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Philosophy of psychedelics

Philosophy of psychedelics is the philosophical investigation of the psychedelic experience. While psychedelic, entheogenic or hallucinogenic substances have been used by many traditional cultures throughout history mostly for religious purposes, recorded philosophical speculation and analysis of these substances, their phenomenological effects and the relevance of these altered states of consciousness to philosophical questions is a relatively late phenomenon in the history of philosophy. Traditional cultures who use psychedelic substances such as the Amazonian and Indigenous Mexican peoples hold that ingesting medicinal plants such as Ayahuasca and Peyote allows one to commune with the beings of the spirit world.

Indian philosophy edit

The Indian Yogi and scholar Patanjali in his Yoga sutras (4.1) mentions that mystic powers (siddhaya) can arise from certain "herbs" or "healing plants"[1] (osadhi):

janmauṣadhi-mantra-tapaḥ samādhi jāḥ siddhayaḥ||
The mystic powers arise due to birth, herbs, mantras, the performance of austerity and samadhi.[2]

Later commentators on the Yoga sutras like Vyasa mention elixirs of the asuras, and also state these herbal concoctions can be found in this world. Adi Shankara meanwhile refers to the Vedic drink Soma.[2]

Vajrayana Buddhist Tantras mention the nectar "amrita" (literally "immortal", "deathless") which was drunk during rituals and which is associated in the tradition with 'spiritual intoxication'.[3] A biography of the scholar Gampopa mentions how one of his teachers stated that "You can obtain Buddhahood: by taking a medicine pill which will make you immortal like the sun and moon."[4] This is a reference to the Vajrayana practice of rasayana (Skt: "alchemy") to create certain potions or pills. According to M.L. Walter's study of Indo-Tibetan rasayana, ingestion of these substances were said to "strengthen the yogin and procure the siddhi for him, as well as bringing him to the final goal."[5] According to Chogyam Trungpa (1939 – 1987), a modern teacher in the Kagyu tradition:

amrita... is used in conferring the second abhisheka, the secret abhisheka. This transmission dissolves the student's mind into the mind of the teacher of the lineage. In general, amrita is the principle of intoxicating extreme beliefs, belief in ego, and dissolving the boundary between confusion and sanity so that coemergence can be realized.[6]

19th century edit

European literature such as Confessions of an English Opium-Eater by Thomas De Quincey (one of the first English commentators on Kant)[7] and Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Kubla Khan described the use and phenomenal character of mind-altering substances such as Opium. De Quincey held that Opium allowed one to access the earliest of memories and that therefore no memories were ever truly forgotten:

The minutest incidents of childhood, or forgotten scenes of later years, were often revived: I could not be said to recollect them; for if I had been told of them when waking, I should not have been able to acknowledge them as parts of my past experience. But placed as they were before me, in dreams like intuitions, and clothed in all their evanescent circumstances and accompanying feelings, I recognized them instantaneously […] I feel assured that there is no such thing as forgetting possible to the mind.[8]

Jacques-Joseph Moreau, who reported his experiments with mental patients and drugs, believed that “the hashish experience was a way to gain insight into mental disease.”[9]

The French Poet Baudelaire wrote about the effects of Hashish and Opium in Les Paradis artificiels (1860) and theorized about how they could be used to allow the individual to reach "ideal" states of mind. Charles Baudelaire was member of the 'Club des Hashischins', a Parisian literary group dedicated to the exploration of altered states of consciousness which included Jacques-Joseph Moreau and literary figures such as Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, Gerard de Nerval, Honore de Balzac, and Theophile Gautier.[10] Baudelaire's opinion of the drug was generally negative, believing that it weakened and dampened artistic capacities, the personal Will and even the very identity of the hashish eater. He compared it to suicide and a false happiness, and saw wine as the true intoxicant of the artists.[11]

In the United States, The Hasheesh Eater (1857) an autobiographical book by Fitz Hugh Ludlow became popular. Ludlow wrote that a Marijuana user sought "the soul’s capacity for a broader being, deeper insight, grander views of Beauty, Truth and Good than she now gains through the chinks of her cell."[12] The American William James was one of the first academic philosophers to write about the effects of hallucinogenic substances in his The Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide (1882) in which he writes that the gas can produce a "tremendously exciting sense of an intense metaphysical illumination. Truth lies open to the view in depth beneath depth of almost blinding evidence. The mind sees all logical relations of being with an apparent subtlety and instantaniety to which its normal consciousness offers no parallel".[13] He goes on to say that the experience gave him the sense that the philosophy of Hegel was true. In his The Varieties of Religious Experience he likewise writes:

