Etymology
/ et'e-mol'e-je / 1. the origin and history of words
The name of the genus "Psilocybe" comes from the
Greek words "psilos" (bare) and "kube"
(head), warped into New Latin to form "psilocybe".
Literally translated, this means "bald head", which
I suppose comes from their appearance. A rather inaccurate
comparison if you ask me, most bald people don't have
big pointy nipples on top of cone-shaped heads, even if they're
from Remulok, but I digress...
The best known hallucinogens in Psilocybe mushrooms are the
chemicals psilocybin and psilocin, which are discussed at
length in the next part. There remains a minor controversy
about the spelling of their names. Psilocybin and psilocin
are both alkaloids (nitrogen-containing substances found in
nature), and an effort in the 70's aimed to convert all alkaloid
names so that they end in -ine, like cocaine, caffeine, morphine,
etc. The names should thus be "psilocybine" and
"psilocine"; yet "psilocybine" is used
very rarely even in modern authoritative works, and I have
seen "psilocine" in print exactly once. If anybody
has some idea about the current situation and the Korrekt(tm)
spelling, please inform me.
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