In his 1992 book Food of the Gods, new-age icon Terence McKenna hypothesized that the Neolithic culture that inhabited the site used psilocybin mushrooms as part of its religious ritual life, citing rock paintings showing persons holding mushroom-like objects in their hands, as well as mushrooms growing from their bodies.
Terence Stamp | Terence | Terence Reese | Terence Rattigan | Terence Koh | Virginia McKenna | Terence McKenna | Terence Hill | Terence Tao | Terence Conran | Richard McKenna | Terence Trent D'Arby | Terence Weil | Terence Fisher | Terence Donovan (photographer) | Terence Donovan | Terence Alexander | Regis McKenna | Kristine McKenna | Frank McKenna | Dave McKenna | Aline Brosh McKenna | Terence the Tractor | Terence O'Neill | Terence MacSwiney | Terence Lewin, Baron Lewin | Terence Hines | Terence Higgins, Baron Higgins | Terence E. McKnight | Terence Cooper |
Pêra invited three major counterculture American writers: Terence McKenna, Robert Anton Wilson and Rudy Rucker and asked them about the nature of time.
Operated as a partnership between author Jonathan Ott, botanist Rob Montgomery, businessman Ken Symington, and author Terence McKenna, the series brought together some of the most noted experts in entheogenic research, including Dr. Alexander and Ann Shulgin, Bret Blosser, Dr. Deborah Mash, Manuel and Donna Torres, Giorgio Samorini, Christian Rätsch, Dr. Claudia Müller-Ebeling, Dale Pendell, and others.
Certain representative works and artists are selected for detailed analysis, such as William Shakespeare's The Tempest, Francis Coppola's Apocalypse Now, William Blake, Eden Ahbez, the 13th Floor Elevators, the Mel Lyman Family, Terence McKenna, Grateful Dead, Philip K Dick, Father Yod & The Source Family, and several more.