People evolved from monkeys through drugs: Drug addicts then created religions

Terence McKenna had originally given the theory that it was psychdelic mushrooms that had set in motion the rapid congnitive evolution of people. McKenna Theory was called “The Monkeys of Stone.” Although it was said that he had been rejected, this theory has already gained power. There seems to have been a fundamental difference in the co-gnitive skills between [...]
Although it was said that he had been rejected, this theory has already gained power.
There seems to have been a fundamental difference in the co-operational skills between the early Homo Sapiens and their immediate descendants, Homo erectus.
Of course, the erectus stood and walked vertically a giant step forward, but with the arrival of Homo Sapiens, we see traces of art, pictography, and the use of the work elements, and during that period the use of language, follows Periscope from BigThink.
In the 1990s, psychiatrists of psicdelic drugs and ethnobotanist Teresa McKenna published his book called “due to the gods” in which he assumed that the once giant and permanent step before the homo sapiens was made by the discovery of magic mushrooms.
The scientific community had never seriously considered McKenna's theory, but these days, his ideas have already been strongly restored.
Micologist Paul Stamentes said McKenna was right all along.
According to McKenna's hypothesis, “people were starting to migrate to new areas, and at some point we got into psychdelic mushrooms grown in cow dung, and then we ate them. After we had swallowed them, their brains began to tire out, seeking new skills to process information.
Many modern psychiatrists claim that the world never looks the same after an experience with these drugs.
It was this time when the Homo Sapiens began to make religious rituals, make calendars, and invent magic and so on.”Periscope












