Travis Kitchens
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
to who we are as people maybe you can't get rid of it maybe it's not a tale from a from an earlier stage of evolution maybe there's something to it where you can't get rid of it that's the tradition that we're in the psychedelic literature and psychedelic studies are not a part of the history of science they're part now they are but they're part of the history of religious studies it comes out of these battles of which go back hundreds of years does that make sense
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Could be. Any kind of large-scale theory like that is probably going to be almost always wrong. People need to think on a much smaller scale because then you have a chance of it actually being true. When you're thinking of large scale, but what they are is sometimes a good starting point. Maybe this happened, and then you start working on other little elements of it.
Could be. Any kind of large-scale theory like that is probably going to be almost always wrong. People need to think on a much smaller scale because then you have a chance of it actually being true. When you're thinking of large scale, but what they are is sometimes a good starting point. Maybe this happened, and then you start working on other little elements of it.
Could be. Any kind of large-scale theory like that is probably going to be almost always wrong. People need to think on a much smaller scale because then you have a chance of it actually being true. When you're thinking of large scale, but what they are is sometimes a good starting point. Maybe this happened, and then you start working on other little elements of it.
But here's what I was talking about, what you're talking about. Here's a book you should read. It's by Colin Kidd, and it's called The World of Mr. Kazabon. And if you want to understand the tradition of literature this is in, this is the book you should read because it goes into Graham Hancock's forebears and where he got all of these ideas. Mr. Who, Kazabon? Kazabon.
But here's what I was talking about, what you're talking about. Here's a book you should read. It's by Colin Kidd, and it's called The World of Mr. Kazabon. And if you want to understand the tradition of literature this is in, this is the book you should read because it goes into Graham Hancock's forebears and where he got all of these ideas. Mr. Who, Kazabon? Kazabon.
But here's what I was talking about, what you're talking about. Here's a book you should read. It's by Colin Kidd, and it's called The World of Mr. Kazabon. And if you want to understand the tradition of literature this is in, this is the book you should read because it goes into Graham Hancock's forebears and where he got all of these ideas. Mr. Who, Kazabon? Kazabon.
He's a character in the novel Middlemarch. C-A-U-S-A-B-O-N. Yeah, Colin Kidd. It's a hilarious book. It's a short book, and everybody should read it who's interested in these topics. Because what you get are the original Graham Hancocks. And you get also Carl Rucks, the people before him who were saying, you know, people even in the late 1800s were already saying, what if Jesus was a shaman?
He's a character in the novel Middlemarch. C-A-U-S-A-B-O-N. Yeah, Colin Kidd. It's a hilarious book. It's a short book, and everybody should read it who's interested in these topics. Because what you get are the original Graham Hancocks. And you get also Carl Rucks, the people before him who were saying, you know, people even in the late 1800s were already saying, what if Jesus was a shaman?
He's a character in the novel Middlemarch. C-A-U-S-A-B-O-N. Yeah, Colin Kidd. It's a hilarious book. It's a short book, and everybody should read it who's interested in these topics. Because what you get are the original Graham Hancocks. And you get also Carl Rucks, the people before him who were saying, you know, people even in the late 1800s were already saying, what if Jesus was a shaman?
You started to get books like that. Really? Yes. And you started to get like there's a book, Cock Lane and Common Sense by Andrew Lang, who was a. I think he was British, but he was a paranormal researcher. And he had what was called a predecessor to the drug theory called the hallucination theory of religion.
You started to get books like that. Really? Yes. And you started to get like there's a book, Cock Lane and Common Sense by Andrew Lang, who was a. I think he was British, but he was a paranormal researcher. And he had what was called a predecessor to the drug theory called the hallucination theory of religion.
You started to get books like that. Really? Yes. And you started to get like there's a book, Cock Lane and Common Sense by Andrew Lang, who was a. I think he was British, but he was a paranormal researcher. And he had what was called a predecessor to the drug theory called the hallucination theory of religion.
And so they were already starting to figure out like, hold on, the people in these books are all having visions. What's going on here? And at the same time, you had Havelock Ellis and other psychologists experimenting with drugs, and they started to put it together. They started to go, hold on a second. What if they were on drugs? Well, you can imagine how this went over. It was taboo then.
And so they were already starting to figure out like, hold on, the people in these books are all having visions. What's going on here? And at the same time, you had Havelock Ellis and other psychologists experimenting with drugs, and they started to put it together. They started to go, hold on a second. What if they were on drugs? Well, you can imagine how this went over. It was taboo then.
And so they were already starting to figure out like, hold on, the people in these books are all having visions. What's going on here? And at the same time, you had Havelock Ellis and other psychologists experimenting with drugs, and they started to put it together. They started to go, hold on a second. What if they were on drugs? Well, you can imagine how this went over. It was taboo then.
it's taboo now.