The history of each of these species is fascinating. To illustrate his point, Michael Pollan gives us the history of four common plants that have greatly affected mankind: the apple, the tulip, marijuana, and the potato. Pollan’s thesis in a nutshell (and his name is rather appropriate here), is that we are human bumblebees of a sort, lured by our desires to seminate seeds and further the evolutionary whims of plants in a reciprocal dance in which they are every bit as much in charge as we, evolutionarily speaking. In his intriguing book, The Botany of Desire But what if instead of controlling plants, it’s the other way around – plants manipulating us, satisfying our needs so that we will do their bidding, which is to aid them in their endless quest to propagate? This, at least, is the highly original notion of Michael Pollan Higher civilization itself, you might say, began when people learned to farm. One of the pivotal moments in our history, anthropologists like to say, is when mankind learned to domesticate plants, becoming farmers instead of hunter-gatherers, thereby insuring a steady food supply and giving birth to settled communities. Please follow us on Picture by Peter HägerĪs humans, we take ourselves fairly seriously, imaging we are in charge of the world around us.
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