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3fd589e Perhaps what most commends cooking to me is that it offers a powerful corrective [...] To butcher a pork shoulder is to be forcibly reminded that this is the shoulder of a large mammal, made up of distinct groups of muscles with a purpose quite apart from feeding me. The work itself gives me a keener interest in the story of the hog: where it came from and how it found its way to my kitchen. In my hands its flesh feels a little less like th.. Michael Pollan
bb6aa8a effect. Michael Pollan
399957a either-or is a construction more deeply woven into our culture than into nature, where even antagonists depend on one another and the liveliest places are the edges, the in-betweens or both-ands. So it is with the blade of grass and the adjacent forest as, indeed, with all the species sharing this most complicated farm. Relations are what matter most, and the health of the cultivated turns on the health of the wild. Michael Pollan
7e15361 I don't work with crazies anymore Michael Pollan
8006385 Some mycelium will actually insinuate itself into the grain of trees, taking up residence and forming a symbiotic relationship with the tree. Stamets believes the mycelium functions as a kind of immune system for its arboreal host, secreting antibacterial, antiviral, and insecticidal compounds that protect the trees from diseases and pests, in exchange for nourishment and habitat. Michael Pollan
1527d93 When we mistake what we know for all there is to know, a healthy appreciation for one's ignorance in the face of a mystery like soil fertility gives way to the hubris that we can treat nature like a machine. Michael Pollan
72d3fa9 The great advantage of being a "reasonable creature" is that you can find a reason for whatever you want to do" Michael Pollan
2fc9e67 change our understanding of the links between our brains and our minds. Michael Pollan
dea1904 The efficiencies of the adult mind, useful as they are, blind us to the present moment. We're constantly jumping ahead to the next thing. We approach experience much as an artificial intelligence (AI) program does, with our brains continually translating the data of the present into the terms of the past, reaching back in time for the relevant experience, and then using that to make its best guess as to how to predict and navigate the futur.. Michael Pollan
026c05b imagine for a moment if we once again knew, strictly as a matter of course, these few unremarkable things: What it is we're eating. Where it came from. How it found its way to our table. And what, in a true accounting, it really cost. We could then talk about some other things at dinner. For we would no longer need any reminding that however we choose to feed ourselves, we eat by the grace of nature, not industry, and what we're eating is n.. food meal natural organic sustainability Michael Pollan
a7f6ac5 its power to imbue everything in our field of experience with a heightened sense of purpose and consequence. Michael Pollan
4065f71 Not only does he choose his own words with great care, but he insists that you do too, so, for example, when I carelessly deployed the term "recreational use," he stopped me in mid-sentence. "Maybe we need to reexamine that term. Typically, it is used to trivialize an experience. But why? In its literal meaning, the word 'recreation' implies something decidedly nontrivial. There is much more to be said, but let's bookmark this topic for ano.. Michael Pollan
91777ab We were martini people." I asked if he was a spiritual man. "Not really, though I think he would have liked to have been." Michael Pollan
eea004d Sugar was a rarity in eighteenth century America. Even after cane plantations were planted in the Caribbean, it remained a luxury good beyond the reach of most Americans...It wasn't until late in the nineteenth century that sugar became plentiful and cheap enough to enter the lives of many Americans...; before then the sensation of sweetness in the lives of most people came chiefly from the flesh of fruit. And in America that usually meant .. Michael Pollan
c785403 Sweetness is a desire that starts on the tongue with the sense of taste but doesn't end there. Or at least it didn't end there, back when the experience of sweetness was so special that the word served as a metaphor for a certain type of perfection... The best land was said to be sweet; so were the most pleasing sounds; the most persuasive talk; the loveliest views, the most refined people. Michael Pollan
323b29e Our brains developed under the pressure of natural selection to make us good foragers, which is how humans have spent 99 percent of their time on Earth. The presence of flowers, as even I understood as a boy ,is a reliable predictor of future food. People who were drawn to flowers , and who further could distinguish among them and remember where in the landscape they'd seen them, would be much more successful foragers than people who were b.. Michael Pollan
cf8ced9 great writers stamp the world with their minds, and the psychedelic experience will forevermore bear Huxley's indelible imprint. Michael Pollan
