This is your mind on plants / Michael Pollan.
Publisher: New York : Penguin Press, ©2021Description: 274 pages ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0593296907
- 9780593296905
- 581.6 23
- RS164 .P655 2021
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | RS164 .P655 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001498657 |
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RS164 .B324 C74 1990 V.2 Herbal medicine past and present / | RS164 .H276 2005 Understanding medicinal plants : their chemistry and therapeutic action / | RS164 .M287 2013 The wild medicine solution : healing with aromatic, bitter, and tonic plants / | RS164 .P655 2021 This is your mind on plants / | RS420 .L535 2015 Top drugs : history, pharmacology, syntheses / | RT4 .M32 2007 Daring to care : American nursing and second-wave feminism / | RT4 .T63 2022 Dr. nurse : science, politics, and the transformation of American nursing / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Opium -- Prologue -- "Opium, made easy" -- Epilogue -- Caffeine -- Mescaline -- The door in the wall -- The orphan psychedelic -- In which we meet the cacti -- The birth of a new religion -- Peeking inside the teepee -- An interlude on mescaline -- Learning from San Pedro -- Drunk at the wheel -- Plan C.
"Of all the things humans rely on plants for--sustenance, beauty, fragrance, flavor, fiber--surely the most curious is our use of them is to change consciousness: to stimulate or calm, fiddle with or completely alter, the qualities of our mental experience. Michael Pollan dives deep into three plant drugs -- opium, caffeine, and mescaline -- and throws the fundamental strangeness, and arbitrariness, of our thinking about them into sharp relief. Exploring and participating in the cultures that have grown up around these drugs, while consuming (or in the case of caffeine, trying not to consume) them, Pollan reckons with the powerful human attraction to psychoactive plants, and the equally powerful taboos with which we surround them. Based in part on an essay written more than 25 years ago, this groundbreaking and singular consideration of psychoactive plants, and our attraction to them through time, holds up a mirror to our fundamental human needs and aspirations, the operations of our minds, and our entanglement with the natural world"-- Provided by publisher.
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