Nitrous oxide and ether, especially nitrous oxide … stimulate the mystical consciousness in an extraordinary degree. … [In] the nitrous oxide trance we have a genuine metaphysical revelation. … [Our] normal waking consciousness, rational consciousness as we call it, is but one special type of consciousness, whilst all about it, parted from it by the filmiest of screens, there lie potential forms of consciousness entirely different.[14]

While it has been speculated that Friedrich Nietzsche had psychedelic experiences brought on by the drugs he used to help with his various illnesses, it is more likely that his drug use was restricted to opium, rather than classic psychedelics. He had, however, speculated on the significance of altered states, particularly with regards to "narcotics potions" taken to attain oneness with one's fellow man and with nature. In The Birth of Tragedy he wrote: "Now that the gospel of universal harmony is sounded, each individual becomes not only reconciled to his fellow but actually at one with him - as though the veil of Maya had been torn apart and there remained only shreds floating before the vision of mystical Oneness" The Birth of Tragedy. [15]

20th century edit

After using mescaline in 1953, Aldous Huxley wrote The Doors of Perception where he advanced the theory that psychedelic compounds could produce mystical experiences and knowledge, "what the visionary, the medium, even the mystic were talking about" and what eastern philosophy described with terms like satcitananda, godhead, suchness, shunyata, anatta and dharmakaya.[16][page needed] Huxley also quotes the philosopher C. D. Broad, which held that the brain and nervous system might act as a reducing valve of all the stimuli in the universe:

According to such a theory, each one of us is potentially Mind at Large. But in so far as we are animals, our business is at all costs to survive. To make biological survival possible, Mind at Large has to be funneled through the reducing valve of the brain and nervous system. What comes out at the other end is a measly trickle of the kind of consciousness which will help us to stay alive on the surface of this Particular planet.[16][page needed]

Huxley wrote that it was possible that certain human beings could, through drugs, meditation, etc. circumvent the reducing valve and experience something far beyond everyday consciousness. This experience Huxley saw as the source of all mysticism, a theory termed the perennial philosophy. He also discusses art and the legality of various drugs in the West as well as arguing for the importance for self-transcendence. Huxley's philosophical novel Island also described a utopian society that used a psychedelic substance for spiritual purposes.[citation needed]

In the early 1960s a group that eventually came to be called "Harvard Psychedelic Club" which included Timothy Leary, Huston Smith and Ram Dass administered psychedelics to Harvard students. The group experimented with psychedelics in experiments such as the Harvard Psilocybin Project. Huston Smith's last work, Cleansing the Doors of Perception, describes the Harvard Project in which he participated.[citation needed]

Ram Dass' Be Here Now and Tim Leary's The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on The Tibetan Book of the Dead compared the psychedelic experiences to eastern philosophy and mystical states of consciousness. These books further popularized the idea that eastern - particularly Indian philosophical and spiritual insights could be obtained from using psychedelics. One of these experiences described in The Psychedelic Experience is that of ego death or depersonalization.[full citation needed]

The idea that the psychedelic experience could grant access to eastern spiritual insights was also promoted by the popular philosopher Alan Watts in his writings such as The Joyous Cosmology, who also argued that one should not remain dependent on them for spiritual growth: "If you get the message, hang up the phone. For psychedelic drugs are simply instruments, like microscopes, telescopes, and telephones. The biologist does not sit with eye permanently glued to the microscope, he goes away and works on what he has seen."[17]

Various psychologists during the 1960s also studied psychedelic substances and worked with psychedelic therapy and later developed various theories about their effects and significance. Stanislav Grof is known for his extensive work in LSD psychotherapy and for developing a theory which stated that the psychedelic experience allowed one to relive birth trauma and to explore the depths of the unconscious mind. Grof observed four levels of the LSD experience, which for him correspond to areas of the human unconscious: (1) abstract and aesthetic experiences (2) psychodynamic experiences (3) perinatal experiences, and (4) transpersonal experiences. Grof defined the last level as "experiences involving an expansion or extension of consciousness beyond the usual ego boundaries and beyond the limitations of time and/or space."[18] The field of transpersonal psychology focuses on this type of experience. Grof included topics such as consciousness, mysticism and metaphysics in his later writings.[citation needed]

