Dennis McKenna: The Chemistry Behind the Coca Leaf
MAR 16, 202663 MIN
Dennis McKenna: The Chemistry Behind the Coca Leaf
MAR 16, 202663 MIN
Description
The Many Faces of Coca – Part TwoIn Part Two of the Many Faces of Coca series, 3L1T3 and Bryan sit down with renowned ethnopharmacologist Dennis McKenna to explore the science behind the coca leaf.Part One focused on history and politics with Wade Davis, this conversation turns to the biology and chemistry of the plant itself.What actually happens when coca is chewed?What compounds exist in the leaf besides cocaine?Why did human cultures independently domesticate coca multiple times?Dennis breaks down the alkaloid chemistry, pharmacology, and plant symbiosis that shaped coca’s role in Andean societies for thousands of years.Along the way, the conversation explores:• The three coca species used by humans• Why coca and cocaine are chemically and culturally different• The entourage effect of whole plant medicines• How alkaline activation changes coca absorption• Why coca chewing may help treat cocaine addiction• The scientific questions prohibition has prevented researchers from askingThe result is a clearer picture of a plant that has been misunderstood for over a century.This episode is Part Two of a three-part series examining coca from history, chemistry, and lived experience.Part Three will explore how coca prohibition shapes real life in Andean communities with Manuela Picq.Key PointsCoca comes from three main domesticated species in the genus Erythroxylum.The coca leaf contains multiple alkaloids, not just cocaine.Cocaine is only one compound within a larger phytochemical matrix in the leaf.Traditional coca chewing uses alkaline substances to increase alkaloid absorption.Whole plant use produces a broader entourage effect compared to isolated cocaine.Indigenous cultures independently domesticated coca multiple times across South America.Coca may help high-altitude populations adapt through increased energy, nutrition, and appetite suppression.Cocaine acts primarily as a dopamine reuptake inhibitor in the brain.Some evidence suggests chewing coca may help people transition away from cocaine dependenceChapters:00:00 – What Is Coca? The Question That Starts Everything00:44 – Major Psilocybin News: Compass Pathways Phase 3 Results04:28 – The Many Faces of Coca Series (Part 2 Introduction)07:36 – Dennis McKenna Joins the Conversation08:09 – Coca vs Cocaine: The Botanical Reality15:06 – Why Humans Domesticated Coca18:23 – Why Humans Seek Altered States of Consciousness26:06 – What’s Actually Inside the Coca Leaf?31:31 – Why Coca Is Not the Same as Cocaine36:48 – Is Coca Addictive? The Science Explained42:23 – The Medical Potential of Coca48:41 – Why Drug Laws Block Scientific Research55:25 – What We Learned From the Chemistry of Coca59:33 – The War on Drugs and the Economics of Coca01:00:42 – Next Episode: The Human Cost of Prohibition Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D, Mike, and Oceanna, on Patreon! https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod