Literature DB >> 1881155

Does pharmacology corroborate the nicotine therapy and practices of South American shamanism?

J Wilbert1.   

Abstract

The use of tobacco by South American Indians is deeply rooted in their culture and thought. From early pre-Columbian times to the present, tobacco has functioned as an important psychotropic drug for magico-religious, medicinal and recreational purposes. Native interest in tobacco centers on the nicotine alkaloid it contains. Data culled from about 1800 sources and pertaining to nearly 300 societies reveal that South American Indians employ six major and several minor means of nicotine application. There exists a close functional relationship between tobacco and shamanism. The empirical ethnographical data base of nicotine application is compared to the comprehensive literature of experimental clinical studies of tobacco and nicotine. Ritual tobacco use aims to achieve acute nicotine intoxication. The pharmacological effects of the alkaloid on the human body are shown to have informed shamanic therapeutic practices and beliefs. Closely associated with soil cultivation, tobacco use in the New World is much more recent than shamanism. Thus, it is not the drug that gave origin to shamanic religion but religion that informed the effects of the drug.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1881155     DOI: 10.1016/0378-8741(91)90115-t

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol        ISSN: 0378-8741            Impact factor:   4.360


  3 in total

1.  "Tobacco Is the Chief Medicinal Plant in My Work": Therapeutic Uses of Tobacco in Peruvian Amazonian Medicine Exemplified by the Work of a Maestro Tabaquero.

Authors:  Ilana Berlowitz; Ernesto García Torres; Heinrich Walt; Ursula Wolf; Caroline Maake; Chantal Martin-Soelch
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2020-10-07       Impact factor: 5.810

2.  Traditional medicine applied by the Saraguro yachakkuna: a preliminary approach to the use of sacred and psychoactive plant species in the southern region of Ecuador.

Authors:  Chabaco Armijos; Iuliana Cota; Silvia González
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2014-02-24       Impact factor: 2.733

3.  Amazonian Medicine and the Psychedelic Revival: Considering the "Dieta".

Authors:  David M O'Shaughnessy; Ilana Berlowitz
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2021-05-28       Impact factor: 5.810

  3 in total

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