The scientist and philosopher John C. Lilly discussed his experiments with psychedelics and altered states of consciousness in The Center of the Cyclone: An Autobiography of Inner Space and Programming and Metaprogramming in the Human Biocomputer. Other psychologists who studied and wrote on psychedelic use include Walter Pahnke, Ralph Metzner and Claudio Naranjo.[citation needed]

According to writer James Oroc, the 1990s brought about a second phase in modern psychedelic culture. The philosophical foundation of this new wave of psychedelic thought was based on the works of Alexander Shulgin, Alex Grey and Terence McKenna.[19]

Contemporary edit

Neuroscientist Rick Strassman has written about his research into the psychedelic N,N-Dimethyltryptamine in his book DMT: The Spirit Molecule (2001). In his book Strassman investigates the possible connection between natural DMT in mystical and Near Death Experiences and psychedelic states caused by outwardly administered DMT. He also describes the psychedelic experiences of the volunteers in his experiments and their encounter with certain strange "beings" after being administered DMT.[citation needed]

In 2012, University of California Press published the book Neuropsychedelia by anthropologist Nicolas Langlitz.[20] In this book, Langlitz recounts the findings of his fieldwork following scientists involved in reviving scientific research on psychedelics as well as his own philosophical reflections. He explains that Aldous Huxley's view expressed in The Doors of Perception—of the brain as a "reducing valve" which when released by the ingestion of a psychedelics produces a "perennial" mystical experience—has been very influential among contemporary psychopharmacologists. These scientists, Langlitz writes, have given Huxley's view a materialist "neurobiological reinterpretation" which Langlitz calls "mystic materialism".[21]

The philosopher Thomas Metzinger has discussed the effects of substances such as LSD, dimethyltryptamine, and mescaline in his Being No One (2003) and those of psilocybin in The Ego Tunnel (2009).[22][page needed][23][page needed] Metzinger describes the hallucinatory component of the psychedelic experience as "epistemically vacuous," i.e., not a reliable source of knowledge.[21]

The American author Sam Harris discussed his use of psychedelics in his 2014 book Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion, which also attempts to argue for a naturalized spirituality.[citation needed]

The philosopher Peter Sjöstedt-Hughes' book Noumenautics was published by the independent publisher Psychedelic Press in 2015 and discusses psychedelic phenomenology and its metaphysical implications. In 2021 they published his Modes of Sentience covering similar themes.[citation needed]

In his non-academic encyclopedia of psychedelic culture and thought Psychedelia (2012), Patrick Lundborg developed a psychedelic philosophy he called "Unified Psychedelic Theory" (UPT) which draws from Platonism, the phenomenology of Husserl and Merleau-Ponty, Paul D. MacLean's Triune brain theory, the work of Eugen Fink, and other thinkers.[citation needed]

In 2021, the philosopher Chris Letheby's book Philosophy of Psychedelics was published by Oxford University Press.[24] Philosophy of Psychedelics is organised as a defence against what Letheby calls the 'Comforting Delusion Objection' to psychedelic therapy. The objection is that psychedelic therapy works by inducing non-naturalistic metaphysical beliefs, and so it is epistemically deficient if one adopts a philosophically naturalistic world-view.[4] Letheby concludes that the Comforting Delusion Objection fails, and that the epistemic status of psychedelic therapy, given philosophical naturalism, is good.[3]

