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Consciousness and Shamanism: Cognitive Experiences in the Ayahuasca Trance and Theories of their Causation
Contributor(s): Walter, Peter Fritz (Author)
ISBN: 151683531X     ISBN-13: 9781516835317
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $11.40  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: August 2015
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Psychology | Ethnopsychology
Physical Information: 0.43" H x 5.98" W x 9.02" (0.62 lbs) 186 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
'Consciousness and Shamanism (Scholarly Articles, Vol. 4)'-2017 Revised, Updated and Reformatted Edition-is the result of the author's Ayahuasca voyage in 2004 to Ecuador, where he was drinking the sacred brew in the presence of an experienced Shuar shaman. He puts up the hypothesis that when the traditional Ayahuasca brew is ingested, it is not, or not directly, the plant's DMT that causes the spiritual voyage, as it is assumed in the overwhelming part of the literature on shamanism and entheogens, but the shaman's superconsciousness impacting directly upon the consciousness of the shaman's client, the seeker of truth who comes to drink the brew.The author explains in this paper the various theories of causation, reports his own Ayahuasca experience in all detail, and cites the few research results from other consciousness researchers (Narby, Leadbeater, Villoldo) that seem to corroborate his hypothesis. He brings forth other examples that sustain his theory, taken from former experiences with Filipino spiritual healers, homeopathy, medical hypnosis and Bach flower treatment.The author counters the plant chemistry causation theorists with the possibility and even probability that the shaman's directed superconscious intent impacts first on the plant's consciousness matrix and uses this matrix as a transmitting and amplifying agent of his powerful thought forms. This might be accomplished in practice via the creation, by thought energy, of elementals that in last resort effect the alteration of the client's consciousness during the trance. The author calls this a multi-causative theory of causation versus the reigning single-causative theory that holds it was solely the plant's or the brew's DMT that causes the consciousness-altering effects. He also brings forth evidence from the experience itself that appears to strongly corroborate his conclusions.