52 min listen
Podcast 337 – “The World Could Be Anything”
ratings:
Length:
100 minutes
Released:
Dec 29, 2012
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Guest speaker: Terence McKenna
PROGRAM NOTES:
[NOTE: All quotations are by Terence McKenna.]
“And yet my, not only my faith, but my experience has led me to believe that the world is not a construction of space and time and matter and energy. That that mapping is insufficient. That the world is instead some kind of a linguistic construct. It is more in the nature of a sentence, or a novel, or a work of art than it is in the nature of these machine models of interlocking law that we inherit out of a thousand years of rational reductionism.”
“It seems to me that information is the thing which uses matter, uses light, uses spirit, uses whatever it can put its hands on to organize itself into higher and higher levels of self-reflection.”
“It's meanings that we need to coax into our lives.”
“And the whole schtick of the psychedelic experience, I think, is reclaim immediate experience, realize that you out vote all parliaments, police forces, and major newspapers on the planet because, who knows, they may be illusions.”
“The world could be anything, you know, It could be a solid state matrix of some sort. It could be an illusion. It could be a dream. I mean it really could be a dream.”
“In cyberspace things are built out of light.”
“Apparently, in the Avesta classical period [early Iron Age and before] no one would have dreamed of having a spiritual experience without resort to drugs.”
“To carry language from two dimensions into three is the task of the poets, and the rebels in the 20th Century.”
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MP3
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BOOKS MENTIONED IN THIS PODCAST
Starmaker
The Phenomenon of Man
Childhood's End
The City and the Stars
The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss
PROGRAM NOTES:
[NOTE: All quotations are by Terence McKenna.]
“And yet my, not only my faith, but my experience has led me to believe that the world is not a construction of space and time and matter and energy. That that mapping is insufficient. That the world is instead some kind of a linguistic construct. It is more in the nature of a sentence, or a novel, or a work of art than it is in the nature of these machine models of interlocking law that we inherit out of a thousand years of rational reductionism.”
“It seems to me that information is the thing which uses matter, uses light, uses spirit, uses whatever it can put its hands on to organize itself into higher and higher levels of self-reflection.”
“It's meanings that we need to coax into our lives.”
“And the whole schtick of the psychedelic experience, I think, is reclaim immediate experience, realize that you out vote all parliaments, police forces, and major newspapers on the planet because, who knows, they may be illusions.”
“The world could be anything, you know, It could be a solid state matrix of some sort. It could be an illusion. It could be a dream. I mean it really could be a dream.”
“In cyberspace things are built out of light.”
“Apparently, in the Avesta classical period [early Iron Age and before] no one would have dreamed of having a spiritual experience without resort to drugs.”
“To carry language from two dimensions into three is the task of the poets, and the rebels in the 20th Century.”
Download
MP3
PCs – Right click, select option
Macs – Ctrl-Click, select option
BOOKS MENTIONED IN THIS PODCAST
Starmaker
The Phenomenon of Man
Childhood's End
The City and the Stars
The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss
Released:
Dec 29, 2012
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Podcast 074 – “The Resacularization of the World” (Part 2): Guest speakers: Terence McKenna, Ralph Abraham, and Rupert Sheldrake - PROGRAM NOTES: (Minutes : Seconds into program) 07:18 Rupert Sheldrake: “If there were to be a true Mother Earth religion develop, by Psychedelic Salon