kolorit said:Priests and other Christian men started out just the same as curanderos. The early european mystics had a similar amount of knowledge about curing and helping people as the "People of Shamanistic Ascendence".
1.As you can see, we might be able to seperate the practices, but the believes are not that easily distinguished.
2.You may be talking about Curanderos, who work with proven & specific plants on ill patients, but you can also talk about Tunguskian Shamans, who are doing rather less healing and more ceremony, like weddings, good luck charms and the such.
3.Wouldn't you agree, that all of these practices originate from belief first and foremost?
4.I dont quite know, if you are referring to me as the one who is "screwing" with tradition.
Tradition seems to me (right now) like some sort of stagnating, repeated memory of distant past, very limited and unfitting.
kolorit said:But the problem that people of modernized culture suddenly call themselves shamans and take huge amounts of psychedelic drugs is a deeper problem then that. And I seriously doubt that traditions have much to offer as a solution.
ganesh said:Kolorit,
I think you have some good points to make, and this goes to illustrate the large complexity and of the subject, and why i believe it's important to be SPECIFIC, and focus on facts rather than projections, and associated 'fluff'.

Hiyo Quicksilver said:If the question really is "how does one become a shaman", then there is no definitive answer. Since the word "Shamanism" has come to be used as a descriptor for a wide variety of religious practices across a worldwide spectrum of cultures, the answer depends on the context in which you're speaking. Specifically, in regard to what culture's practices you're referring to.
That aside, I see no real distinction here between "Shamanism" and "Neoshamanism"... And I do believe that more attention to that distinction could seamlessly clear away much of the division in this discussion.
Given that many of us are speaking of Native-American influenced practices in the context of western spirituality, it should be noted when one is, in fact, referring to neoshamanic practice or indigenous shamanic tradition.
And, if one is speaking specifically in regard to neoshamanism, then it is important to note that neoshamanic practice claims no adherence to any traditional indigenous practice, and does not by default imply any requirement or prohibition of their appropriation.
Putting down a Neoshaman because they do not adhere to or respect indigenous shamanism is as ignorant and absurd as putting down a Buddhist for not adhering to traditional Hinduism, or a Christian for not practicing Judaism. :thumb_dow