In 2022, Christine Hauskeller and Peter Sjöstedt-Hughes' edited volume, Philosophy and Psychedelics was published by Bloomsbury.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Arthur Anthony Macdonell, Arthur Berriedale; Vedic Index of Names and Subjects, Volume 1; Volume 5
  2. ^ a b Bryant, Edwin F.; The Yoga Sutras of Patañjali: A New Edition, Translation, and Commentary, chapter IV
  3. ^ a b Gimian, Carolyn Rose; The Essential Chogyam Trungpa, Glossary
  4. ^ a b Stewart, J. M. The Life of Gampopa, The Incomparable Dharma Lord of Tibet, Snow Lion Publications, Ithaca, N. Y., USA, 1995, page 53.
  5. ^ Walter, M. L, Preliminary Results from a study of two Rasayana systems in Indo-Tibetan Esoterism published in Tibetan Studies in Honour of Hugh Richardson (M. Aris, ed.), Aris & Phillips Ltd., Warminster, England 1980, page 319
  6. ^ Trungpa, C.; Sacred Outlook: The Vajrayogini Shrine and Practice (in The Silk Route and the Diamond Path, D. E. Klimburg-Salter, editor ), UCLA Art Council, Los Angeles, 1982, page 236
  7. ^ Stirling, James Hutchison (1867). "De Quincey and Coleridge Upon Kant," Fortnightly Review, Vol. 8, pp. 377–97.
  8. ^ Quincey, Thomas de. Confessions of an English Opium-Eater and Other Writings.London: Penguin Books, 2003, 76
  9. ^ Nahas, Gabriel G. Marihuana—Deceptive Weed. New York: Raven Press, 1973. see: Baudelaire on Drugs : Marijuana Consumption in the Age of Colonialism http://evitanza.bol.ucla.edu/baudelaire.html#_ftn15
  10. ^ Levinthal, C. F. (2012). Drugs, behavior, and modern society. (6th ed.). Boston: Pearson College Div.
  11. ^ Vitanza, Baudelaire on Drugs : Marijuana Consumption in the Age of Colonialism
  12. ^ Ludlow, Fitz Hugh "The Visionary", The Hasheesh Eater 1857
  13. ^ James; The Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide (1882), https://erowid.org/chemicals/nitrous/nitrous_article1.shtml
  14. ^ James, William; The Varieties of Religious Experience, ch. XVI
  15. ^ Traherne, Twain; The Psychedelic Nietzsche
  16. ^ a b Huxley, Aldous (1954). The Doors of Perception. Perennial Classics. ISBN 0-06-059518-3.
  17. ^ The Joyous Cosmology: Adventures in the Chemistry of Consciousness (the quote is new to the 1965/1970 edition (page 26), and not contained in the original 1962 edition of the book).
  18. ^ PSYPRESSUK CONTRIBUTORS; Realms of the Human Unconscious by Stanislav Grof PUBLISHED JANUARY 19, 2011 · UPDATED FEBRUARY 5, 2015, http://psypressuk.com/2011/01/19/literary-review-realms-of-the-human-unconscious-by-stanislav-grof/
  19. ^ Oroc, James; The Second Psychedelic Revolution, http://realitysandwich.com/216613/the-second-psychedelic-revolution-part-one-the-end-of-acid/
  20. ^ Langlitz, Nicolas (2012). Neuropsychedelia: The Revival of Hallucinogen Research since the Decade of the Brain (1st ed.). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520274822.
  21. ^ a b Langlitz; Nicolas; IS THERE A PLACE FOR PSYCHEDELICS IN PHILOSOPHY? Fieldwork in Neuro- and Perennial Philosophy, http://www.nicolaslanglitz.de/nicolaslanglitz.de/Texts_files/Langlitz%202016%20-%20IS%20THERE%20A%20PLACE%20FOR%20PSYCHEDELICS%20IN%20PHILOSOPHY%3F.pdf
  22. ^ Metzinger, Thomas (2003). Being No One: The Self-Model Theory of Subjectivity. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-13417-9.
  23. ^ Metzinger, Thomas (2009). The Ego Tunnel: The Science of the Mind and the Myth of the Self. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465020690.
  24. ^ Letheby, Chris (2021). Philosophy of Psychedelics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/med/9780198843122.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-884312-2.
  25. ^ Philosophy and psychedelics : frameworks for exceptional experience. Christine Hauskeller, Peter Sjöstedt-H. London. 2022. ISBN 978-1-350-23163-4. OCLC 1291222794.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)

Further reading edit

  • Letheby, Chris (2021). Philosophy of Psychedelics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/med/9780198843122.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-884312-2.
  • Hauskeller, Christine, and Sjöstedt-Hughes, Peter, eds. (2022). Philosophy and Psychedelics. London: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781350231610

