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Brainforest Café

Brainforest Café

McKenna Academy of Natural Philosophy

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1 Creator

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1 Creator

In the Brainforest Café, Dennis McKenna discusses a wide range of topics related to philosophy, plant medicines, psychedelics and consciousness in nature. Guests are invited from diverse fields such as anthropology, neuroscience, and spirituality to explore various aspects of the human experience. Some of the topics that are covered in the Brainforest Café include the history and the role of plant medicines in traditional healing practices and the potential benefits of psychedelic-assisted therapy for mental health. The Brainforest Café also explores the cultural, social, and political implications of psychedelic use. Dennis McKenna shares his own personal experiences with plant medicines, offering insights and reflections on his own journey of self-discovery and transformation. The Brainforest Café is a thought-provoking and engaging exploration of the intersection between science, spirituality, and culture, and offers a valuable perspective on the potential of plant medicines to transform our understanding of ourselves and the natural world.
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Top 10 Brainforest Café Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Brainforest Café episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Brainforest Café for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Brainforest Café episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Brainforest Café - From True Hallucinations to Modern Reality
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10/07/24 • 83 min

John O’Connor is from Kalamazoo, Michigan. His recent book, The Secret History of Bigfoot: Field Notes on a North American Monster, explores the obsessive world of Bigfoot believers. His essays have appeared in The New York Times, Oxford American, GQ, Creative Nonfiction’s True Story series, and elsewhere. He teaches journalism at Boston College. His upcoming book traces a historical path from Terence and Dennis ́s McKenna "Experiment at La Chorrera" to our current psychedelic moment.

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Brainforest Café - From Ayahuasca Explorations to an End of Life Doula
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07/22/24 • 65 min

By the time Annelise was seven years old, she had lived in Istanbul for five years and travelled around the world. By the age of twenty, she had lived in England and Spain, and had a passion for learning languages and experiencing diverse cultures. This contributed to her going to Brazil to study its culture and history, a time which profoundly influenced the rest of her life. Her professional careers have ranged from Runway Model, to Director of HR in a corporation, Author, and Death Doula for thirty years. “Ayahuasca, Sacred Medicine” shares these exciting, often wondrous, and sometimes awful experiences from her life.

In 1977, she drank Ayahuasca for the first time with a Brazilian spiritual group, the UDV (Uniao do Vegetal). She was a member for eighteen years, and served as a primary translator. Her story of rituals, the strength of community, and the years of deepening awareness portrays a tradition of mystery with ancient roots, and also a very modern drama involving stark and honest revelation. The story shares the role of Ayahuasca in opening Annelise to dimensions beyond this realm. Those expereinces led to the healing of old wounds, a significant change in the trajectory of her life, and deeper happiness in her everyday life. The book is a great repository of factual and experiential information for understanding the science and the mystery of the many aspects of Ayahuasca.

Over many years, Annelise has written articles and presented her knowledge at conferences dedicated to studying Ayahuasca. From the intimate perspective of a translator and interpreter, Annelise adventured with researchers involved in Ethnobotany and learned first hand the personal, cultural, and scientific significance of Ayahuasca in human development. Her work has contributed beautiful knowledge and personal experience to the conscious exploration of this sacred medicine. This book offers wisdom and realistic and grounded knowledge of how Ayahuasca can lead to spiritual awakening, emotional and physical healing, and the deepening of our human connection with nature.

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Brainforest Café - From Zen to Psychedelics

From Zen to Psychedelics

Brainforest Café

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03/18/24 • 81 min

Erik F. Storlie, PhD, entered graduate school at Berkeley in 1962 intending to become a medievalist. Experience with cannabis, peyote, mushrooms, and LSD prompted an interest in Zen and the synergies between meditation and psychedelic medicine. He is retired from teaching meditation and mindfulness at The University of Minnesota and has published two memoirs that speak to sixty years of meditation and psychedelic exploration: Nothing on my Mind: Berkeley, LSD, Two Zen Masters; and Go Deep and Take Plenty of Root.

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Brainforest Café - Modern Science & Ancestral Eastern Healing Practices
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06/18/23 • 67 min

A conversation with Shauheen Etminan & Jonathan Lu.

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Dr. Barbara Thiers is the director emerita in the Division of Plant Research and Conservation at the New York Botanical Garden. Prior to her retirement, she was the Patricia K. Holmgren director of the William and Linda Steer herbarium, the world's third largest herbarium, housing over 7.9 million collections of algae, broophytes, fungi, and vascular plant. She applied her interest in herbarium science and information technology to develop the CV Star Virtual herbarium, which contains a searchable database of digitized herbarium specimens. She is also the editor of the Index Herberorium, the guide to the world's approximately 3300 herbaria. Dr. theers is widely recognized for her contributions to efforts to digitize the world's natural history collections. In 2020, to help educate the public as to the importance of herbaria and botanical history, she published a beautifully illustrated book entitled herbaria the quest to preserve and classify the World's plants, published by Timber press. She is past president of the American Society of Plant Taxonomists and past president of the Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections. She's a member of the Board of the Natural Science Collections Alliance and member of the External Advisory Board of ID Bio the National Collections Digitization Hub.

