Keywords
Ecology Religious aspectsPiaroa
Culrural neurophenomenology
Magic
Piaroa mythology
Shamanism
Healers
Piaroa Indians Social life and customs
Yopo
Venezuela
Hallucinogens
Piaroa Indians Religious life
Indians of South America
Shamans
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This thesis presents an analysis of Piaroa shamanic practices that combines elements of symbolic, psychobiological and phenomenological approaches. Theories from, and clinical findings in, neuroscience, pharmacology, psychology and psychoneuroimmunology are integrated with extended participant observation field study involving basic shamanic training to demonstrate how Piaroa shamans learn to understand and effect biopsychosocial adaptation and promote health. It is argued that Piaroa shamanism is a sophisticated means of interpreting ecological forces and emotional processes in the interests of minimising stress across related systems: self, society, ecosystem, and cosmos. Piaroa shamans should be cadres in the promotion of an ethos, the good life of tranquillity, which serves as the basis for low-stress social relations. Piaroa mythology is predicated upon human-animal-god reciprocity and provides the shaman with a series of informationprocessing templates, designed to be invoked with the use of hallucinogens, which assist him to understand inter-systemic relations. I analyse how Piaroa shamans develop the psychic skills to divine and regulate ecological relationships and emotional processes, while highlighting possible relationships among native symbolism, neurology, consciousness and the emotions. It is argued that Piaroa shamanic practices involve conditioning the mind to achieve optimal perceptive capacities that, in association with sensitive biopsychosocial study, facilitate accurate prediction and successful psychosocial prescription. A cultural neurophenomenological approach enables articulation of the psychocultural logic of ethos, epistemology, divination, sorcery, and curing, and a fuller picture of a South American indigenous society’s shamanic practices than less integrative approaches have affordedDate
2004Type
thesisIdentifier
oai:arrow.nla.gov.au:128495847246231http://repository.uwa.edu.au:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=7997&local_base=GEN01-INS01
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Aproximación a la actitud ante la malaria, etnias Yanomami, Piaroa y Yekuana, comunidades del Alto Orinoco. Amazonas, Venezuela - 2013 [Approach to the attitude to malaria,etnias Yanomami, Piaroa and Yekuana, High Orinoco communities. Amazon, Venezuela - 2013]Loaiza Borges, Lisbeth; Cardozo de Angulo, Rosa Alba; Poveda, José M.; Zurlo, María (Universidad de los Andes Venezuela, 2015)"En los últimos 20 años se registró una alarmante progresión de la Malaria en el continente americano. Se investigó el Municipio Autónomo Alto Orinoco por ser un área hiperendémica y completamente aislada. Existen 17 grupos étnicos, destacando los Yanomami, Piaroa, Yekuana y Guahibo, cada uno con su lenguaje, religiones, tradiciones y costumbres diferentes. Se exploró a los indígenas encuestados desde el punto de vista epidemiológico y existencial, a través de la encuesta aplicada por Rifá en comunidades maláricas de Asia. Un total de 452 individuos fueron censados (58 % del total de la población de las comunidades visitadas), de las cuales 257 pobladores mayores de 19 años, fueron entrevistados, 53% de los Yanomamis, 26% de los Piaroas, y 21% del total eran Yecuanas. 48% fueron hembras y 52% hombres, predominaron los menores de 44 años, las viviendas de las cinco comunidades estudiadas de Yanomami fueron shaponos, y hubo mayor vulnerabilidad en las comunidades Yanomami a la adquisición de otras enfermedades transmisibles. En relación a la creencia acerca de la intervención de los espíritus en la evolución de la Malaria, 60% de los encuestados de la etnia Yanomami consideraron necesaria la intervención del Chaman en el tratamiento de la Malaria. La etnia más afectada es la Yanomami por estar muy dispersa, convivir en viviendas multifamiliares y abiertas denominadas shapono, sin servicios sanitarios básicos y la mayoría distante de escuelas, ambulatorios de salud y actividades de intercambio económico El chamán continúa jugando un papel vital en las comunidades de la etnia Yanomami estudiadas" ["In the past 20 years was recorded an alarming increase of Malaria in the Americas. It investigated the autonomous high Orinoco communities for being a hyperendemic area completely isolated. There are 17 ethnic groups, prominence Piaroa, Yanomami, Yekuana and Guahibo, each one with its language, religions, traditions and different customs. It explored the Indians surveyed from the existential, and epidemiological perspective through the survey by raffle in malarious from Asian communities. A total of 452 individuals were surveyed (58% of the total population of the communities visited), of which 257 residents over the age of 19, were interviewed, 53 per cent of the Yanomami, 26% of the Piaroas, and 21% of the total were Yecuanas. 