Body of Wonder

Episode #33 An Anthropological Perspective on Plant Medicine with Wade Davis, PhD

5 snips
Oct 26, 2022
Wade Davis, cultural anthropologist and ethnobotanist who lived with Indigenous Amazonian and Andean peoples, shares stories from decades of fieldwork. He explores how societies shape perception, the sensory and spiritual knowledge in traditional plant use, the cultural history of ayahuasca and coca, and the tensions around biodiversity, commercialization, and reclaiming sacred medicines.
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INSIGHT

Indigenous Knowledge Relies On Intuition And Multisensory Perception

  • Indigenous navigators and healers use multisensory perception and intuition, not just detached trial and error.
  • Andrew Weil describes ayahuasca showing shamans which plant to mix, illustrating trusted ecological intuition.
ANECDOTE

Siona Plant Taxonomy Sings In Different Keys

  • Schultes reported Siona informants recognizing 17 varieties of a liana that looked identical to taxonomists.
  • The Siona said each variety 'sings to you in a different key' on a full moon, showing experiential taxonomy.
INSIGHT

Medicine Lost By Severing Spirituality From Healing

  • Modern science's separation of medicine from spirituality narrowed medicine's view of health.
  • Andrew Weil argues integrative medicine should revive Hippocrates' reverence for nature to restore a broader approach to healing.
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