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  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  MANY THANKS TO THE FOLLOWING: first reader, Rachel Vuillaume Narby; research assistant, Marie-Claire Chappuis; third base coach, Jon Christensen; unconditional support, Willy Randin/Nouvelle Planète; epistemology, Suren Erkman; anthropology, Jürg Gasché; metaphysics, Richard Chappuis; biology, Jean-Luc Renck, Véronique Servais; botany, Mathias Läubli, Michel Mettraux; medicine, Gilbert Guignard; professional guidance, Henri Weissenbach; argumentation, Jeremy P. Tarcher; French language consultant, Fabienne Radi Maitre; images, [email protected]; original readers, Christophe Berdat, Philippe Randin, Yona Birker Chavanne, Patrick Lyndon, Claude Corboz, Laurent Grand, Jacques Falquet, Jean-Pierre Hurni, Jacques Mabit, Jacob Granatouroff; English manuscript readers, Michael Harner, Patrick Lyndon, Adrian Franklin, Rob La Frenais, Philip Colchin, Francis Huxley; literary agent, Barbara Moulton; my professors, Humphry Osmond, Sylvia Yanagisako, Renato Rosaldo, Shelton Davis, Stefano Varese, Albert Duruz; my colleagues, Alberto Chirif, Anna Tsing, John Beauclerk, Marcus Colchester, Pierrette Birraux-Ziegler, Oliviero Ratti, Laurent Demierre; nicotinic receptors, Marc Ballivet; dimethyltryptamine information, Olaf Anderson, Novartis; nicotine information, Brigitte Caretti, Switzerland’s Federal Office of Public Health; stereograms, Madeleine Siffert, Pascal Siffert; the term “DNA-TV,” Kit Miller; child care, Sandrine Arnold, Marianne Santos.

  Books: The Cantonal and University Library of Fribourg, Switzerland; The Network of Swiss Libraries; Librophoros, Christophe Piller, Fribourg, Switzerland; Flashback Books, Michael Horowitz, 20 Sunny-side Avenue, Suite A195, Mill Valley, CA 94941.

  In Peru: Sally Swenson, Victoria Mendoza, Abelardo Shingari, and the community of Quirishari.

  Original fieldwork funded by National Science Foundation (No. BNS 8420651); Wenner-Gren Foundation (No. 4622); Stanford’s Center for Research in International Studies.

&nbsp
; Specials thanks go to Carlos Perez Shuma, who made an anthropologist of me; the indigenous people of the world, who taught me the most important things I know, who have kept their ancient knowledge despite persecution, genocide and territorial confiscation, and whose ethical standard is an inspiration; my parents, grandparents, and ancestors for the DNA; the global network of life, with a special thought for the plant-teachers.

  PERMISSIONS AND CREDITS

  p. 57. “The human brain.... Redrawn from Desana sketches.” From G. Reichel-Dolmatoff, “Brain and Mind in Desana Shamanism,” in Journal of Latin American Lore, vol. 7, no. 1 (1981). Reprinted with permission of The Regents of the University of California.

  p. 58. “The human brain.... Redrawn from Desana sketches.” From G. Reichel-Dolmatoff, “Brain and Mind in Desana Shamanism,” in Journal of Latin American Lore, vol. 7, no. 1 (1981). Reprinted with permission of The Regents of the University of California.

  p. 64. “The ancestral anaconda . . . guided by the divine rock crystal.” From G. Reichel-Dolmatoff, “Brain and Mind in Desana Shamanism,” in Journal of Latin American Lore, vol. 7, no. 1 (1981). Reprinted with permission of The Regents of the University of California.

  p. 65. “‘The Serpent Lord Enthroned.’” From J. Campbell (1964), p. 11. New York, Viking, all rights reserved.

  p. 67. “‘Zeus against Typhon.’” From J. Campbell (1964), p. 239. New York, Viking, all rights reserved.

  p. 69. (No title.) From Luna and Amaringo (1991), “Vision 33: Campana Ayahuasca,” p. 113. Reprinted with the authors’ kind permission.