External links edit

  • The first Philosophy of Psychedelics conference, at the University of Exeter
  • Baudelaire's "The poem of Hashish"
  • The Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide BY WILLIAM JAMES 1882
  • Huxley's The Doors of Perception
  • The Psychedelic Experience by Timothy Leary
  • The Psychedelic Library articles by various writers
  • Psychology of the Future: Lessons from Modern Consciousness Research by Stanislav Grof
  • Note Towards the Definition of a Psychedelic Philosophy by Patrick Lundborg
  • Consciousness and Psychedelics – TEDx Talk by Peter Sjöstedt-H
  • Seeing Snakes: On Delusion, Knowledge, and the Drug Experience by G T Roche
  • Some Epistemological Questions Concerning the Non Medical Use of Drugs by Raphael Waters

philosophy, psychedelics, philosophical, investigation, psychedelic, experience, while, psychedelic, entheogenic, hallucinogenic, substances, have, been, used, many, traditional, cultures, throughout, history, mostly, religious, purposes, recorded, philosophic. Philosophy of psychedelics is the philosophical investigation of the psychedelic experience While psychedelic entheogenic or hallucinogenic substances have been used by many traditional cultures throughout history mostly for religious purposes recorded philosophical speculation and analysis of these substances their phenomenological effects and the relevance of these altered states of consciousness to philosophical questions is a relatively late phenomenon in the history of philosophy Traditional cultures who use psychedelic substances such as the Amazonian and Indigenous Mexican peoples hold that ingesting medicinal plants such as Ayahuasca and Peyote allows one to commune with the beings of the spirit world Contents 1 Indian philosophy 2 19th century 3 20th century 4 Contemporary 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksIndian philosophy editThe Indian Yogi and scholar Patanjali in his Yoga sutras 4 1 mentions that mystic powers siddhaya can arise from certain herbs or healing plants 1 osadhi janmauṣadhi mantra tapaḥ samadhi jaḥ siddhayaḥ The mystic powers arise due to birth herbs mantras the performance of austerity and samadhi 2 Later commentators on the Yoga sutras like Vyasa mention elixirs of the asuras and also state these herbal concoctions can be found in this world Adi Shankara meanwhile refers to the Vedic drink Soma 2 Vajrayana Buddhist Tantras mention the nectar amrita literally immortal deathless which was drunk during rituals and which is associated in the tradition with spiritual intoxication 3 A biography of the scholar Gampopa mentions how one of his teachers stated that You can obtain Buddhahood by taking a medicine pill which will make you immortal like the sun and moon 4 This is a reference to the Vajrayana practice of rasayana Skt alchemy to create certain potions or pills According to M L Walter s study of Indo Tibetan rasayana ingestion of these substances were said to strengthen the yogin and procure the siddhi for him as well as bringing him to the final goal 5 According to Chogyam Trungpa 1939 1987 a modern teacher in the Kagyu tradition amrita is used in conferring the second abhisheka the secret abhisheka This transmission dissolves the student s mind into the mind of the teacher of the lineage In general amrita is the principle of intoxicating extreme beliefs belief in ego and dissolving the boundary between confusion and sanity so that coemergence can be realized 6 19th century editEuropean literature such as Confessions of an English Opium Eater by Thomas De Quincey one of the first English commentators on Kant 7 and Samuel Taylor Coleridge s Kubla Khan described the use and phenomenal character of mind altering substances such as Opium De Quincey held that Opium allowed one to access the earliest of memories and that therefore no memories were ever truly forgotten The minutest incidents of childhood or forgotten scenes of later years were often revived I could not be said to recollect them for if I had been told of them when waking I should not have been able to acknowledge them as parts of my past experience But placed as they were before me in dreams like intuitions and clothed in all their evanescent circumstances and accompanying feelings I recognized them instantaneously I feel assured that there is no such thing as forgetting possible to the mind 8 Jacques Joseph Moreau who reported his experiments with mental patients and drugs believed that the hashish experience was a way to gain insight into mental disease 9 The French Poet Baudelaire wrote about the effects of Hashish and Opium in Les Paradis artificiels 1860 and theorized about how they could be used to allow the individual to reach ideal states of mind Charles Baudelaire was member of the Club des Hashischins a Parisian literary group dedicated to the exploration of altered states of consciousness which included Jacques Joseph Moreau and literary figures such as Victor Hugo Alexandre Dumas Gerard de Nerval Honore de Balzac and Theophile Gautier 10 Baudelaire s opinion of the