from foxglove). It's all well and good to wish for a miracle drugs, but things like exercise and safe sex still work best. Boring, isn't it?
Incidentally, it's also worth noting that the archeologists now think that the Amazon (at least along the main, whitewater rivers) was home to a lot more people than we thought even a few years ago. I'm venturing into speculative territory, but I'm guessing that one reason there is this sophisticated use of hallucinogens throughout the Amazon is that it used to be more, well, civilized, and they had the time and numbers of experimenters to work out the drug interactions that Davis talks about. Diseases brought by the Spaniards and Portuguese probably wiped out most of the river cultures, and the tribes we see now are the isolated remnants after 500 years. Something similar may have happened in the Congo, too, since there's plentiful pottery remains and former cultivated fields in the upper basin, in areas that were once thought to be virgin rain forest. Anyway, getting off topic. Fun stuff! F |
12th August 2009, 06:58 AM | #21 | |
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Again, "while 25% of Western pharmaceuticals are derived from rainforest ingredients, less than 1% of these tropical trees and plants have been tested by scientists". To keep testing the plants of the Amazon region is hardly "wishing for a miracle drug", it is merely common sense research. The continued destruction of the rain forest however is nothing but short-sighted stupidity. |
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12th August 2009, 07:03 AM | #22 | |
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12th August 2009, 06:00 PM | #23 | |
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Yes, few plants have been tested. There's a reason. Some plant families are rich in drug-type chemicals. The tomato family is a good example of this, and has given us atropine, scopalamine, nicotine, etc. Some families are not rich. Basically, the are ~800 species of figs in the tropics, and there are hundreds of species of oaks. The chemistry of both groups is known fairly well, they're pretty consistent among species and they're not good sources for new drugs. I could go on at length, but the reason no one is checking the plants that we know about is because there's a very low probability that we'll find anything new in them. Wade Davis is not neutral in this process. As an ethnobotanist, he has an interest in promoting bioprospecting, specifically by finding out what native tribes use as medicines, and then determining whether those plants work by some new chemistry, whether they work by some chemistry that's already known (the normal case), or whether they work by sympathetic magic (i.e. placebo) alone (also very common). Bioprospecting goes in and out as a fad among drug companies. Right now, they're bioprospecting in the ocean and in animals, because they're finding new classes of pain killers (cone snails) and antibiotics (frogs, alligators, etc) to study. I'm sure that they will eventually go back to the rainforests, but even then, they're probably going to be looking at things like fungi, bacteria, and animals, as much as the plants. I'm sorry to hear about your mother, but I'm not sure that the plants of the rain forests held any cure for her. That was definitely true for my late father, by the way. Best, F |
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13th August 2009, 03:25 PM | #24 | |
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Mythbusters if it can regarded as a good experimenter (perhaps it is), is supposed to have busted the belief (though some claim that the same experiment proved otherwise). Personally, I don't believe that plants or trees are sentient (anatomically, they don't have a brain or a nervous system, etc.). And I'm sure Fearn can elaborate on this more. But after knowing that those Indians do perceive something from plants and they have evidence to prove such allegation, I'm now having second thoughts |
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13th August 2009, 03:29 PM | #25 | |
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13th August 2009, 04:16 PM | #26 | |
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Talking about having that good sense of one's surroundings, I think it was Jared Diamond in his Guns Germs and Steel who made the same allusion in said book. IIRC, Diamond said that if you drop a Papua New Guinea (PNG) native in the middle of Manhattan or something like that, the PNG native would be totally disoriented of course. But in the same manner, Diamond said that if he [Diamond] was dropped in the middle of the PNG rainforest, he won't survive. Thus Diamond was saying that he's not really smarter than the PNG native. Rather, each one of them merely adapted to his own native surroundings. And having made that adaptation, the heightened sensitivity is there. To cite another example, Spanish missionaries during the colonial period had often recorded how Filipino seamen masterfully navigate the seas by merely "reading" the cloud formations, the floats encountered in the sea, the type of fishes that swim by, the looks of the waves, etc. I'm sure seamen who are Polynesian, Mediterranean, etc. also possessed the same heightened sensitivity to his surroundings. So yes, we are saying the same thing after all PS - Maybe somebody should ask Wade Davis what exactly did the Indians mean when they said that they hear those plants "singing" under the moonlight. It's also possible that something was lost in the translation. |
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13th August 2009, 04:40 PM | #27 | |
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Sounds good, I agree with your agreement and elaboration
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13th August 2009, 05:02 PM | #28 | |
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Can I just request for your comments please on my two back-of-the-envelope calculations? Here's quick-and-dirty calculation no. 1 -- [a] there are currently about 13,000 drugs per US Food & Drug Admin., if I understood correctly this webpage; [b] if the stat we picked up was correct in that 25% of Western drugs came from rainforest ingredients, then that would be 3,250 out of the 13,000; [c] again if it's true that only 1% of rainforest flora has been tested, then shouldn't that mean that the 99% untested plants ought to give us thousands of more new drugs? On the one hand, I myself like anybody else will find it ridiculous if someone will say that we expect to see 321,750 new drugs (i.e., 99 x 3,250) once the remaining 99% have been tested. On the other hand, if we are to say that no significant new drugs are to be expected from the 99%, wouldn't that be swinging to the opposite extreme? After all, the 1% tested did yield 3,000+ drugs. Could it be that the most likely scenario will be somewhere in between? (though perhaps skewed towards the scenario you just described, in that the success rate will be much lower this time, on account of the similar traits of many species, etc.). Just thinking out loud ... I'll post next that second rough calcs |
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13th August 2009, 05:09 PM | #29 | |
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13th August 2009, 05:22 PM | #30 | |
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While i understand your comments that the not all plants are viable sources for drugs and that the 1% figure is therefore misleading there are so many species of plants in the Amazon that i am convinced that it is well worth the investigation. My worry is that by the time scientists get done with cone snail and "eventually go back to the rainforests" there nay not be any rainforests to go back to. They are disappearing at an amazing rate. |
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