  p. 70. “‘. . . the spread-out form of DNA . . .’” From Luna and Amaringo (1991), “Vision 46: Sepultura Tonduri,” p. 139. Reprinted with the authors’ kind permission.

  p. 70. “‘. . . chromosomes at a specific phase. . . .’” From Luna and Amaringo (1991), “Vision 40: Ayacatuca,” p. 127. Reprinted with the authors’ kind permission.

  p. 70. “‘. . . triple helixes of collagen . . .’” From Luna and Amaringo (1991), “Vision 21: The Sublimity of the Sumiruna,” p. 89. Reprinted with the authors’ kind permission.

  p. 70. “‘. . . DNA from afar, looking like a telephone cord . . .’” From Luna and Amaringo (1991), “Vision 32: Pregnant by an Anaconda,” p. 111. Reprinted with the authors’ kind permission.

  p. 74. Cover of Crick (1981) is reprinted with the kind permission of Little, Brown & Co.

  p. 78. “‘A painting on hardboard of the Snake of the Marinbata people of Arnhem Land.’” From F. Huxley (1974), p. 127. Photo by Axel Poignant. All rights reserved.

  p. 79. “‘A rock painting of the Walbiri tribe of Aborigines representing the Rainbow Snake.’ ” From F. Huxley (1974), p. 126. Photo by David Attenborough. All rights reserved.

  p. 80. “Early prophase . . .” From Watson et al. (1987). Copyright © 1987 by James D. Watson. Published by the Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company.

  p. 80. “Anaphase II . . .” From Watson et al. (1987). Copyright © 1987 by James D. Watson. Published by the Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company.

  p. 81. “‘The cosmic serpent, provider of attributes.’” From R. T. R. Clark (1959), p. 52. Reprinted with permission from Thames and Hudson Ltd.

  p. 82. “‘Sito, the primordial serpent.’ ” From R. T. R. Clark (1959), p. 192. Copyright British Museum.

  p. 82. “‘Ronín, the two-headed serpent.’” From A. Gebhart-Sayer (1987), p. 42. Reprinted with the author’s kind permission.

  p. 83. “‘The serpent of the earth becomes celestial ...’” From C. Jacq (1993), p. 99. Reprinted with the author’s kind permission.

  p. 84. “‘Here is the dragon that devours its tail.’” From M. Maier (1965, orig. 1618), p. 139. All rights reserved.

  p. 84. “‘Ouroboros: bronze disk, Benin art.’” From Chevalier and Gheerbrant (1982), p. 716. Paris, Robert Laffont, all rights reserved.

  p. 85. “‘Vishnu and his wife Lakshmi resting on Sesha . . .’” From F. Huxley (1974), pp. 188-89. Reprinted with the kind permission of Aldus Books and the Ferguson Publishing Company.

  p. 87. “‘Cosmovision.’” From A. Gebhart-Sayer (1987), p. 26. Reprinted with the author’s kind permission.

  p. 87. “‘Aspects of Ronín.’” From A. Gebhart-Sayer (1987), p. 34. Reprinted with the author’s kind permission.

  p. 89. (No title.) From J. Watson (1968), p. 165. London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, all rights reserved.

  p. 92. “‘The DNA double helix represented as a pair of snakes...’” From Wills (1991), p. 37. Copyright © 1991 by Christopher Wills. Reprinted by permission of Basic Books, a division of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

  p. 94. “Liana (Bauhinia caulotretus) ‘that goes from earth up to heaven.’” From T. Koch-Grünberg (1917), vol. 2, drawing IV. All rights reserved.

  p. 96. “The ‘sky-ladder’ drawing . . .” From A. Gebhart-Sayer (1987). Reprinted with the author’s kind permission.

  p. 97. “‘Banisteriopsis caapi, a liana that tends to grow in charming double helices ...’” From Schultes and Raffauf (1992), p. 26. Reprinted with permission from Synergetic Press, Oracle, Arizona.

  p. 102. “‘The cosmic serpent, provider of attributes.’” From R. T. R. Clark (1959), p. 52. Reprinted with permission from Thames and Hudson Ltd.

  p. 105. “A magnified section of a leaf . . .” From a photo by Alfred Pasieka. Reprinted with the photographer’s permission.

  p. 111. “‘Cosmovision.’” From A. Gebhart-Sayer (1987), p. 26. Reprinted with the author’s kind permission.

  p. 113. “Detail from Pablo Amaringo’s painting ‘Pregnant by an Anaconda.’” From Luna and Amaringo (1991), p. 111. Reprinted with the authors’ kind permission.