48% were females and 52% men, predominated minors aged 44, dwellings of the five communities studied of Yanomami were shaponos, and there was increased vulnerability in the Yanomami communities in the acquisition of other communicable diseases. In relation to the belief about the intervention of the spirits in the evolution of Malaria, 60% of respondents of the Yanomami ethnic group considered necessary the intervention of the shaman in the treatment of Malaria. The ethnic group most affected is the Yanomami be very spread, live together in open and multi-family dwellings called shapono, without basic health services and the most distant of schools, health clinics and economic exchange activities the shaman continues to play a vital role in the communities of the Yanomami ethnic group studied"]
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The biocultural ecology of Piaroa shamanic practiceRodd, Robin (University of Western Australia. School of Social and Cultural StudiesUniversity of Western Australia. Anthropology and Sociology Discipline Group, 2005)This thesis presents an analysis of Piaroa shamanic practices that combines elements of symbolic, psychobiological and phenomenological approaches. Theories from, and clinical findings in, neuroscience, pharmacology, psychology and psychoneuroimmunology are integrated with extended participant observation field study involving basic shamanic training to demonstrate how Piaroa shamans learn to understand and effect biopsychosocial adaptation and promote health. It is argued that Piaroa shamanism is a sophisticated means of interpreting ecological forces and emotional processes in the interests of minimising stress across related systems: self, society, ecosystem, and cosmos. Piaroa shamans should be cadres in the promotion of an ethos, the good life of tranquillity, which serves as the basis for low-stress social relations. Piaroa mythology is predicated upon human-animal-god reciprocity and provides the shaman with a series of informationprocessing templates, designed to be invoked with the use of hallucinogens, which assist him to understand inter-systemic relations. I analyse how Piaroa shamans develop the psychic skills to divine and regulate ecological relationships and emotional processes, while highlighting possible relationships among native symbolism, neurology, consciousness and the emotions. It is argued that Piaroa shamanic practices involve conditioning the mind to achieve optimal perceptive capacities that, in association with sensitive biopsychosocial study, facilitate accurate prediction and successful psychosocial prescription. A cultural neurophenomenological approach enables articulation of the psychocultural logic of ethos, epistemology, divination, sorcery, and curing, and a fuller picture of a South American indigenous society’s shamanic practices than less integrative approaches have afforded
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The biocultural ecology of Piaroa shamanic practiceRodd, Robin (University of Western Australia. Anthropology and Sociology Discipline GroupUniversity of Western Australia. School of Social and Cultural Studies, 2005)This thesis presents an analysis of Piaroa shamanic practices that combines elements of symbolic, psychobiological and phenomenological approaches. Theories from, and clinical findings in, neuroscience, pharmacology, psychology and psychoneuroimmunology are integrated with extended participant observation field study involving basic shamanic training to demonstrate how Piaroa shamans learn to understand and effect biopsychosocial adaptation and promote health. It is argued that Piaroa shamanism is a sophisticated means of interpreting ecological forces and emotional processes in the interests of minimising stress across related systems: self, society, ecosystem, and cosmos. Piaroa shamans should be cadres in the promotion of an ethos, the good life of tranquillity, which serves as the basis for low-stress social relations. Piaroa mythology is predicated upon human-animal-god reciprocity and provides the shaman with a series of informationprocessing templates, designed to be invoked with the use of hallucinogens, which assist him to understand inter-systemic relations. I analyse how Piaroa shamans develop the psychic skills to divine and regulate ecological relationships and emotional processes, while highlighting possible relationships among native symbolism, neurology, consciousness and the emotions. It is argued that Piaroa shamanic practices involve conditioning the mind to achieve optimal perceptive capacities that, in association with sensitive biopsychosocial study, facilitate accurate prediction and successful psychosocial prescription. A cultural neurophenomenological approach enables articulation of the psychocultural logic of ethos, epistemology, divination, sorcery, and curing, and a fuller picture of a South American indigenous society’s shamanic practices than less integrative approaches have afforded