Food of the Gods
The Search for the Original Tree of Knowledge — a radical history of plants, drugs, and human evolution
Tradition: Psychedelic philosophy / ethnobotany
The "stoned ape" thesis — psychedelic mushrooms catalysed the emergence of human consciousness, language, and culture
Food of the Gods (1992) is McKenna's most systematic work, presenting the "stoned ape" hypothesis: that the ingestion of psilocybin mushrooms by early hominids on the African savanna catalysed the development of language, symbolic thought, and religious consciousness. McKenna surveys the history of human relationships with psychoactive plants from the Palaeolithic through Amazonian shamanism to modern drug policy, arguing that the suppression of psychedelic experience is the root cause of the modern "dominator" culture of ecocide, addiction, and alienation. The book proposes a return to an "archaic revival" — a partnership with psychedelic plants as the path to ecological and spiritual renewal.
Author
Editions cited
- Food of the Gods: The Search for the Original Tree of Knowledge (Bantam, 1992)
School Embodiments
Food of the Gods is the most ambitious theoretical statement of the psychedelic-entheogenic tradition — psychoactive plants as co-evolutionary partners in the emergence of human consciousness.
"My contention is that mutation-Loss of the symbiotic relationship with psilocybin mushrooms catalysed the emergence of human self-reflection." (Food of the Gods, chapter 2)
McKenna's diagnosis of modern crisis is ecological: the dominator culture has severed the human-nature bond, and psychedelic plants are the lost link.
"The suppression of shamanic gnosis has led to the planet-destroying ego of industrial civilization." (Food of the Gods, chapter 14)
McKenna draws extensively on indigenous shamanic traditions and proposes a return to the animist-relational framework in which plants are teachers and partners.
"The shaman's journey is a partnership with the plant spirit — a relationship older than civilization." (Food of the Gods, chapter 5)
McKenna's vision of reality as a process of increasing novelty — culminating in his "timewave" theory — has process-philosophical resonances.
"The universe is a novelty-conserving engine." (Food of the Gods, chapter 15)
The "archaic revival" — the return to a pre-modern partnership with nature — is recognisably Romantic in its structure.
"What we need is an archaic revival — a re-immersion in the psychedelic mysteries that formed us." (Food of the Gods, conclusion)
The "stoned ape" thesis is an evolutionary hypothesis — McKenna proposes a specific mechanism (psilocybin-enhanced cognition) for the rapid expansion of the human brain.
"Psilocybin at low doses improves visual acuity; at higher doses it triggers boundary dissolution and glossolalia — the precursor of language." (Food of the Gods, chapter 3)
Internal Tensions
The central tension is scientific credibility: the "stoned ape" hypothesis remains speculative and has not been adopted by mainstream paleoanthropology or evolutionary biology. McKenna's rhetorical brilliance sometimes outstrips his evidentiary base. A second tension is between McKenna's genuine ecological concern and his romanticism about pre-modern societies — the "archaic revival" idealises a past that may never have existed as described.
I. Time
McKenna's time-frame spans from the Palaeolithic hominid past to a speculative future of renewed psychedelic partnership. His "timewave" theory proposes an acceleration of novelty toward a transcendent endpoint.
Attributes
II. Space
The spatial scope ranges from the African savanna to the Amazon to the global industrial civilization McKenna critiques. Psychedelic space is non-local — the inner journey transcends ordinary spatial boundaries.
Attributes
III. Matter
The psychoactive molecules — psilocybin, DMT, mescaline — are the material agents of McKenna's thesis. Matter is real and consequential; specific molecular structures reshape consciousness.
Attributes
IV. Observer
The observer in McKenna's framework is the psychedelic experiencer — embodied but capable of trans-spatial, trans-temporal experience under the influence of psychoactive plants. Active and participatory.
Attributes
V. Energy
The energies of psychedelic experience — neurochemical, experiential, cultural — are the medium of McKenna's argument. The suppression of these energies produces the pathologies of dominator culture.
Attributes
VI. Information
Psychedelic experience is information-rich — McKenna treats the visions, glossolalia, and boundary-dissolution of the psychedelic state as genuine informational content, not mere hallucination.
Attributes
Personas that cite this work
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Food of the Gods resolves each dilemma
48 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 12 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 9 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas, all mainstream
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.
23 mainstream positions
9 unaligned
Information · 4 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
Pattern, memory, and what is preserved or lost.