  INDEX

  Amaringo, Pablo

  Anaconda

  Ancon, Laureano

  Ant

  Artaud, Antonin

  Avíreri

  Axis of the world

  Ayahuasca

  Bergson, Henri

  Beveridge, W. I. B.

  Biophoton

  Bourdieu, Pierre

  Brain

  Calladine, Chris

  Campbell, Joseph

  Castaneda, Carlos

  Chaumeil, Jean-Pierre

  Chuang-Tzu

  Chucano Santos, José

  Consciousness

  Crick, Francis

  Curare

  Darwin, Charles

  Descartes, René

  Devereux, George

  Dimethyltryptamine

  DNA

  Drew, Horace

  Education, bilingual

  Einstein, Albert

  Eliade, Mircea

  Frank-Kamenetskii, Maxim

  Franklin, Rosalind

  Gaia

  Gebhart-Sayer, Angelika

  Geertz, Clifford

  Gomez, Ruperto

  Gurvich, Alexander

  Harner, Michael

  Heraclitus

  Ho, Mae-Wan

  Holmes, Sherlock

  Huxley, Francis

  Jacob, François

  Jakobson, Roman

  “Junk” DNA

  Kekulé, August

  Koch-Grünberg, Theodor

  Lamarck, Jean-Baptiste

  Langaney, André

  Lévi-Strauss, Claude

  Linnaeus, Carl von

  LSD

  Luisi, Pier Luigi

  Luna, Luis Eduardo

  Malinowski, Bronislaw

  Maninkari

  Margulis, Lynn

  Mayr, Ernst

  Métraux, Alfred

  Monod, Jacques

  Mundkur, Balaji

  Nash, J. Madeleine

  Nicotine

  Perez Shuma, Carlos

  Piaget, Jean

  Pollack, Robert

  Popp, Fritz-Albert

  Popper, Karl

  Quartz

  Radio waves

  Receptor

  Reichel-Dolmatoff, Gerardo

  Sagan, Dorion

  Schu
ltes, Richard E.

  Scott, Alwyn

  Serotonin

  Serpent

  Shapiro, James

  Shapiro, Robert

  Shingari, Abelardo

  Snake

  Stereogram

  Strassman, Rick

  Sullivan, Lawrence

  Tangoa, Luis

  Television

  Tobacco

  Townsley, Graham

  Twins

  Twisted language

  Tylor, Edward

  Visual system

  Wallace, Alfred

  Watson, James

  Weiss, Gerald

  Wesson, Robert

  Wilbert, Johannes

  Wills, Christopher

  Yahweh

  Zeus

  BIBLIOGRAPHIC INDEX

  Abelin (1993)

  Alberts et al. (1990)

  Artaud (1979)

  Atkinson (1992)

  Atlan and Koppel (1990)

  Baer (1992)

  Balick et al. (1996)

  Barker et al. (1981)

  Bass (1994)

  Baudoin (1918)

  Bayard (1987)

  Beach et al. (1994)

  Beauclerk et al. (1988)

  Bellier (1986)

  Beveridge (1950)

  Bisset (1989)

  Blocker and Salem (1994)

  Blubaugh and Linegar (1948)

  Boulnois (1939)

  Bourdieu (1977) (1980) (1990)

  Bourguignon (1979)

  Broad (1994)

  Browman and Schwarz (1979)

  Brown (1988)

  Buchillet (1982)

  Burnand (1991)

  Burroughs and Ginsberg (1963)

  Butler (1996)

 
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