drug was generally negative believing that it weakened and dampened artistic capacities the personal Will and even the very identity of the hashish eater He compared it to suicide and a false happiness and saw wine as the true intoxicant of the artists 11 In the United States The Hasheesh Eater 1857 an autobiographical book by Fitz Hugh Ludlow became popular Ludlow wrote that a Marijuana user sought the soul s capacity for a broader being deeper insight grander views of Beauty Truth and Good than she now gains through the chinks of her cell 12 The American William James was one of the first academic philosophers to write about the effects of hallucinogenic substances in his The Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide 1882 in which he writes that the gas can produce a tremendously exciting sense of an intense metaphysical illumination Truth lies open to the view in depth beneath depth of almost blinding evidence The mind sees all logical relations of being with an apparent subtlety and instantaniety to which its normal consciousness offers no parallel 13 He goes on to say that the experience gave him the sense that the philosophy of Hegel was true In his The Varieties of Religious Experience he likewise writes Nitrous oxide and ether especially nitrous oxide stimulate the mystical consciousness in an extraordinary degree In the nitrous oxide trance we have a genuine metaphysical revelation Our normal waking consciousness rational consciousness as we call it is but one special type of consciousness whilst all about it parted from it by the filmiest of screens there lie potential forms of consciousness entirely different 14 While it has been speculated that Friedrich Nietzsche had psychedelic experiences brought on by the drugs he used to help with his various illnesses it is more likely that his drug use was restricted to opium rather than classic psychedelics He had however speculated on the significance of altered states particularly with regards to narcotics potions taken to attain oneness with one s fellow man and with nature In The Birth of Tragedy he wrote Now that the gospel of universal harmony is sounded each individual becomes not only reconciled to his fellow but actually at one with him as though the veil of Maya had been torn apart and there remained only shreds floating before the vision of mystical Oneness The Birth of Tragedy 15 20th century editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message After using mescaline in 1953 Aldous Huxley wrote The Doors of Perception where he advanced the theory that psychedelic compounds could produce mystical experiences and knowledge what the visionary the medium even the mystic were talking about and what eastern philosophy described with terms like satcitananda godhead suchness shunyata anatta and dharmakaya 16 page needed Huxley also quotes the philosopher C D Broad which held that the brain and nervous system might act as a reducing valve of all the stimuli in the universe According to such a theory each one of us is potentially Mind at Large But in so far as we are animals our business is at all costs to survive To make biological survival possible Mind at Large has to be funneled through the reducing valve of the brain and nervous system What comes out at the other end is a measly trickle of the kind of consciousness which will help us to stay alive on the surface of this Particular planet 16 page needed Huxley wrote that it was possible that certain human beings could through drugs meditation etc circumvent the reducing valve and experience something far beyond everyday consciousness This experience Huxley saw as the source of all mysticism a theory termed the perennial philosophy He also discusses art and the legality of various drugs in the West as well as arguing for the importance for self transcendence Huxley s philosophical novel Island also described a utopian society that used a psychedelic substance for spiritual purposes citation needed In the early 1960s a group that eventually came to be called Harvard Psychedelic Club which included Timothy Leary Huston Smith and Ram Dass administered psychedelics to Harvard students The group experimented with psychedelics in experiments such as the Harvard Psilocybin Project Huston Smith s last work Cleansing the Doors of Perception describes the Harvard Project in which he participated citation needed Ram Dass Be Here Now and Tim Leary s The Psychedelic Experience A Manual Based on The Tibetan Book of the Dead compared the psychedelic experiences to eastern philosophy and mystical states of consciousness These books further popularized the idea that eastern particularly Indian philosophical and spiritual insights could be obtained from using psychedelics One of these experiences described in The Psychedelic Experience is that of ego death or depersonalization full citation needed The idea that the psychedelic experience could grant access to eastern spiritual insights was also promoted by the popular philosopher Alan Watts in his writings such as The Joyous Cosmology who also