Shroom: Plant Intoxicants

December 23, 2010

Posted by at 7:00 am | No Comments

www.onlinesmartshop.nl ‘Plant Intoxicants’ is a pionering study of psychactive plants and their role in society. Initially published in Nuremberg in 1855, it is one of the first books to examine the cultivation, preparation, and consumption of the world’s major stimulants and inebriants. Drawing on his own travel experiences as well as the writings of his predecessors, Baron Ernst von Bibra (1806-78) devotes a full chapter to each of seventeen plants, ranging from such mild stimulants as coffee and tea, through tobacco and hashish, to powerful narcotics and hallucinogens such as opium and fly agaric (amanita muscaria). Written in a lively style, ‘Plant Intoxicants’ paints a fascinating panorama of the worldwide use of psychoactive plants in the nineteenth century. Von Bibra brings to the subject a keen intellect, an engaging sense of humor, and a refreshing open-mindness unusual for his, or any, time. While frankly acknowledging and describing in vivid detail the depravities of the opium den, he holds the opinion that intoxicants, when used in moderation, are “gifts bestowed by the gods on man to alleviate his misery and reconcile men with one another.” His findings , unhampered by the restrictive morality of his era, are a testament to the intellectual freedom enjoyed by wealthy private researchers in the nineteenth century. Complementing and enhancing von Bibra’s work is a full annotation by his modern-day counterpart, the ethnobotanist Jonathan Ott. A foreword by

 

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