ccef6de Carhart-Harris believes that people suffering from a whole range of disorders characterized by excessively rigid patterns of thought--including addiction, obsessions, and eating disorders as well as depression--stand to benefit from "the ability of psychedelics to disrupt stereotyped patterns of thought and behavior by disintegrating the patterns of [neural] activity upon which they rest." Michael Pollan
9048278 If you want to understand what an expanded consciousness looks like, all you have to do is have tea with a four-year-old. Michael Pollan
917418a Goldsmith has so far raised three million pounds to fund and organize psilocybin trials (starting with treatment-resistant depression) at multiple sites in Europe. Already he is working with designers at IDEO, the international design firm, to redesign the entire experience of psychedelic therapy. Michael Pollan
186a1a2 Psychedelic drugs cause panic and temporary insanity in people who have not taken them. Michael Pollan
ddfb22f it tells me that consciousness is primary to the physical universe. Michael Pollan
4ab8f9b Science has little interest in, and tolerance for, the testimony of the individual; in this it is, curiously, much like an organized religion, which has a big problem crediting direct revelation too. Michael Pollan
cf84bef The premise behind the approach was that our fear of death is a function of our egos, which burden us with a sense of separateness that can become unbearable as we approach death. "We are born into an egoless world," Cohen wrote, "but we live and die imprisoned within ourselves." Michael Pollan
a97b51f the second possible explanation for the noetic sense: when our sense of a subjective "I" disintegrates, as it often does in a high-dose psychedelic experience (as well as in meditation by experienced meditators), it becomes impossible to distinguish between what is subjectively and objectively true. What's left to do the doubting if not your I?" Michael Pollan
7bff7a0 Normal waking consciousness might seem to offer a faithful map to the territory of reality, and it is good for many things, but it is only a map--and not the only map. Michael Pollan
1736d6b Part of the power of the ego flows from its command of one's rational faculties.) Michael Pollan
48a0b39 changing the course of history or, in a great many more cases, the course of their own lives. "No doubt" is the key. I can think of a couple of ways to account for such a phenomenon, neither entirely satisfying. The most straightforward and yet hardest to accept explanation is that it's simply true: the altered state of consciousness has opened the person up to a truth that the rest of us, imprisoned in ordinary waking consciousness, simply.. Michael Pollan
53f8779 Could it be that the doctors were mistaking transcendence for insanity? Michael Pollan
9d023fb The same phenomenon that pointed to a materialist explanation for spiritual and religious belief gave people an experience so powerful it convinced them of the existence of a nonmaterial reality--the very basis of religious belief. Michael Pollan
0b6616a Our brains constitute only 2.5 percent of our weight yet consumer 20 percent of our energy when we're resting. Michael Pollan
aaa3f11 binocular depth inversion illusion. Michael Pollan
3a0b98c The mental health system reaches only a fraction of the people suffering from mental disorders, most of whom are discouraged from seeking treatment by its cost, social stigma, or ineffectiveness. There are almost forty-three thousand suicides every year in America (more than the number of deaths from either breast cancer or auto accidents), yet only about half of the people who take their lives have ever received mental health treatment. "B.. Michael Pollan
32737f1 Guidelines for Voyagers and Guides."* The guidelines represent a" Michael Pollan
cfb3578 Some scientists have raised the possibility that consciousness may pervade the universe, suggesting we think of it the same way we do electromagnetism or gravity, as one of the fundamental building blocks of reality. Michael Pollan
2100f4e A maneira de comer e um dos meios mais poderoso que um povo tem de expressar e preservar sua identidade cultural. (...) Tornar as opcoes alimentares mais cientificas e esvazia-las de seu conteudo etnico e de sua historia. antropologia nutrição Michael Pollan
2663f5d ineffability: Michael Pollan
50e66e1 noetic Michael Pollan
9df4f4c abeyance, Michael Pollan
d3c7b8e numinous Michael Pollan
408ce4e Science has trouble with this interpretation, however, because, whatever the perception is, it can't be verified by its customary tools. It's an anecdotal report, in effect, and so has no value. Science has little interest in, and tolerance for, the testimony of the individual; in this it is, curiously, much like an organized religion, which has a big problem crediting direct revelation too. But it's worth pointing out that there are cases Michael Pollan
8317db8 I myself am identical with nature. Michael Pollan
cc0bdea the marvel of consciousness," as Vladimir Nabokov once called it, "that sudden window swinging open on a sunlit landscape amidst the night of non-being"--maybe" Michael Pollan
095532b It seems to me that one of the great luxuries of life at this point is to do one thing at a time. One thing to which you give yourself wholeheartedly, uni-tasking. luxury multitasking time Michael Pollan