argued that one should not remain dependent on them for spiritual growth If you get the message hang up the phone For psychedelic drugs are simply instruments like microscopes telescopes and telephones The biologist does not sit with eye permanently glued to the microscope he goes away and works on what he has seen 17 Various psychologists during the 1960s also studied psychedelic substances and worked with psychedelic therapy and later developed various theories about their effects and significance Stanislav Grof is known for his extensive work in LSD psychotherapy and for developing a theory which stated that the psychedelic experience allowed one to relive birth trauma and to explore the depths of the unconscious mind Grof observed four levels of the LSD experience which for him correspond to areas of the human unconscious 1 abstract and aesthetic experiences 2 psychodynamic experiences 3 perinatal experiences and 4 transpersonal experiences Grof defined the last level as experiences involving an expansion or extension of consciousness beyond the usual ego boundaries and beyond the limitations of time and or space 18 The field of transpersonal psychology focuses on this type of experience Grof included topics such as consciousness mysticism and metaphysics in his later writings citation needed The scientist and philosopher John C Lilly discussed his experiments with psychedelics and altered states of consciousness in The Center of the Cyclone An Autobiography of Inner Space and Programming and Metaprogramming in the Human Biocomputer Other psychologists who studied and wrote on psychedelic use include Walter Pahnke Ralph Metzner and Claudio Naranjo citation needed According to writer James Oroc the 1990s brought about a second phase in modern psychedelic culture The philosophical foundation of this new wave of psychedelic thought was based on the works of Alexander Shulgin Alex Grey and Terence McKenna 19 Contemporary editThis section gives self sourcing popular culture examples Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources and remove less pertinent examples Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged or removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Neuroscientist Rick Strassman has written about his research into the psychedelic N N Dimethyltryptamine in his book DMT The Spirit Molecule 2001 In his book Strassman investigates the possible connection between natural DMT in mystical and Near Death Experiences and psychedelic states caused by outwardly administered DMT He also describes the psychedelic experiences of the volunteers in his experiments and their encounter with certain strange beings after being administered DMT citation needed In 2012 University of California Press published the book Neuropsychedelia by anthropologist Nicolas Langlitz 20 In this book Langlitz recounts the findings of his fieldwork following scientists involved in reviving scientific research on psychedelics as well as his own philosophical reflections He explains that Aldous Huxley s view expressed in The Doors of Perception of the brain as a reducing valve which when released by the ingestion of a psychedelics produces a perennial mystical experience has been very influential among contemporary psychopharmacologists These scientists Langlitz writes have given Huxley s view a materialist neurobiological reinterpretation which Langlitz calls mystic materialism 21 The philosopher Thomas Metzinger has discussed the effects of substances such as LSD dimethyltryptamine and mescaline in his Being No One 2003 and those of psilocybin in The Ego Tunnel 2009 22 page needed 23 page needed Metzinger describes the hallucinatory component of the psychedelic experience as epistemically vacuous i e not a reliable source of knowledge 21 The American author Sam Harris discussed his use of psychedelics in his 2014 book Waking Up A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion which also attempts to argue for a naturalized spirituality citation needed The philosopher Peter Sjostedt Hughes book Noumenautics was published by the independent publisher Psychedelic Press in 2015 and discusses psychedelic phenomenology and its metaphysical implications In 2021 they published his Modes of Sentience covering similar themes citation needed In his non academic encyclopedia of psychedelic culture and thought Psychedelia 2012 Patrick Lundborg developed a psychedelic philosophy he called Unified Psychedelic Theory UPT which draws from Platonism the phenomenology of Husserl and Merleau Ponty Paul D MacLean s Triune brain theory the work of Eugen Fink and other thinkers citation needed In 2021 the philosopher Chris Letheby s book Philosophy of Psychedelics was published by Oxford University Press 24 Philosophy of Psychedelics is organised as a defence against what Letheby calls the Comforting Delusion Objection to psychedelic therapy The objection is that psychedelic therapy works by inducing non naturalistic metaphysical beliefs and so it is epistemically deficient if one adopts a philosophically naturalistic world