Jeremy Narby: The Man behind THE COSMIC SERPENT
Jeremy Narby, anthropologist and author of THE COSMIC SERPENT, talks about his new book, his first trip to the Amazon, and his first time experiencing ayahuascan enlightenment.
Date: 5/21/2006 1:37:57 PM ( 18 y ) ... viewed 3786 times By Ben Sumrall Jeremy Narby, anthropologist and author of The Cosmic Serpent, talks about his new book, his first trip to the Amazon, and his first time experiencing ayahuascan enlightenment.
Jeremy
Narby, Ph.D., is an anthroplogist and author. He grew up in Canada and
Switzerland, studied history at the University of Canterbury, and
received his doctorate in anthropology from Stanford University. Dr.
Narby is the author of The Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge and Intelligence and Nature: An Inquiry into Knowledge, as well as being co-editor of Shamans through Time.
He works with Nouvelle Planete and helps facilitate
rainforest expeditions aimed at exploring indigenous knowledge systems
of the Amazon.
What brought you to the Amazon initially?
Back in the 1980s, internationally-financed development projects
were driving roads into the Amazonian rainforest and confiscating the
lands of indigenous peoples. As a young anthropologist, I wanted to
study this conflict.
What sort of things were you doing with the indigenous peoples there?
I was studying how they used the rainforest, in order to show that
they used it rationally, and therefore deserved the right to own their
lands.
What led you to discover ayahuasca?
The Ashaninca people I lived with said that their knowledge about
plants came from plant mixtures such as ayahuasca and tobacco paste.
They considered ayahuasca a major source of knowledge. And they said
the way to understand this was to try some myself.
You describe your first experience with ayahuasca as being both
terrifying and illuminating. What stands out most in your
memories of this first experience?
The images seemed to correspond to a very powerful, but unknown
level of reality, which I had presupposed did not exist. I could see
the arrogance of my own worldview.
In The Cosmic Serpent you demonstrate that shamans can access molecular knowledge through the use of plants. What led to this conclusion?
The correspondences between the notions of shamans and molecular
biologists. For example, both agree that there is a hidden unity under
the surface of life's diversity; both associate this unity with the
double helix shape (or two entwined serpents, a twisted ladder, a
spiral staircase, two vines wrapped around each other); and both
consider it necessary to deal with this level of reality in order to
heal.
How do shamans use this information to heal others?
Shamans claim they gain access in their visions to information
regarding the diagnostic of a patient’s illness, as well as the remedy.
Vision, knowledge and power are the three key stages in ayahuasca
shamanism, as anthropologist Jean-Pierre Chaumeil explains. Shamans
start by seeing visions, from which they gain knowledge, which in turn
leads to the power to heal.
Arthur C. Clark, in his 2001 series, paints the picture of intelligent life becoming "creatures of radiation," able to store information in lattices of
light. Do you think that utilizing the photon emissions of DNA could
lead to a similar evolutionary progression?
Perhaps, but first and foremost I think that more research is needed on the photonic emissions of DNA.
Did you make a "leap of faith" when you decided to leave behind
your Western skepticism and believe the statements of shamans as true?
I would call it "suspending disbelief," rather than "making a leap
of faith." The point was not to believe what shamans say, but to
consider the possibility that what they say might be true.
I've heard that certain Amazonian shamans are trying to
disseminate ayahuasca to other parts of the world. Do you find this to be the case? If so, what are their intentions?
There seem to be several reasons for this trend. The last 500 years
were rough on indigenous Amazonians. Some now feel that the time is
right to get the world's attention.
Given the advanced state of decline in some of these ecosystems,
are you worried that some knowledge has been irrevocably lost to us?
Yes. In the Amazon, entire societies have been wiped from the face of the earth.
A lot of your work has been to make sure that indigenous peoples
are fairly compensated for their botanical knowledge. What is the state
of this endeavor?
For sixteen years I have been helping indigenous Amazonians gain land
titles to their territories and set up bilingual, intercultural schools
in their communities. As to the quest for intellectual property rights
for indigenous people, it is a very complex, judicial issue, requiring
jurists and lawyers. As far as I can see, there has yet to be much
concrete progress in compensating indigenous people for their botanical
knowledge.
In
regards to your work with Nouvelle Planete, what do you think is the
best way to preserve what's left of the Amazon Rainforest?
The most effective way is to work with local populations, motivating them to use the forest in a sustainable way.
In what other ways did the research and writing of this book change you?
This research has opened my mind to several ways of looking at the
world. I cherish rationalism and I also appreciate the shamanic gaze.
It has made me bi-cognitive. It is like having two complementary ways
of interpreting the world.
Much like Charles Darwin, you hesitated to publish your findings.
Has there been a shift in response from academia and the scientific
community?
I am starting to get marginal interest. These things take time.
Have
you been approached by the advocates of "Intelligent Design" and, if
so, do you find that your ideas support them, or are entirely different
in nature?
I have not been approached by advocates of "Intelligent Design." As
an agnostic, I do not know about final causes, and prefer to
concentrate on the here and now. I take evolution as a given, but I do
not believe that either "blind chance" or "God" drives it.
Have you seen the missionaries and growth of Christianity among the Ashaninca change the Ashaninca's use of ayahuasca?
Yes, in some cases it has driven ayahuasca usage underground. In
others, it has changed the cosmology in which Ashaninca shamans operate.
Have you been back to study with the same Ashaninca you
originally were with in Peru?
I have yet to go back to the Pichis Valley to do an in-depth study of how things have changed since the mid-1980s.
In your new book, Intelligence in Nature, you postulate that intelligence is not uniquely human, but exists across the
animal and plant kingdoms. What examples did you find to support this?
Single-celled slime molds can solve mazes. Bees can handle abstract
concepts with brains the size of pinheads. Parasitic plants can
correctly assess whether to invest energy into exploiting a host, or
whether to move on. Ants can cultivate mushroom gardens using
antibiotics. Parrots can say what they mean. Dolphins can recognize
themselves in mirrors. Cells can communicate with one another using
molecular and electric signals.
What can humans learn from this intelligence?
We can learn to get a grip on our powers of predation, for starters.
Jaguars, for example, stand at the top of the Amazonian food chain, but
they lead discreet lives. We could learn a thing or two from these
formidable predators.
What projects are you working on now?
I am concentrating on my work with Nouvelle Planete, getting
support for Amazonian initiatives, such as demarcating the territory of
the Cacataibo people; equipping the Kukama-Kukamiria people with
short-wave radios to help them monitor the territories in and around
the Pacaya-Samiria National Park, and enabling Aguaruna women to protect their knowledge of medicinal and nutritional plants.
Any thoughts on the recently-discovered double helix galaxy?
This might be a good place to look for signs of life.
Reprinted from DNA Monthly. Text and image copyright (c) 2006 by Souldish.com. All Rights Reserved.
[Ben Sumrall is an actor, writer, and director of theatre and film. He
is also a student and explorer of life and humanity's spiritual practices.]
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