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Dr. David E.Nichols is one of the world’s foremost authorities on the chemistry and pharmacology of psychedelic substances.

In 1993, with the collaboration of colleagues, Dr. Nichols founded the Heffter Research Institute, realizing his vision of a privately funded Institute as the most effective mechanism for bringing research on psychedelic agents into the modern era of neuroscience. Since its founding it has emerged as a leading force advancing psychedelic research in numerous institutions.

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Brainforest Café - On Ancient Archeology And Psychedelics
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08/14/23 • 57 min

A conversation with Graham Hancock.

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Brainforest Café - God on Psychedelics

God on Psychedelics

Brainforest Café

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01/16/24 • 52 min

Don Lattin is an American journalist who has been exploring the interface between psychedelics and religion in America since the end of the 90s. His books include "Shopping for Faith: American Religions in the new Millenium" (co-authored with Richard Cimino & Jose Basse, 1998); "Following our Bliss: How the Spiritual Ideals of the Sixities Influence Our Lives Today" (2003); "Jesus Freaks: A True Story of Murder and Madness on the Evangelical Edge" (2007); and "The Harvard Psychedelic Club: How Timogthy Leary, Ram Dass, Huston Smith, and Andy Weil Killed the 60s and Ushered in a New Age for America" (2010); "Changing our Minds: Psychedelic Sacraments and the New Psychotherapy" (2017). His most recent book is "God on Psychedelics: Tripping Across the Rubble of Old Time Religion" (2023) which explores the emerging integration of psychedelic mystical experiences into mainstream religious practices. He has been an adjunct faculty member in the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley, and for two decades was a staff writer covering religion, spirituality and psychology at the San Francisco Chronicle. In addition to his published books, his work has been widely published in many US magazines and newspapers. Don kindly took time from his busy schedule at the MAPS Psychedelic Science Conference in Denver last June 2023 to record this Interview for the Brainforest Café.

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Brainforest Café - Civilization: is it worth it?
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12/31/23 • 66 min

Dr. Ryan is an astute observer, commentator and fellow experiencer of the human condition. Unlike most of us, his insights into the existential human situation undermine conventional wisdom, and are often profoundly unsettling. This approach is reflected in his best selling book, “Sex at Dawn” (2010) which calls into question nearly everything we think we understand about human sexuality. His latest book, “Civilized to Death: the Price of Progress”, takes on the very notion of Civilization and what he terms the Narrative of Perpetual Progress. From the book’s description: Most of us can feel that something’s off—balmy December days, face-to-face conversation replaced with screen-to-screen zomboidism, a world at constant war, a political system in disarray. We hear some lies so frequently that they begin to feel like facts: Civilization is humankind’s greatest accomplishment. Progress is undeniable. We’re lucky to be alive here and now. Well, maybe we are and maybe we aren’t. Civilized to Death counters the idea that “progress” is inherently good, arguing that the progress defining our age may be analogous to an advancing disease. The ideas Chris Ryan unpacks in this book have reframed much of what I assumed to be true about civilization and the evolution of our species. It has been a most unsettling experience, as much as it has been edifying, stimulating, and enlightening.

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Michael Coe, PhD, is an applied ecologist and ethnobiology research fellow at the French National Institute for Research and Development (IRD) and Mediterranean Institute of Biodiversity and Ecology (IMBE) in Marseille, France. Michael is working to help promote the revitalization of ethnobiology at academic institutions in the United States, to help provide a global synthesis on the sustainability and of non-timber forest products, and to help Indigenous-led efforts aiming to facilitate sustainable ayahuasca management in the Peruvian Amazon.

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FAQ

How many episodes does Brainforest Café have?

Brainforest Café currently has 25 episodes available.

What topics does Brainforest Café cover?

The podcast is about Society & Culture, Natural Sciences, Podcasts, Science and Philosophy.

What is the most popular episode on Brainforest Café?

The episode title 'Herbaria: Their role in protecting biodiversity and indigenous knowledge' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on Brainforest Café?

The average episode length on Brainforest Café is 68 minutes.

How often are episodes of Brainforest Café released?

Episodes of Brainforest Café are typically released every 14 days, 1 hour.

When was the first episode of Brainforest Café?

The first episode of Brainforest Café was released on Jun 18, 2023.

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