In the past, you've been critical of free trade and agriculture. Today, we live in an era of rising protectionism. In your second book, called a place of my own, the architecture of day dreams, you argue that a writer's second book is the key to understanding that writer giveen where you are today. I think every writer has a set of kind of final questions all their work. If you keep going, well, come back to that.
Michael Pollan has long been fascinated by nature and the ways we connect and clash with it, with decades of writing covering food, farming, cooking, and architecture. Pollan's latest fascination? Our widespread and ancient desire to use nature to change our consciousness.
He joins Tyler to discuss his research and experience with psychedelics, including what kinds of people most benefit from them, what it can teach us about profundity, how it can change your personality and political views, the importance of culture in shaping the experience, the proper way to integrate it into mainstream practice, and - most importantly of all - whether it's any fun.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded July 20th, 2018 Other ways to connect