view 4 Letheby concludes that the Comforting Delusion Objection fails and that the epistemic status of psychedelic therapy given philosophical naturalism is good 3 In 2022 Christine Hauskeller and Peter Sjostedt Hughes edited volume Philosophy and Psychedelics was published by Bloomsbury 25 See also editCognitive liberty Psychedelic art Psychedelic literature Psychedelics and ecology Psychedelic therapy PsychonauticsReferences edit Arthur Anthony Macdonell Arthur Berriedale Vedic Index of Names and Subjects Volume 1 Volume 5 a b Bryant Edwin F The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali A New Edition Translation and Commentary chapter IV a b Gimian Carolyn Rose The Essential Chogyam Trungpa Glossary a b Stewart J M The Life of Gampopa The Incomparable Dharma Lord of Tibet Snow Lion Publications Ithaca N Y USA 1995 page 53 Walter M L Preliminary Results from a study of two Rasayana systems in Indo Tibetan Esoterism published in Tibetan Studies in Honour of Hugh Richardson M Aris ed Aris amp Phillips Ltd Warminster England 1980 page 319 Trungpa C Sacred Outlook The Vajrayogini Shrine and Practice in The Silk Route and the Diamond Path D E Klimburg Salter editor UCLA Art Council Los Angeles 1982 page 236 Stirling James Hutchison 1867 De Quincey and Coleridge Upon Kant Fortnightly Review Vol 8 pp 377 97 Quincey Thomas de Confessions of an English Opium Eater and Other Writings London Penguin Books 2003 76 Nahas Gabriel G Marihuana Deceptive Weed New York Raven Press 1973 see Baudelaire on Drugs Marijuana Consumption in the Age of Colonialism http evitanza bol ucla edu baudelaire html ftn15 Levinthal C F 2012 Drugs behavior and modern society 6th ed Boston Pearson College Div Vitanza Baudelaire on Drugs Marijuana Consumption in the Age of Colonialism Ludlow Fitz Hugh The Visionary The Hasheesh Eater 1857 James The Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide 1882 https erowid org chemicals nitrous nitrous article1 shtml James William The Varieties of Religious Experience ch XVI Traherne Twain The Psychedelic Nietzsche a b Huxley Aldous 1954 The Doors of Perception Perennial Classics ISBN 0 06 059518 3 The Joyous Cosmology Adventures in the Chemistry of Consciousness the quote is new to the 1965 1970 edition page 26 and not contained in the original 1962 edition of the book PSYPRESSUK CONTRIBUTORS Realms of the Human Unconscious by Stanislav Grof PUBLISHED JANUARY 19 2011 UPDATED FEBRUARY 5 2015 http psypressuk com 2011 01 19 literary review realms of the human unconscious by stanislav grof Oroc James The Second Psychedelic Revolution http realitysandwich com 216613 the second psychedelic revolution part one the end of acid Langlitz Nicolas 2012 Neuropsychedelia The Revival of Hallucinogen Research since the Decade of the Brain 1st ed Berkeley CA University of California Press ISBN 9780520274822 a b Langlitz Nicolas IS THERE A PLACE FOR PSYCHEDELICS IN PHILOSOPHY Fieldwork in Neuro and Perennial Philosophy http www nicolaslanglitz de nicolaslanglitz de Texts files Langlitz 202016 20 20IS 20THERE 20A 20PLACE 20FOR 20PSYCHEDELICS 20IN 20PHILOSOPHY 3F pdf Metzinger Thomas 2003 Being No One The Self Model Theory of Subjectivity Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 0 262 13417 9 Metzinger Thomas 2009 The Ego Tunnel The Science of the Mind and the Myth of the Self New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0465020690 Letheby Chris 2021 Philosophy of Psychedelics Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 med 9780198843122 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 884312 2 Philosophy and psychedelics frameworks for exceptional experience Christine Hauskeller Peter Sjostedt H London 2022 ISBN 978 1 350 23163 4 OCLC 1291222794 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link Further reading editLetheby Chris 2021 Philosophy of Psychedelics Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 med 9780198843122 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 884312 2 Hauskeller Christine and Sjostedt Hughes Peter eds 2022 Philosophy and Psychedelics London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 9781350231610External links editThe first Philosophy of Psychedelics conference at the University of Exeter Baudelaire s The poem of Hashish The Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide BY WILLIAM JAMES 1882 Huxley s The Doors of Perception The Psychedelic Experience by Timothy Leary The Psychedelic Library articles by various writers Psychology of the Future Lessons from Modern Consciousness Research by Stanislav Grof Note Towards the Definition of a Psychedelic Philosophy by Patrick Lundborg Consciousness and Psychedelics TEDx Talk by Peter Sjostedt H Seeing Snakes On Delusion Knowledge and the Drug Experience by G T Roche Some Epistemological Questions Concerning the Non Medical Use of Drugs by Raphael Waters Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philosophy of psychedelics amp oldid 1192922545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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