R. Gordon Wasson (1898-1986) was a pioneer investigator of sacred indigenous mushroom rituals in Mexico in the 1950s. Albert Hofmann, the famed chemist who discovered the curious properties of LSD in 1943, recently celebrated his 100th birthday in Switzerland. Carl A. P. Ruck, an expert on ancient Greek ethnobotany, lives in Massachusetts.
“[Gordon Wasson has] made the specialty of mycology something of
universal importance and one of the pillars of anthropology and the
history of religions.”
—Octavio Paz, Nobel Prize-winning poet and author
“The Road to Eleusis grew out of a three-way collaboration of
scholar-scientists sparked by R. Gordon Wasson’s insight into the
true nature of an ancient religious ritual, the Eleusinian
Mysteries. In collaboration with the world-renowned chemist, Albert
Hofmann, and Carl Ruck, a Classical scholar specializing in the
ethnobotany of ancient Greece, they give solid foundation to what
Wasson deduced as the essence of the Mysteries. The three authors
present their findings and their evidence, drawing the specialties
of their three fields together in fascinatingly persuasive
form.
“The content of those Mysteries is, together with the identity of
India’s sacred soma plant, one of the two best kept secrets in
history, and this book is the most successful attempt I know to
unlock it. Triangulating the resources of an eminent Classics
scholar, the most creative mycologist of our time, and the
discoverer of LSD, [The Road to Eleusis] is a historical tour de
force while being more than that. For by direct implication it
raises contemporary questions which our cultural establishment has
thus far deemed too hot to face.”
—Huston Smith, author of The World’s Religions
“The book’s themes of the universality of experiential religion,
the suppression of that knowledge by exploitative forces, and the
use of psychedelics to reconcile the human and natural worlds make
it a fascinating and timely read.”
—Gaia Media
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