Author

Publication

1992 - Oxford University Press, Oxford, England

Language

English

Word Count

58,000 words, Guess

Page Count

232 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • Better World Books9780198555612
  • Open LibraryOL1706072M

Classifications

  • DDC615/.1/09
  • LCCRM300 .M1845 1992
  • LCCRM300.M1845 1992

Description

People have always been curious about the plants and animals with which they coexist. Primitive cultures identified edible and poisonous plants by a process of trial and error, and then began to exploit the toxic materials for hunting, euthanasia, executions, and murder. Other plants were found to have stimulatory or hallucinogenic effects: these not only formed the basis of magico-religious rites, they also encouraged experimentation which led to the identification of plants with useful medicinal properties. This absorbing account of the evolution of modern medicine from its roots in folk medicine will entertain and inform both scientist and general reader alike. It explains the chemical basis of modern pharmacology, and provides a fascinating description of how the use and abuse of natural products in various societies throughout the ages has led to the development of many of the drugs we now take for granted. Many plant and animal species remain undiscovered, and much native folk medicine has yet to be investigated. Given the present wholesale destruction of many of the earth's wild places, this book is particularly timely: these potential sources of agents for murder, magic, and - in particular - medicine, could soon be lost for ever.

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