Anthropology of Consciousness

Abstract


Volume 14, Number 2, September-December 2003, pages 60-88

Märipa: To Know Everything
The Experience of Power as Knowledge Derived from the Integrative Mode of Consciousness

Robin Rodd
Department of Anthropology and Sociology
The University of Western Australia
Nedlands, Western Australia, 6907
Fax: (61)8-9380-1062
rrodd@cyllene.uwa.edu.au

Shamans of the Piaroa ethnic group (southern Venezuela) conceive of power in terms of  knowledge derived from visionary experiences. Märipa is an epistemology concerning the translation of knowledge derived from the integrative mode of consciousness, induced primarily through the consumption of plant hallucinogens, to practical effect during waking life. I integrate mythological, neurobiological, experiential, and ethnographic data to demonstrate what märipa is, and how it functions. The theory and method of märipa underlie not only Piaroa shamanic activity, but all aspects of Piaroa life; mythology, causality, eschatology, and history. Piaroa shamanic practices involve conditioning the mind to achieve optimal perceptual capacities that facilitate accurate prediction and successful psycho-social prescription. Piaroa shamans describe their technologies of consciousness in terms of gods and spirits, but also in terms of 'studying' and the acquisition of information. Because neurobiological processes underlie the development and experience of märipa, the language of neurobiology enables a partial translation of this indigenous epistemology. The concepts of feedforward neural processing and somatic markers are central to the processes of mental imagery cultivation that Piaroa shamans employ to divine solutions to adaptive problems. Piaroa 'techniques of ecstasy' involve the ability to apply mythological templates of human adaptation to schemas of human behaviour based on years of social analysis in association with heightened information processing capacities derivative of refined experimentation with the integrative mode of consciousness.


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copyright 2004 American Anthropological Association