Well, not everyone. Not the outsider, raised in a different culture.
> You can't by it from
>him for $22.  He won't even sell it to you for $100.  You offer him $1000,
>$10,000 and he just laughs in your face.  No, it's worth *more* than all
>that.  But you can have it if you want it.  It'll take a while, though.
>You might have to study for ten years, but if you *really* want it...
And what will I end up with? I'll be a shaman. What will I have done of 
worth for any generation to come, or for a stranger, or another culture? 
Nada.
>(This is the point, Wade, where the scientificly trained white
>anthropologist throws up his hands and, declaring it all a sham, goes back
>home to his safe, simple suburban home.)
Actually, once people get by the idea that only this immersion is a valid 
method of studying them, they are free to actually start analyzing them 
objectively and disinterestedly. (And yes, I know the whole cycle is 
required....) This leads to some important medical findings, once you 
take the 'magic' out of the herb. It's all heresy, of course, to the 
shaman.
I reiterate- the shaman is only a shaman within his own culture. Taken 
outside, he is a sham. Science, and the scientist, do not have a culture 
(in the same sense- I don't want a semantic squabble about 'culture') 
which they can step outside of and perish.
Now- to you, (I think) this validates the shaman. To me, this relegates 
him and his methods to curiosity.
Not that I ain't curious.
But I (personally) ain't got ten years, either.
                   *****************
                     Wade T. Smith  
morbius@channel1.com      |  "There ain't nothin' you    
wade_smith@harvard.edu    |    shouldn't do to a god."
morbius@cyberwarped.com   |
******* http://www.channel1.com/users/morbius/ *******